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Finding spiritual freedom often feels like trying to run a race while carrying your entire luggage set. Materialistic attachment isn't just about owning "stuff"; it’s the emotional weight and identity we give to those things. 1. Audit Your "Identities"
Create a 48-hour buffer between the urge to buy and the act of buying.
Realize that if you lost the object today, your soul’s value wouldn’t drop a cent. Materialistic Attachments and Spiritual Freedom
Prioritize "The Great Wealths"—presence, breath, relationships, and nature.
Visit a museum, a park, or a high-end store. Practice looking at beautiful things and saying, "I am so glad that exists," and then walking away without feeling a need to take it home. 6. Relink Your Joy to "The Invisible" Finding spiritual freedom often feels like trying to
Attachments often start with an impulse—a hunger for a "hit" of dopamine.
Set a "No-Thing" hour each day. No screens, no shopping, no "doing." Just being. This recalibrates your spirit to find contentment in existence rather than acquisition. Audit Your "Identities" Create a 48-hour buffer between
Spiritual freedom comes from the realization that we are temporary residents here. Nothing is truly "ours"; we are just borrowing it for a few decades.
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