NPR has two current pieces about drinking…
27 Dec 2010 Leave a Comment
…. One deals with the question of how much is too much. Personally, I don’t think it goes quite far enough with its suggested precautions. Other than that and a misinformed remark from some “expert” that you should “exercise good judgement” about when to stop drinking (that is the portion of the brain that’s affected first by alcohol), it’s a good read, with some food for thought.
Link: When Does Moderate Drinking Become A Problem?
The other segment deals with permissive parenting versus strict parenting, and how they affect the likelihood of teens drinking. The results will surprise you.
Link: Parenting Style Plays Key Role In Teen Drinking
Via the Sunrise Detox Blog
Chaz Comments on “Outside Help”
13 Nov 2010 1 Comment
in Alcohol and Other Drugs, Depression, Emotional Health, Recovery, Sober Living
We were honored by a comment from Chaz at Chaz Recovering, one of the best recovery blogs out there, in our opinions. He adds the following to the previous article. (Used with his permission.)
Hi Shel… thanks for this. I concur.
I have often heard said by many 12 step members that “The Program” is all we need. To them I would suggest, “speak for yourself”.
I was about 2 years sober and making good progress in recovery when it became very noticeable that I was frequently severely blue and moody. My wife asked if I would please consult a doctor. I was at the time under the care of a General Practitioner who specialized in addiction recovery. His main medical advice was participation in AA or other relevant 12 step program.
He did an initial assessment for physical damage due to drugs or alcohol and then monitored for about a year, but after that, he mainly directed us to 12 step. He essentially acted as a co-sponsor with medical knowledge to many of us.
So who better to take my blue funks to than him? This doctor is extremely cautious to diagnose depression to any of his patients because so many come to him claiming depression and requesting prescriptions. Which he feels is the natural thing for a recovering alcoholic or addict to do.
So he wisely refered me out for a second opinion to concur one way or other if I was truly suffering from clinical depression and if medication was the best approach for me. This referral landed me in the office of a wonderful psychiatrist who also mainly works with addicts/alcoholics, and he himself is one of us, having been sober some 20+ years.
He too was cautious to dispense prescriptions for anti-D’s. Again, chemical reprieve is what most addicts and alcoholics are knowingly or unknowingly wanting. So his approach was to exhaust all non-chemical approaches first. This led to a wonderful set of sessions on Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. The outcome was an amazing lifting of the sad and anxious feelings that plagued me for most of my life. I practice CBT to this day and have the most amazing reprieve from sadness and worry that the rooms of AA were never able to give me.
Who knows what the originators of AA meant when they wrote the original material? We do know that the landscape of our culture has changed dramatically since the 1930′s. Each of us needs what we need. And frankly, I do not see that it is the rightful place of any AA member to tell another what he/she needs or doesn’t need medically or psychologically.
Some are well-intentioned. To be a little more blunt, some are busy-bodies. Some need to be needed so they dispense advice to feel important. AAs are all works in progress and a lot of us are still pretty sick. AA is there to help us get sober. Any other benefit is a bonus. So I caution AA advisors to stick to AA advice.
For me, my dysfunctions are multi-faceted. So I will seek recovery in the same way.
Ciao.
Chaz
Addicts, Alcoholics and Holiday Parties: What’s A Hostess To Do?
12 Nov 2010 Leave a Comment
in Alcohol and Other Drugs, Family and Friends, Life Issues, Sober Living
Bill, over at Sunrise Detox Blog, has written a great article about dealing with party guests who are in recovery. Please spread it around. It’s good stuff.
Addicts, Alcoholics and Holiday Parties:What’s A Hostess To Do?
Full disclosure: “Bill” is our own dear Bill, as well as my husband.
Why Might I Need “Outside Help?”
11 Nov 2010 4 Comments
in 12 Steps, Alcohol and Other Drugs, Emotional Health, Life Issues, Recovery, Therapy
Some of the people in the recovery fellowships are inclined to tell us that everything we need to recover can be found in the rooms of the fellowship, and that we don’t need anything but the Steps and a good sponsor in order to stay sober.
These people mean well, and their statements were pretty close to accurate
back in the days when “therapy” meant years with a Freudian analyst who, most times, wouldn’t even tell you how you were coming along. Those sessions were expensive, and have lately been shown to have been of less value than one might have hoped. Back in “the day,” useful feedback was more readily available in a 12-step group than from many professionals.
Many do find that the rooms are all they need, but some of us may discover that we have issues beyond our drinking and drugging that could benefit from a little extra “outside help.” For example, some of us may have issues that were masked by alcohol and/or drugs, but that begin to plague us once we are clean and sober. Some of us may need skilled help to dig out things we have tried to forget. We may simply need to develop a level of trust with a professional that we are not able to reach with a sponsor or other person in recovery.
The current generation of addiction therapists are trained in ways that Dr. Freud never imagined. Most have a variety of treatment skills that can be matched to different client needs. A trained guide can help keep us on the track when our denial kicks in and we try to tippy-toe around important issues. Group therapy can be the source of unconditional love like we have never felt before. Finally, we may need a professional who can evaluate our issues and suggest other options.
It may very well be true that all you need is the fellowship of the rooms, and we are convinced that it is virtually impossible to remain in a healthy state of recovery without them. But some of us need — or want — more than that, and an experienced addiction therapist (perhaps also in recovery) can often help us cut right to the heart of our issues and save us a world of pain.
Alcohol Messes Up Kids’ Brains Way More Than Adult Brains
09 Nov 2010 Leave a Comment
in Alcohol Addiction, Alcohol and Other Drugs, Denial Tags: adolescent brain alcohol, teen drinking
Alcohol Messes Up Kids’ Brains Way More Than Adult Brains – Sunrise Detox Blog
“I love smoking pot, but I think I may have a problem. I smoke it every day, and when I can’t get it, I drink…”
04 Nov 2010 Leave a Comment
in 12 Steps, Alcohol and Other Drugs, Denial, Questions & Answers
Sound familiar? Read on…
For Hoarders, The Mess Begins In The Mind
03 Nov 2010 Leave a Comment
in Hoarding, Life Issues, Therapy
Researchers now believe these people have always been hoarders, and that compulsive hoarding is an anxiety disorder that gets worse with time. Frequently, the problem first emerges in childhood or adolescence. But people often aren’t “found out” until they’re older, often when their homes present fire hazards or neighbors complain.
Neat Stamp! Wish they were still available.
02 Oct 2010 Leave a Comment
in Alcohol and Other Drugs, Recovery, Treatment
From Vicarious Rising
Boxer Says Alcohol, Cocaine No Problem
21 Sep 2010 Leave a Comment
in Alcohol and Other Drugs, Denial, Treatment
Ricky Hatton, a British boxer currently in treatment for “depression,” denies drug addiction or alcohol abuse:
“…Hatton, whose treatment at The Priory clinic is for depression, also said: “I’m not the slightest bit worried about the cocaine. Problem? What problem?
“He said his drinking is not an issue either, after confessing to downing nearly 50 pints of Guinness a week.
“You would associate alcoholism with shorts like whisky and vodka – but I have never really had that,” the News of the World quotes him as saying.”
Grandparents Need To Grieve, Too!
14 Sep 2010 Leave a Comment
in Grief and Loss, Life Issues
An excellent article from AARP about the support grandparents need after the loss of a grandchild.
Indeed, grandparents often are the forgotten grievers. Standing in the background, trying to be strong for their own son or daughter, grandparents are called upon to play the difficult role of parents to their grieving children, while also staring into the void left by the death of a grandchild. How should they act? What should they say to a son or daughter who has just lost the most precious possession?


