Can Recovering Addicts and Alcoholics Attend Holiday Parties Safely?

Obviously, people in early recovery are more vulnerable than folks who have been clean and sober for several years. Newcomers have not yet replaced their old habits — developed over years of using — with newer, healthier reflexes.There is a real possibility that being in a drinking (and perhaps drugging) environment could massively trigger a desire to use. This is also possible when we are further along in recovery, but by then most people have learned to deal better with situations that might be triggers.

Nonetheless, there is no reason that we can’t attend holiday parties with relative safety, so long as we follow some simple guidelines.

Can Recovering Addicts and Alcoholics
Attend Holiday Parties Safely?

Death of Amy Winehouse ‘highlights need for education about drug abuse’

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2011/07/25/death-of-amy-winehouse-highlights-need-for-education-over-drug-abuse-91466-29112392/

Why Go To Meetings?

A Unique Experience

A man can never know what it is like to bear a child. If we can agree on that, then perhaps you’ll be able to follow along with me when I say that no non-addict will ever be able to understand exactly where an addict or alcoholic is coming from.

The experience of addiction is incomprehensible, on a gut level, to anyone who hasn’t been there. I can tell you that withdrawal from heroin, Oxycontin, methadone or other opiates is like the worst case of flu you’ve ever had, multiplied several times, and you still won’t really get it. More

Numbers

I let my 21st sober anniversary go by without any big fuss, but it seems appropriate to make a few comments. I mean, one is without question an “Old Timer” at 21, and we’re supposed to have all that wisdom and say really deep stuff, right?

Well, in my case, not so much.  More

If you keep on doing what you used to do, expect to get what you used to get.

We recently received a letter from a person who was detoxed at home, and who is sitting around feeling miserable and wondering when the symptoms of Post Acute Withdrawal are going to ease up.

There are two issues here.  First of all, it’s not uncommon for people to become depressed when they stop drinking or using other drugs.  They may even have been attempting to self-medicate  previously-existing problems with the drugs and/or alcohol.  In any case, quitting without support is likely to create feelings — both psychological and physical — that folks new to recovery are simply not equipped to handle alone.

There’s a saying, “When you keep on doing what you used to do, you’ll keep on getting what you used to get.”   This is akin to the well-known “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.”  What did we do when we were using?  We isolated.  Often we drank or drugged alone, or with people to whom we were able to relate only superficially due to our mutual conditions.  And, of course, every drunk and addict knows that feeling of  alone-ness while surrounded by other people.  Drunks and addicts isolate — emotionally, if not physically.

It therefore follows, as the night the day, that isolation is not a good thing for us.  It gives us too much time to feel sorry for ourselves, too much time to mull over old wrongs and resentments, too much time doing the same mental gymnastics we used to do, too much time to decide that if it doesn’t get any better than this, we might as well use.

If you’re sitting around home, down in the dumps,  get to a 12-step meeting, make some new friends, and begin to change your life.  If that doesn’t work, keep going anyway, but consider getting some professional help for your depression.

Turns Out No One Is Very Good At Estimating Drunkenness

Sloshed, trollied, hammered, plastered. We’ve done a sterling job of inventing words for the inebriated state, but when it comes to judging from their behaviour how much a person has drunk, we could do (a lot) better.

It truly is an issue of how much we’ve had to drink, not how we act.  The effect of the drug on our brains is consistent, but because we can learn to act sober, we fool even ourselves.

http://bps-research-digest.blogspot.com/2010/08/how-good-are-we-at-estimating-other.html

Is it hard to come off cannabis?

Q&A: Is it hard to come off cannabis?

Next Post

Experiencing Teen Drama Overload? Blame Biology : NPR

Tweens and teens go through developmental changes that can be exasperating for parents and can make them feel ineffective. Experts talk about those trying teen years and how parents can learn to cope more effectively while their child moves toward adulthood.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129150658

Divorce May Be Contagious

Half of marriages in the United States eventually end in divorce. In addition to just being a socially-accepted norm, a new study reveals that divorce may actually be contagious.

http://brainblogger.com/2010/08/14/breaking-up-is-not-so-hard-to-do/

Previous Older Entries

tumblr visit counter
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 197 other followers