Archive for November, 2011

What is This Thing Called Addiction?

November 30th, 2011

When I began working in the field of addiction 30 years ago, most clients were automatically labeled addicts, (yes, shocking but true) just as most clinicians were either recovered individuals or members of addiction-troubled families. Of course, the field has evolved and what was once held to be gospel truth has been modified and re-labeled. The purpose of this brief paper serves to highlight the confusion and complexities inherent when assigning the label “Addiction”.

Addiction may be:

• Disease/illness; Disorder DSM-IV-TR, (insurance reimbursement)
• Not illness but can create lots of physical illnesses
• Myth of Alcoholism (Herbert Fingarette; scientific data)
• Concept, not illness (Jellinek)
• Spiritual depravity, character defects – AA fellowship only salvation (AA)
• Hedonism – following the pleasure principle – feels good (our limbic system)
• Everyone is addicted (Andrew Weil, Harvard Conference presentation)
• Genetically programmed (unproven, research not universally validated)
• Big multi-billion dollar business
• Treatment and discomfort depends on the healthcare providers’ projection (Ellen Langer, Harvard)
• Resulting from abuse and trauma
• Life-style issues
• Once an addict – always an addict vs. once a human being – always a human being
• Organismic self-regulation, creative adjustment to what is
• My theory is better than yours philosophy!

The above bullet points are not inclusive and perhaps none speak to each reader. My heart goes out to clients and clinicians for both are, one might say forced, to give a diagnosis that pretty much will stay with an individual for life i.e. failed attempts to purchase life or health insurance etc. Are any of our noble attempts really helpful? Statistics vary hugely; it all depends on who provides them – each program is the best on the web. The questions really become: Can a label alone define anything? Who is the client? What is his/her experience; a good question because some will say addicted individuals can’t think clear enough for recall or have warped perceptions. Others will claim that there is no cure; what does that mean? Why bother? Who is the individual who has learned to overuse substances? Are they embodied in their drinking, drug-using activities?

In conclusion, my professional belief is that what is, is and whatever works, works. I see each individual as a wonderful, complex, highly unique individual who trusts or learns to trust me that s/he is deserving. Kierkegaard wrote that “if you label me you negate me”; a powerful statement that invites all professionals to have an open mind, an open heart, to see and experience the client/professional relationship not as two separate, isolated human beings but in an I/Thou co-created dialogical relationship. This is how we both experience our working together. Believe me, it isn’t always easy. You may see it differently and I would really love to hear your experience and position on the issue of “Addiction.”

How Can Drug Testing Save Us

November 29th, 2011

Addiction of one type or another is a part of life whether in the form of gambling, drinking, caffeine or tobacco and yet it is only for the addiction to illegal substances that people are ridiculed, shamed and abandoned. Today, scientific evidence proves that brain function is actually altered by addiction, making sobriety extremely difficult to achieve.

Thought to be caused primarily by environmental factors such as a family’s belief system, involvement with a drug using peer group or passed from generation to generation through genetics, addiction is frequently caused by a traumatic event or a series of events that create an emotional pain so intense that a person chooses to use drugs as a means of mental and emotional escape. Once a physical addiction has been established, the feeling of pleasure that is received by the brain is altered, making it extremely difficult for a user to quit even when they want to.

Effective prevention is the preferred method of dealing with addiction and can be achieved through parenting that emphasizes open communication with children, anti-drug programs through school and state and random drug testing. Also effective, but underutilized, is abstinence. Frequently, casual or occasional users who only intend to try a drug, find great pleasure and relaxation in its use. The casual use then becomes a daily habit and the daily habit eventually leads to a full-blown, out of control addiction. It is the rare drug abuser who intends to end up a powerless addict.

Drug testing is often used to effectively motivate a drug abuser to accept treatment because it is a factual, scientific measurement of toxins in the body that is difficult to deny. Drug testing is frequently used during treatment as well to help ensure that a person is maintaining their sobriety. It is not uncommon for relapses to occur four, five or even more times.

It is during these long, dark days of loneliness and struggle that a person needs support, encouragement and understanding more than ever. Friends and especially relatives may find it difficult to continue supporting someone who they have judged as being too weak or lazy to overcome an addiction. It often requires a team consisting of doctors, an ongoing support group and close friends and family to aid in the recovery of a loved one. Successful, sustained sobriety is greatly influenced by a high level of continuing support.

Drug Use – Advantages and Disadvantages

November 28th, 2011

Rampant, often unchecked use of drugs is a malaise that has been plaguing our society, and especially our younger generation for quite some time. It has grown quickly from a psychological bad malaise, a bad habit to a dangerous social evil, and in many countries, invite strict punitive action. Countries across the world try to combat this evil using combination’s of public awareness regarding the evils of drug use, severe clampdowns on drug usage/trafficking and penal impositions. However, this is still not enough as drug trafficking has proliferated across social strata, and is not limited to isolated groups of the society. So why exactly is drug usage considered to be one of the most debilitating and potentially dangerous of social evils?

One of the most primary reasons why consumption and business dealings on drugs are declared illegal internationally is because of the tremendous damage they cause to the human body. Drugs usually are of two kinds, and act as general nervous stimulants that can almost supercharge the brain and the nervous system for brief amounts of time. For that amount of time, the user has no sense of personal identity and this phase is usually described as a phase of euphoric detachment, while the user loses common consciousness. However, this effect is fleeting and does not last long. Drug-induced euphoria lasts for a very short time, usually culminating in sever hangovers and strains on the human body, which might manifest in physical and psychological reactions.

Drugs are generally hallucinogenic compounds that are primarily of two types, Organic and inorganic. Organic drugs are usually extracted from plants, and processed and consumed usually by burning them like tobacco. Inorganic compounds are much more difficult to obtain, as they are manufactured in pharmaceutical laboratories and are generally available in the form of tablets, pills and fluid solutions. Scientific studies have actually revealed that inorganic drugs/narcotic agents are more life-threatening and potentially debilitating in nature than their organic counterparts, even though prolonged drug use of either could result in serious consequences.

It might be said that drug use is actually dependent on more than one conditions and criterion. There are, in reality, numerous reasons that increase the usage of drugs within a particular demographic cross-section. These reasons could range from social, psychological, economical or just out of biological dependency. One reason why sustained usage of drug is deemed so dangerous to life and health is that it creates a sense of dependency within the user, who feels habituated by the use of drugs. Irrespective of the original stimulus, the consumption of drug becomes the primary objective in these cases, and the user often goes to extreme lengths to maintain the habit of drug use.