The Energetics of Numbing:

What Your Netflix Binge is Really Telling You

It’s a familiar scene: the day is done, you’re feeling stressed, overwhelmed, or just… empty. So you reach for your phone to scroll, flip on the TV to binge, or open the pantry for a snack. We call it “unwinding,” but often, it’s a form of numbing. It’s a way to quiet the noise in our heads and disconnect from uncomfortable feelings.

But what if these habits weren’t just “bad habits” to be broken? What if, instead, they were signals from a deeper part of you? From an energetic perspective, numbing is a profound act of contraction. It’s a protective retreat inward. The problem isn’t that we do it; the problem is when we get stuck there. This isn’t about shaming your scrolling, but about understanding the energy behind it and learning how to find a healthy, life-giving balance.

Women dancing - bursting from a mobile phone

Why We Numb: The Archetypal Urge to Retreat

While doom-scrolling is a modern invention, the instinct to retreat from pain is ancient. This urge is deeply connected to universal archetypes that live within our collective unconscious.

  • The Wounded Child: When we feel hurt or overwhelmed, our inner "Wounded Child" seeks safety. Numbing behaviors like binge-watching are our modern ways of swaddling ourselves, creating an artificial womb to hide from a world that feels too harsh. It’s a primal attempt to self-soothe.

  • The Shadow: Numbing is also a way we manage our "Shadow", the parts of ourselves we deny or repress. The feelings we’re trying to escape (anxiety, sadness, loneliness, inadequacy) are pushed into the shadow. The numbing activity becomes a guard at the gate, preventing these feelings from reaching our conscious mind.

The specific action (the phone, the TV, the food) is less important than the universal human reaction: avoidance and retreat in the face of pain.

The Dance of Energy:

Contraction vs. Expansion

Your energy is always in a dance between two states. Neither is good nor bad; they are both essential.

Contracting Energy

This is the energy of focus, protection, and introspection. Think of it as pulling your energy inward. A healthy contraction is choosing to read a book instead of going to a loud party, or focusing deeply on a work task.

Numbing activities are a form of contraction. When you scroll endlessly or get lost in a show, your awareness shrinks to the size of the screen. You pull all your energy into a tiny, "safe" bubble to shut out the vastness of your own feelings. It’s a closed circuit designed to protect you, but when it becomes your default, it leads to stagnation, disconnection, and lethargy.

Expanding Energy

This is the energy of connection, growth, and expression. It’s an outward-moving force. Expansion is the feeling of a heartfelt conversation, creating art, moving your body, or simply being present in nature. These actions break the closed circuit of numbing. They require you to open up, engage with the world, and allow your energy to flow freely again.

The goal is not to eliminate contraction, but to stop getting stuck in the stagnant loop of numbing. Healing comes from consciously choosing expansive actions to balance our necessary moments of retreat.

The Inevitable Expansion:

Why Numbing Creates Pressure

If numbing is the action of energetic contraction, the opposite reaction is the build-up of suppressed energy that demands eventual expansion. Think of it like a pressure cooker.

The "action" is you actively pushing down the lid and holding in the steam (contracting your energy to suppress a feeling like anxiety or sadness). The "opposite reaction" isn't happening somewhere else; it's the steam (the suppressed emotion) pushing back against the lid from the inside.

This suppressed energy doesn't just vanish. Your system's drive for balance (homeostasis) means this pressure must be released. The expansion, therefore, shows up in two ways:

Unconscious Expansion

When the pressure becomes too much, the energy expands uncontrollably. This can manifest as a sudden emotional outburst, a panic attack, a depressive episode, or physical symptoms. The pot boils over.

Conscious Expansion

This is the intentional and healthy release of that built-up pressure. It's the very thing you do to counteract numbing. It's choosing to let the steam out safely through things like heartfelt conversation, creative expression, or intentional movement.

After a long period of numbing, this drive for balance is why you might feel a sudden, intense craving for connection, sensation, or movement. It's your system trying to correct the imbalance.

Finding Your Balance:

From Numbing to Nourishing

So, how do you break the cycle? It’s not about willpower; it’s about gentle, conscious choices.

  • Start with the Pause: When you feel the urge to numb, pause for just 30 seconds. Take one deep breath. In that moment of pause, ask yourself, "What am I feeling right now that I'm trying to avoid?" You don't need to fix the feeling, just name it. This simple act of awareness is the first step out of the unconscious pattern.

  • Try the "Five-Minute" Antidote: You don't have to go from scrolling to running a marathon. Commit to just five minutes of an expansive activity before you numb.

    • Stretch your body for five minutes.
    • Put on one favourite song and just listen, without doing anything else.
    • Step outside and breathe fresh air for five minutes.
    • Write down whatever is in your head for five minutes.

    Often, this small dose of expansion is enough to shift your energy, and you may find the urge to numb has lessened.

  • Practice Conscious Contraction: Not all retreat is numbing. Your energy system needs to contract and rest. The key is to do it consciously. Instead of numbing, try nourishing rest.

    • Instead of scrolling in bed, try reading a chapter of a book.
    • Instead of eating out of boredom, try making a warm cup of herbal tea and savouring it.
    • Instead of flipping on the TV immediately, try 10 minutes of quiet meditation or simply sitting and watching the world outside your window.

By seeing your numbing habits through an energetic lens, you can transform them from sources of guilt into valuable signals. They are messengers telling you that you need rest, safety, or a moment to process. By learning to meet those needs with conscious, nourishing actions, you can reclaim your energy and find a more vibrant, authentic balance in your life.

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