Archive for the 'Alcohol Treatment' Category

Alcohol Treatment

Thursday, February 21st, 2008

Most people with alcoholism, alcohol addiction, or those who suffer from alcohol abuse enter an alcohol rehab treatment center reluctantly due to their denial relating to the severity of their alcohol problem. Family issues, health problems or legal difficulties may prompt admission to an alcohol rehab program, but for those reluctant to enter an alcohol treatment facility, an intervention may be the answer. An intervention is a process which helps some people recognize and accept the need for alcohol rehab. An intervention should only be coordinated and initiated by a licensed intervention specialist. If for some reason you can not locate an interventionist in your area, contact an alcohol rehab program near you. While there are several modalities of alcohol treatment to choose from, those suffering from alcoholism, alcohol dependence or alcohol addiction are best suited for a luxury residential alcohol treatment or rehabilitation program Due to the alcohol withdrawal symptoms associated with recovery from alcoholism and the complexities relating to treating alcohol addiction people generally require all the services an alcohol treatment or rehabilitation program has to offer.

The loyality of the bottle

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

Counselors at Cliffside, Malibu drug and alcohol treatment center stay abreast of all developments in the research of addiction and alcoholism. The following is a snippet from an article found on the NIH web site… “Previous studies established that alcoholism runs in families, but this research has given us the most extensive catalogue yet of the genetic variations that may contribute to the hereditary nature of this disease,” says NIDA Director Dr. Nora D. Volkow. “We now have new tools that will allow us to better understand the physiological foundation of addiction.” “This is an important contribution to studies of the genetics of alcoholism and co-occurring substance use disorders,” adds Dr. Ting-Kai Li, director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA). “The findings will open many new avenues of research into common factors in genetic vulnerability and common mechanisms of disease.” NIDA researchers found genetic variations clustered around 51 defined chromosomal regions that may play roles in alcohol addiction. The candidate genes are involved in many key activities, including cell-to-cell communication, control of protein synthesis, regulation of development, and cell-to-cell interactions. For example, one gene implicated in this studyÑthe AIP1 geneÑis a known disease-related gene expressed primarily in the brain, where it helps brain cells set up and maintain contacts with the appropriate neighboring cells. Many of the nominated genes have been previously identified in other addiction research, providing support to the idea that common genetic variants are involved in human vulnerability to substance abuse.

 

Entering rehab

Thursday, September 27th, 2007

My brother went to an alcohol rehab program and it really turned his ass around. Well, not his ass. It turned him and his life around. He was really bad off. My little brother was a terribly bad drunk and he was constantly drinking and constantly drunk. It was nothing to see him completely out of his mind at eleven in the morning and it was definitely nothing to find him drunk for an entire day. I couldn’t get it. I loved to drink. Hell, I still do. It was hard to imagine being drunk for a whole day, though. My brother started getting so blasted after his divorce with his ex-wife and I could tell he was taking it badly. His drinking was one of the last places for him to go before he began his descent into the downward spiral. We started checking out the internet for an alcohol rehab program that would work for him and we finally found one. When my brother finally ended up at the alcohol rehab program he said that he was immediately glad that he went. He said the things that he learned in alcohol rehab made him happy that he sought out treatment. Nowadays, hardly a day goes by without him telling me how much the alcohol rehab program changed his life and how thankful he is that I took him.

Alcohol Treatment Center a lifestyle maintenance call

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Okay, let’s face it. Having to go to an alcohol treatment center does not in any way make you a bad person. It just means that you need to a little lifestyle maintenance. It’s kind of like being born as a person who grows a unibrow. It doesn’t mean that you’re ugly, you just have to a little landscaping so that you aren’t. Alright, maybe that’s a bad example, but hopefully you’re picking up what I’m putting down. As far as I’m concerned any person with the stones to check themselves in to an alcohol treatment center is definitely living on the rad side of life. I mean, it doesn’t take much to figure out that needing to go to alcohol rehab doesn’t necessarily make you the most eligible bachelor on ‘The Dating Game’, but when it comes to real people who respect real bravery, you’re a pretty kickass mofo. How do know this to be true? Well, because a few years back(two years and seventy-two days to be exact) I had to scoot my backside into alcohol treatment.

Alcohol treatment didn’t really seem like the coolest place in the world to take a vacation, but it was probably the best vacation I could have gone on. Sure it was embarrassing, but being drunken village idiot sucked a lot more. So what, I couldn’t handle my liquor. In the grand scheme of things it’s not as big a deal as some folks want to make it seem. And who cares what those morons think anyway? My life is a gazillion times better than it ever was now and I owe all that to alcohol treatment. Well, I owe it all to alcohol treatment and my super good looks.

The golden ticket

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Alcohol recovery…now that’s something you never want to need. Especially when you’re sure you don’t have a problem. Granted, if you do have a problem the best thing to do is get help for it. But who wants to admit that they have a problem? Even though admitting to having a problem is the first step toward alcohol recovery, it unfortunately is the hardest step to take in that process. Maybe that’s why so many people never make it to the other side of that hill. It’s like someone’s offering you the golden ticket and their saying, “here you go. Here’s the golden ticket. It’s yours and all you have to do to get it is admit that you are a total screw up.” Gee, well, since you make it seem so easy… Can anything be more arduous than that? Admitting that you’ve dropped the ball is all that has to happen in order for you to make your way down the road to recovery. That’s just so wrong on so many levels. But no matter how wrong it is it’s definitely a step in the right direction. I guess that’s why it is the first step toward recovery. Because you can’t expect to help yourself if you’re trying to fool yourself into thinking nothing is wrong. Be true to yourself and the truth will set you free.