Pubdate: Sat, 4 Jan 2003 Source: Summit Daily News (CO) Copyright: 2003 Summit Daily News Contact: http://www.summitdaily.com/home.php Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/587 Author: Kimberly Nicoletti TAKING CONTROL OF ADDICTIONS SUMMIT COUNTY - Rob M. drank or smoked pot daily from age 13 to 23. He spent the last two years of his drinking in Frisco at bars within walking distance of his apartment. "I came up here to ski and to party," he said. "My vision was to ski first, party second and work third. Instead, it became party first, ski second and work third. I lost a lot of ski days because I'd sit in the Moosejaw or wherever and drink all night, so I couldn't get up to ski. I wanted the skiing to be more important to me, but basically getting drunk was more important." Rob came to Summit County at age 21 looking for peace and contentment. He ended up smoking a lot of pot, drinking eight to 10 beers and five to six shots daily and staying up for three-day stretches, using cocaine, acid or crystal meth. "When you stay up for three days, people go to sleep, and you're still drinking," he said. "It's very antisocial, even for the partiers. You just get into a different class of people I don't want to be with. I used to have to pay people to work for me because I couldn't possibly go in because I had been up all night." He drank because he felt maladjusted socially, and using chemicals made him wild and fun. He felt an internal drive to drink, even though he knew he'd end up oversleeping, blacking out or feeling remorseful about melodramatic or angry outbursts. "I wanted to party long after other people did," he said. "I felt very alive when I was drunk. I knew I was out of control because I could never leave the bars before 2 a.m. I just couldn't stop when I got going. If I had a videotape, it'd be frightening to see what I did and said." After two ski seasons of intense partying, he went back to college but found he drank the same way. Feeling depressed, he went to the school's mental health center and told the counselor the truth about his drinking. He also had a friend who recently quit drinking, and his father and brother had attended Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) for years. Three weeks after talking to the counselor, he went to AA but relapsed within 21 days. "Once I started drinking again, I put all ideas of recovery out of my mind," he said. "It was like I never stopped drinking. But then, on July 4, 1990, I was at Pinkie's in Arvada, and a voice in my head said, "You don't have to do this anymore. You can be done if you want.' AA showed me there was a way out. It showed me there was an alternative." He's been sober for 12 1/2 years and is about to launch his own business on the Front Range. "My life is not perfect now, but I have hope. I can go anywhere and do anything I want, and I'm not limited by the lurking disasters," he said. "For me, there was always a disaster hanging around the corner when I was drinking, and now I don't have to live like that." Resources for Breaking the Cycle of Addiction Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith began AA in 1935 to help themselves and others who suffered from the disease of alcoholism. It has grown to include 2 million members in 150 countries, according to the AA World Services Web site. AA is a program of total abstinence. Members maintain sobriety one day at a time by sharing their experiences, strengths and hopes at group meetings and by working the 12 Steps with a sponsor. The 12 Steps begin with an admission of problems with alcohol. They continue with believing a higher power can help (which may or may not be God), turning one's life over to it, taking a thorough self-inventory, sharing it and making amends. Members also maintain sobriety by taking personal inventories daily, building conscious contact with a higher power and helping other alcoholics. Other programs use AA's 12 Steps and traditions, including Alanon, for families and friends of alcoholics, and a host of anonymous programs for eating disorders, chemical abuse, gambling, emotional problems, sex and workaholism. Other, Christ-centered programs, such as Celebrate Recovery, founded in 1991, incorporate the 12-Steps but use principles based on the Beatitudes. It also adds accountability partners, who hold members responsible for their program. "The major difference (from AA) is we say who our higher power is, and that's Jesus Christ, and it's for anyone with hurts, habits and hangups (whereas AA is for anyone with a desire to stop drinking)," said group leader Carla Zinn Rigger. Another Christ-centered program, Sunrise Ministries, uses Scripture, prayer and discussion rather than the 12 Steps for recovery. "It's for the addicted and brokenhearted - anything that has control over you or that you feel is out of control," said group leader Danika Gravelle. "We really let the Lord do the work. We're just facilitating the meeting." In response to recovery groups, Jack and Lois Trimpey founded Rational Recovery (RR) in 1986. RR does not believe in the disease concept of addiction and does not support involvement in recovery groups. Instead, it teaches thinking skills designed to result in permanent abstinence from alcohol and other drugs. Thoughts and feelings supporting drug use are called the "addictive voice," an enemy to be defeated. RR focuses on the addicts' control over their lives, rather than on a higher power. Group discussions, books and personal instruction at RR centers teach the cognitively-based method. Each method of recovery has groups in Summit County. [sidebar] RESOURCES FOR RECOVERY: Alcoholics Anonymous (12-step based): (970) 453-2905, www.aa.org Alanon (12-step based for families and friends of alcoholics): (970) 513-4990, www.al-anon.alateen.org Celebrate Recovery (Christ centered): (970) 468-1882, www.celebraterecovery.com Sunrise Ministries (Christ centered): (719) 836-1587 Rational Recovery (cognitively based): www.rational.org - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake