Archive for the 'Addiction' Category

Beating addiction for good

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

If you’re going to beat addiction for good, you’re going to have to be healed from the inside-out. That’s why dual diagnosis is so important. Remember, addiction is both a physical and psychological disease. Addiction recovery, then, must be both a physical and psychological process. Those rehab centers that employ dual diagnosis techniques recognize that substance abuse is very often rooted in underlying psychiatric conditions, and that successful substance abuse treatment must eradicate those conditions wherever they exist. Any other approach simply isn’t good enough.

Nothing is guaranteed in the drug and alcohol rehab process. Rehab can only be successful if it’s administered the right way, by people who know what they’re doing. And dual diagnosis has to be part of the process. You already know what’s at stake in the fight against addiction. Now you know what kind of support you need to win it. All that remains is for you to find a treatment center that can give it to you.

Nothing pretty about Crack Abuse

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Crack abuse is not a choice. Whoever you are, however in control you believe yourself to be…you can’t simply choose to quit using. On the contrary, crack abuse is a disease, and like all diseases it can only be overcome with competent clinical care. You wouldn’t expect a cancer victim to get better outside of an oncology clinic. The same logic applies to crack addicts and drug treatment centers. The good news is that the right rehab program really can help you beat crack abuse for good. The only catch is that you have to be willing to seek it out.

The decision to take up the fight against crack abuse is never an easy one. Entering an addiction treatment facility means admitting weakness, and vulnerability. But there’s simply no other way to get better. The fact that you’re here, reading this, says you don’t need a lecture on the perils of crack addiction. You know how devastating it can be. Now you know what you can do fix the problem. Here’s hoping you can find the courage to make the necessary choice.

Waging your own personal battles. That sort of effort should never be undertaken lightly.

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Drug abuse never dies easy. In fact, addiction treatment is an inherently difficult process. Getting sober for good means confronting your own personal demons, and waging your own personal battles. That sort of effort should never be undertaken lightly. The good news is that the right addiction treatment experience can make a world of difference. In the fight against drug addiction, you need the best allies you can get. It’s hard to imagine how anything could be more important than that.

It’s worth noting here that the best drug treatment is that which is tailored to the individual needs of rehab patients. Drug abuse is a personal problem, after all. The right drug rehab center is the one that helps you beat it on your terms. A drug rehabilitation program designed with your unique case history in mind really can help you get where you need to go. Don’t wait another day to start finding that out for yourself.

Stepping up before it is too late

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

What makes a drug treatment program successful? People, more than anything else. Drug abuse is a personal disease. Drug abuse treatment has to pose a personalized solution to it. Relationships matter in an addiction treatment center. If you’re going to get better, it’s going to be because you get help from competent, compassionate caregivers. The best drug treatment programs are those administered by rehab experts who know exactly what they’re doing, and who bring a measure of genuine empathy to their work. A drug treatment program that can’t offer you that much couldn’t ever be worth your time.

As should perhaps go without saying, no one can look out for your own best interests like you can. In choosing a drug treatment program, it’s vital that you find one specially designed to meet your unique individual needs. In the fight against addiction, you need your own battle plan, not someone else’s. Let today be the day you resolve to find exactly that.

Making life right after addiction trys to take it away

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

My brother went to an addiction treatment center and it was the best thing that could have ever happened to him. The folks at the addiction treatment center gave my brother the confidence to survive the program that they set up for him and he was able to come out of his cloud of drug addiction with flying colors. The addiction treatment center had a program that sported a high rate of success and very little failure when it came to recovering patients. It was amazing to know that there was a place that we could take my brother and actually feel confident that someoned would actually put forth the effort to make him well again. And they did make him well again. My brother, the guy who had been smoking crack for almost as long as it had been around, was once again a sober, regular person. It was definitely a side of him that I hadn’t seen in a really long time. It was the greatest thing in the world to see. The addiction treatment center had fixed him completely and they had made it so that he was doing it on his own. I will never forget what they did for our family.

Drug rehabs are all the same, right?

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

Drug rehabs are all the same, right? I’ve heard too many addicts ask that question. Drug rehabilitation is drug rehabilitation, they’ll tell me. One rehab program should be more or less as effective as the next one. If it worked for someone else, it’s bound to work for me.

Right?

Not quite. Not even close, actually.

Drug rehabs, for the record, are not all the same. Drug treatment only works if it’s done right, with the sort of personal care and attention that the rehab process demands. The drug rehab center that’s “right” for you is the one that takes full stock of your unique individual needs. Anyone who tries to tell you otherwise is either a liar or a fool.

Think of it like this: No one else has experienced the world quite the same way you have. That goes for drug abuse same as anything else. Your addiction is thoroughly and fundamentally your own…and drug rehabilitation can only work for you if it works on your terms. The drug rehabs that recognize that fact really can help their patients get better for good. Those that don’t don’t even stand a chance.

It can be a daunting task, trying to choose a drug treatment center. For your own sake, don’t be intimidated into a bad decision. Do your homework. Know your options. Be sure you have all the information to make the right call. With so much at stake, after all, you just can’t afford to be wrong.

Addicts need interventions, no matter how hard it is

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

Ever been to an intervention? Most people don’t know what they are unless they have seen the television show on A&E. Even then they might have gotten the wrong idea. An intervention is an orchestrated event by one or more people to get an alcoholic or a drug addict to seek professional assistance with their problem. An intervention can also be used to address other problems like gambling addictions, eating disorders, porn addictions, tobacco smoking, and myriad of other problems that people face from day to day. Now, an intervention isn’t always pulled off without a hitch. It can sometimes backfire and turn out to be disastrous. The intervention that my family did for me almost went awry but it ended up working perfectly. I ended up going to drug rehab and getting assistance for my drug problem. I learned all of the facts and techniques to avoid relapse at the drug treatment center that I checked into. It was amazing! I began seeing changes in my life quicker than I would have thought possible. It was almost like magic the way that it worked out for me and it can work for you too.

pain killer….addiction

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

No one ever sees painkiller addiction coming. Lord knows I didn’t. One day you’re filling a prescription for OxyContin and the next day…Boom: You’re cutting open pills in your kitchen at three in the morning while your wife and three kids are sleeping just down the hall.

Not pretty, I know. Nothing about painkiller addiction ever is.

Things are different, now. I got help. Drug Rehab. From rehab experts. I got help, and it changed everything. As hard it as it was, as much as painkiller addiction put up one nasty whale of a fight…I wouldn’t have had it any other way. I won’t have it any other way. Not now. Not ever.

Beating painkiller addiction was the best thing I ever did: for me, for my wife, for my kids. It can be the best thing you ever do too…so long as you’ve got the guts to make it happen. Here’s hoping you find a way to do what you’ve got to.

 

Heroin

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

If you or someone you care about has succumbed to heroin abuse, you don’t need to be told how important successful heroin treatment is. Heroin addiction ruins lives; it strips heroin addicts of hope, and of joy, and leaves them utterly unable to relate to anything except the prospect of their next high. More to the point, heroin addiction is a killer…and every untreated case of heroin abuse is a tragedy waiting to happen.

The good news in all this? Heroin treatment really can help heroin addicts get better. Heroin treatment, done right, allows heroin addicts to get back to living life as they used to know it. Heroin treatment, if you’ll let it, will reconstruct everything heroin addiction tears apart, and help you make tomorrow a thing worth looking forward to.

The obvious catch, of course, is that drug treatment can’t work unless you want it to, and unless you’re willing to make heroin recovery real. Indeed, the success or failure of any heroin treatment program is ultimately up to heroin addicts themselves; if you’re going to get better, it’s going to be because you find the strength to drive your own healing. In the end, it’s hard to imagine how anything else could ever be more important than that.

 

Alcohol Abuse

Friday, May 4th, 2007

Alcohol is a drug. That’s a fact that often gets lost amidst the raucous cheer of a corner pub, or the friendly bustle of a classy cocktail party. It’s not “like” a drug, or “kinda” a drug. It is a drug, plain and simple. Recognizing it is as such—calling a spade a spade, as it were—is an essential step on the road to sobriety.

