Pubdate: Wed, 21 Sep 2005 Source: Freeman, The (Philippines) Copyright: 2005 The Freeman Contact: http://www.thefreeman.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3437 Author: Vicente G. Aldanese Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Philippines MORE ABOUT DRUG ADDICTION: A CLEARER UNDERSTANDING OF PERSONALITY OF THE ADDICT After fifteen years of drug and alcohol abuse, and then another fourteen years of active drug and alcohol addiction, I felt so lost - confused and angry because I could not understand what was happening to me. For the last five to seven years of my active addiction, I would promise myself almost everyday that I would not drink or do drugs ever again. But the promise, no matter how sincere, never lasted. I would stay abstinent for a day or even a week, but eventually I would go back to drinking or doing drugs and almost immediately all hell would break loose again. I eventually started to hate myself and even blamed the whole world and life itself for my problems. But that was because I never understood what was happening to me. Here's what it was like. Most of us have been unwilling to admit we were real addicts. For years I denied the fact that I was addicted to drugs and could not function without them. I used every reason, excuse or explanation I could find to tell myself that "I am not like them." No person likes to think he is bodily and mentally different from his fellows. I never wanted to accept the fact that drugs had control over me. No way! Everyone out there who did not agree with me was the one who was insane. I used to say, "Look at me I still have a job and two cars, I can't be an addict - I use drugs, drugs do not use me." My first attempt was, "I'll just use drugs only on weekends". Then it became only at night. Then I said, I'd only use on special occasions. Then I said, that I would just drink beer and take marijuana. Then I said, I'd just use two hundred pesos worth a day. Then I would compare myself to people I believed were worse off than me. I even tried to switch shabu and alcohol for tranquilizers. But the fact is nothing worked. The idea that somehow, someday, we will be able to control our drug abuse is a great obsession of every addict. I tried everything I could think of, and whatever anyone would suggest, as long as it did not say, stop using drugs. But nothing worked. I just led myself to the usual pattern of use and then get into problems and so on. The persistence of this illusion is astonishing. No matter how many times I failed, I kept getting up and tried again to control my drug use. Many of us pursue this into the gates of insanity or death. Like some of my friends, quite a good number of them have died from overdose or other drug related deaths. We learned that we had to fully concede to our innermost selves that we were addicts/alcoholics. First step in recovery is to come to terms with reality. I have to admit that I had a problem with drugs. I had to let my conscious and sub-conscious minds agree that if I did not stop I might end up in jail, go crazy or die. The delusion that may be we are just like anybody else, has to be destroyed. I had to say to myself "I did not use drugs because I had too much problems. I had problems because I used too much drugs." It is a fact that no real addict ever recovers control. All of us felt at times that we were regaining control, but such intervals - usually brief - were inevitably followed by still less control, which led in time to pitiful and incomprehensible demoralization. Today I know and am 100% sure that if I do drugs again, no matter how long I had stayed clean and sober, I will end up continuing from where I last left off, and most probably even worse. Over any considerable period, we get worse, never better. So I had to learn to stay away from that first hit or drink, because I know that it's all I need to go back in hell. Today, I understand why I needed treatment. I could not do it alone. My wise ideas got me into problems. So, I needed the help and guidance of those that had gone through it before me and learn from them. I needed to learn, to listen, so that I could learn. Today I know that one is too many and a thousand is never enough when it comes to addiction. We are like people who have lost their legs; they never grow new ones. Neither will there be any kind of treatment which will make addicts of our kind like other people. We have tried every imaginable remedy. Once I crossed the line from drug abuse to addictive drug use, there is no going back. I will never be the same again, as I will not be able to take drugs and drink socially ever again. But because of my wanting to control my drugging I will keep on trying new ways. In some instances, there was brief recovery, followed always by a still worse relapse. Physicians who are familiar with addiction agree there is no such thing as making a normal drug user out of an addict. Today, even the World Health Organization believes and accepts addiction as a disease, of which people may die. Addicts keep on trying to control their drugging, but as of today, no such cure has been found. So today, I know I am a recovering addict and I know that my addiction will be with me for as long as I live. But just like a diabetic who does not take sugar and learns to live a healthy lifestyle, as long as I do not pick up that first drink or drug, my life will be reasonably happy, peaceful and serene. Today I know that I have the freedom to make the choice to be an addict in recovery, and not be an actively participating addict who is still using and drinking and whose life is miserable. Despite all we can say, many who are real addicts are not going to believe that they are in that class. By every form of self-deception and experimentation, they will try to prove themselves exceptions to the rule, therefore non-addict. If anyone who is showing inability to control his/her drugging can do the right-about-face and drug like a gentleman/lady, our hats are off to him/her. Heaven knows, many of us have tried hard enough and long enough to drink and drug like other people. We've tried to use every imaginable way to control our drug use but the end result has always been back to a life of guilt, shame, paranoia, frustration and self-hatred So what do we do about this? Some treatment centers say the TC (Therapeutic Community) model works, then there are those who use the 12-step model who claim they are more effective, yet others claim that a combination of the two is the best program. There are even some treatment centers that treat their clients/patients like criminals and practice harsh, physical and inhuman treatment centers outside of Cebu with the hope that nobody will ever find out that they have an addict in the family. Well, in my own experience, the supposed secret of my drug addiction was in reality "a secret that everybody knew about". We at Recovery House do not have any claims to be the best. We have no claims to be either the TC or 12-step model of rehabilitation, though we believe that both models have their advantages. We offer the Recovery House Treatment Program - a program that strives to help drug dependents recover from Drug Addiction through discipline, responsibility and understanding in a humanistic manner of treatment. Some say we are a combination of both TC & 12-step models, but we prefer to say that we offer the Recovery House Treatment Model. We make use of Psychiatrists, Psychologists, Medical Doctors and Recovering Addicts to offer a more holistic type of treatment at a price that is more affordable than most other private centers. For more information, please contact us at 234-0355 or 231-5229 or e-mail us at - ---