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Alcohol, Drugs, and Letting Go

Why meditation offers a different path to ego disengagement

Many people recognize the feeling of ‘letting go’ through alcohol or drugs. The inner critic softens, worries fade into the background, and the sense of a tightly controlled self loosens for a while.

What is often overlooked is that this experience disengaging from ego and self-talk can also be trained deliberately through meditation.

Why Substances Feel Like Relief

Alcohol and many drugs dampen activity in brain systems responsible for self-monitoring and control. As these systems quiet down, the narrative self loses its grip, creating a temporary sense of freedom.

The relief feels real, but it comes from suppression rather than training.

The Difference Between Suppression and Skill

With substances, the effect is passive and short-lived. When the substance wears off, the mind often rebounds — sometimes with even more tension than before.

Meditation works differently. Instead of shutting systems down, it trains you to disengage from ego-driven thought patterns while remaining fully conscious and in control.

How CEVAM Trains Letting Go

In CEVAM, you learn to disengage from the narrative self by keeping attention anchored in direct perception. Thoughts still arise, but they no longer dominate experience.

This creates the same sense of spaciousness people seek through substances — but without numbing awareness or outsourcing control.

A Sustainable Way to Let Go

Over time, meditation builds a stable capacity to relax the grip of ego, not just during sessions, but in everyday life. The calm and openness come from skill, not chemistry.

This makes the effect repeatable, safe, and compatible with clarity.

The Takeaway

Substances offer a shortcut to letting go. Meditation teaches you how to get there yourself. One fades quickly; the other becomes part of who you are.

Curious what letting go feels like without losing clarity?


Try Attune today and train a calm, open mind — naturally.

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