Very few people think of alcohol in the same way they think of, say, heroin. Or crack. Or even marijuana, for that matter. Much of this has to do with the law: alcohol, unlike heroin or crack or marijuana, is legal in the United States. More broadly, its legality means that alcohol is free of the stigma which is often attached to “bad” drugs. Drinking is a socially acceptable pastime; shooting up heroin is not. For the alcoholic, though, things like laws and stigmas do very little to change the fact of addiction itself.

And what of that addiction? How does alcohol function within the human organism, and why does it pose such an irresistible temptation for so many Americans? On a biochemical level, alcohol elevates activity in the body’s natural opioid system. In plain-speak, this means it works in a strikingly similar fashion to a drug like heroin. Forget what’s legal or illegal, forget what’s stigmatized or not stigmatized: what matters for the alcoholic—and for the alcoholic’s friends and family—is the nature of the process by which the drug operates. Recovery is impossible without knowledge, without the truth. Recovery is impossible without understanding.

Natural opioids, when released into the bloodstream, trigger a state of positive affect—pleasure—within the individual. Drinking feels good. Anyone who’s ever cracked a cold beer on a hot day knows that much. The problem, though, is that drinking feels too good for alcoholics. In addicted individuals, the pleasure derived from alcohol consumption becomes a compelling—a compulsive—need, either because of natural chemical imbalances or preexisting psychological problems—or, more often, from a combination of both. In any event, the alcoholic is quite literally overwhelmed by his or her desire to drink. Such is the nature of addiction, whether to an “acceptable” drug like alcohol or a “bad” drug like heroin: addicts use because they have to.

Unfortunately, the psychoactive properties of alcohol are strongly conducive to repetitive—addictive—behavior. As with all drugs, the pleasurable effects of alcohol are impermanent. Heaters fade, buzzes wear off the happy haze of those first few drinks ultimately resolves itself to clarity. What’s worse, after the drunk comes the hangover. For alcoholics, the post-use low is particularly painful; their acute sensitivity to the pleasure of drinking is mirrored by an equally acute sensitivity to the pain of its aftermath. Put simply: hangovers hurt more for alcoholics. And that hurt, in turn, gives alcoholics stronger incentive to start drinking again. All told, it makes for what can often amount to a devastatingly vicious cycle.

The point, then, is that the abuse of alcohol—or heroin or crack or any other drug—is not a choice. Nobody “chooses” to be an addict; addicts don’t “prefer” addiction to sobriety. Like all drug abusers, alcoholics are the way the way they are for reasons that lie largely outside the scope of their control. Recognition of that fact—of the extent to which addiction confounds anything we might deign to call individual willpower—is vital for anyone whose life is affected by alcoholism: for addicts themselves, and for the people who love them.

First, for addicts: As noted above, recovery is impossible without understanding. Many alcoholics naively believe that they are “in control” of their alcohol consumption. They believe that they drink when and because they want to, that they could drink less, or even stop drinking, if they chose to do so. This is an exceedingly dangerous state of mind. Again, alcoholism is not, is any conventional sense of the word, a “choice.” The addict who believes he or she can stop drinking without external intervention—that he or she doesn’t need help, or doesn’t even have a problem—is the addict who is doomed to stay addicted. Addiction stems from the compulsive relationship between the individual and his or her drug of choice. Ignorance to the compulsiveness—the uncontrollability—of that relationship only serves to perpetuate the problem.

Such ignorance is no less destructive for those individuals who live with and around alcoholics. Alcoholism, at its core, is a social disease: it affects both the alcoholic and his or her friends and family; it ruins lives on a grand scale, devastates the well-being of everyone it touches. Understanding the nature of the beast is essential to the act of confronting it. If someone you love has an alcohol problem, it is not his or her “fault.” To hate an alcoholic for being addicted to alcohol is like hating a dog for barking: it’s not right, or fair or sensible or even constructive, no matter how much damage the addiction has caused in your own life. More pressingly, if an alcoholic you love tells you that he or she doesn’t have a problem, or doesn’t need help, he or she is wrong. Dead wrong. Remember, alcohol is a drug. Alcoholism is not a choice. Alcohol abusers, like all addicts, need help in order to recover. And if they’re ever going to get that help, someone who loves them—someone like you—has to recognize what’s true and what isn’t. Anything less just isn’t good enough.

(Source: Biological Psychology: An Integrative Approach, by Frederick Toates)