About Helping the Addict!
I spent most of my life addicted to drugs, one or another. Actually I had three periods of addiction that each centered on a different drug-or-choice. For a long time I was just a user and anything that altered my mind was OK! My first period of use exclusive to one drug featured “Cocaine”. Second on center stage was “Alcohol”. Finally, the absolute destroyer was “Methamphetamines”! The whole scenario covered life from ages 11 to 45! I was a full-blown addict for nearly 30 of these years. Mind you, I was for various substantial lengths of time, what is termed as a “functional addict”! This is actually a misconception because I only “appeared” to be functional. A lot was going on that I was able to hide from the casual observer, and even most relatively close family and friends. This is a story of it’s own! The point to be made is this… the most tragic commonality over this period of three decades in addiction was… the pain, fear and grief that I brought on those who loved me, were part of my life, or inadvertently got in the way of my using! The Victims…
Addiction is such an annihilator of a user’s life that they, users, are almost always the predominant “focus of attention”! Not only that, but society’s focus is directed at them because they wreak so much havoc on it’s structure and the safety of the citizens and their property.
True enough, it’s high time that this problem be addressed through an educated, open-minded method of problem solving. Treating addicts as criminals has failed for long enough. The disease concept is really the only hope for a solution that has a positive outcome for everyone involved, which is, quite frankly… everyone! Treatment programs understand the importance of who it is that is around an addict on a regular basis. The problem is that these people are being subjected to that addict for years, sometimes decades, before the first treatment episode begins. With some education, advice and concern these victims can help themselves while the addicts’ addiction and life circumstances are still only leading up to treatment. In fact, helping you, if you are reading this, I think I can safely say “you”… you will probably be helping the addict as much as you do yourself. With nothing but the best of intentions, the one’s who love an addict the most, are usually their greatest enablers. That’s because you are the easiest to use! Though it’s often subconscious, not always but often… they can count on being able to get away with abusing your love. It’s not meanness, heartlessness or carelessness… it’s just addiction changing the brain into a sick one. This is how you are going to learn to protect yourself and shield yourself from much of the harm that you can inflict on yourself, or allow to be inflicted upon you! Addiction is like a beast you have encountered by surprise and you have to figure out how to fight back with what you have available, at the time. If you don’t do this, you’ll suffer nearly as much as the addict does!
The one thing you have that they do not is your own mind, but it will suffer too, if you can’t become open-minded and teachable. It’s not rocket science, though. It’s really more about being “willing” to learn, and ”willing” to change, than it is about being “able” to do these things. We have to learn to be, objective, in our dealings with the addict that we love, or care about, and love and concern make objectivity a very difficult proposition.
Believe me, when you come to know what makes an addict an addict, a lot of the difficulty becomes less ominous because, for one reason, you can most often stop blaming yourself. You’ll learn that blame” doesn’t need to be assigned. It doesn’t matter where the fault lies, so you can even stop blaming them. Nobody needs to be the “scapegoat”.
A lot of what you’ve let get to you, just simply has to be let go of. Does it matter if someone is genetically predisposed to have cancer? I mean, that’s not going to make you stop fighting it, is it? So what if your grandmother and your mother both had diabetes. Hell, at least you’re going to have people around who know what’s going on and what needs or needs not, to be done, if you end up getting it too, right!
Confrontation only works well if you know how to do it well, and with an addict confrontation not done well is usually a disaster for both parties. Pleading to love, and to common sense, never works, at least, it doesn’t work until denial has been properly addressed.
David R Carroll, CADCA is a certified drug and alcohol abuse Counselor. He has served as a Treatment Program Director. He has worked going into California prisons recruiting inmates for Aftercare Treatment programs. He is primarily a couselor drawn to the satisfaction of helping others to have a life again, or for the first time.
More Meth Drug Addiction Info:
- Sports Car Zone » Video: BMW M3 GTS performance specs revealed
- Three Decades After Birth, The 1981 Chevy Monte Carlo Becomes Cool …
- GTA 4 annihilator guide part 5 | Formula 1 Game
- Ronnie James Dio Gets A Tribute From Tenacious D
- GooseBumpmap: Tactical Intervention | Rock, Paper, Shotgun
- Concept 2
- It Took Three Decades to Become a Food Destination? at Phoodie …
- Why Do I Fear Hospitals
- Interview With Andy Seiler of MLB Bonus Baby
- The Most Important Qualification for a Supreme Court Justice: Life …