Pubdate: Sun, 08 May 2005 Source: Telegraph (NH) Copyright: 2005 Telegraph Publishing Company Contact: http://www.nashuatelegraph.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/885 Author: Barry Timmerman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST RELAPSE Recovering from addiction of any kind presents many challenges, requiring courage, perseverance, vigilance and the willingness to seek support from others. For a teen battling addiction, the challenges can be different from adults. For one, teens have many more enablers than adults do. They are enabled by their peers. They are enabled by their families. They are enabled by the communities they live in. Not all enabling is deliberate. People often mean well, but lack the awareness and the tools to respond effectively to the problem. One such tool is relapse prevention, which is teaching people who are recovering from addiction how to recognize and avoid elements in the environment that will increase their physical and mental craving to use. Let's look at what relapse is. This is important because there is a difference between relapse and lapse. A relapse is when a person re-experiences all the symptoms of the illness from which he or she had recovered. In the case of addiction, it's a return to active use of a psychoactive substance or substances, with the accompanying symptoms of denial, withdrawal, blackouts, mood swings, craving and drug-seeking behavior. A lapse is usually a single episode of use, resulting in a return to non-use. A lapse can be a learning experience, reminding the person that he or she is standing on the brink of disaster. In doing relapse prevention, it's important to assess the difference between a lapse and a relapse. Helping someone recognize what led to his or her use again raises awareness and improves the relapse prevention plan. Like any facet of recovery, the ultimate responsibility for staying in recovery lies with the individual. We can show people the tools, but they have to be willing to use them. An important concept in relapse prevention is recognizing and avoiding triggers. A trigger is any stimulus that produces craving. There are visual triggers, auditory triggers, sensory triggers and olfactory triggers. What makes relapse prevention with teens more challenging is their exposure to triggers they can't avoid. Adults have more control over their environment. Teens are told to avoid associating with others who use. For teens, this is difficult if not impossible, short of locking them up in a controlled environment. Are you going to tell them not to go to school, not to go to work, not to go out? One can't expect teens to live in isolation. The reality is, they are going to be exposed to others in their environment who are either talking about alcohol and other drugs or using them. It's a part of teen culture. When we do relapse prevention with teens, we look at two kinds of triggers: avoidable triggers and unavoidable triggers. Part of the art is helping teens determine the difference between avoidable and unavoidable. Teens need to learn how not to set themselves up for exposure to environmental triggers by becoming aware of what those triggers are, specific to them. One teen's trigger isn't necessarily another teen's trigger. There's a process of helping teens pinpoint what their strongest triggers are, followed by a concrete plan of how to avoid exposure, or what to do if exposed. Here's an example. A teen has identified four major triggers for his or her marijuana use – the smell of marijuana, seeing someone roll a joint, hearing others talk about getting high and being at a certain place in the woods where they used to get high a lot. They have identified safe and unsafe friends. They are at a safe friend's house, when an old using friend shows up. (A safe friend can be someone who isn't into using, someone they can do fun stuff with that doesn't include using.) The old using friend says he has just scored some really good weed and wants to know if anyone wants to go to Mine Falls and get stoned. He pulls out a bag of weed and some papers and begins to roll a joint. Two out of four triggers have just occurred. A relapse-prevention plan helps this individual deal with these unavoidable triggers by making them avoidable in the next few minutes. The obvious plan would be to leave. Teens are big on saving face, so part of the relapse-prevention plan would be creative refusal skills. We would help the teen by having them rehearse things they could say that would allow them to save face and walk away from this potential relapse situation. If they deluded themselves into thinking they could go along for the ride and just watch while others got high, they would be exposed to two more relapse triggers. The result may be a lapse, a relapse, or maybe they don't use this one time, which reinforces a false belief that they can handle these triggers the next time. Another tool we can arm someone with is a positive and negative reinforcer. We elicit a positive mental image connected to the benefits of not using. We then elicit a negative mental image associated with use, which reminds the person why he or she quit using. Some examples of negative images are seeing themselves in the back of a police car, or the looks on the faces of their parents when they had to come get them at the police station, or their boyfriend breaking up with them because of their use. Positive images would be the A they just got on their report card, or being a good role model for their younger sibling, or making the lacrosse team. These added positive and negative images help reinforce making healthy choices when faced with triggers. Here's some feedback for parents of teens with substance-abuse issues: Become aware of triggers around the home. Do you drink in front of your teen? Do you keep beer in the fridge or booze in the house? Are there prescription medications in the medicine cabinet to tempt a teen who's trying not to use? Do you have family events where drinking or other substance use is tolerated? Do you keep a little pot around for special occasions? If your teen's sobriety is important, then be sensitive to his or her need for at least one place where he or she can't be exposed to triggers: home. Until next time, stay safe out there. - ------- Barry Timmerman is coordinator of substance abuse services at The Youth Council in Nashua. He has been a substance abuse professional for 18 years. Readers with questions may e-mail them to Questions also may be mailed to The Telegraph, Straight Talk with Mr. T, PO Box 1008, Nashua, NH 03061, or faxed to the paper at 882-2681. Timmerman is unable to answer letters individually, but readers with further questions or concerns are invited to contact The Youth Council at 889-1090.The advice in this column is intended to provide an understanding of chemical dependency issues, but is not a substitute for treatment. It does not reflect the opinions of The Telegraph or The Youth Council, and is in no way a replacement for the services of a licensed professional counselor.In addition, the youth council is mandated by state law to report any suspicion of child abuse or neglect. Should a letter to "Straight Talk with Mr. T" raise such concerns, the agency will report the information to the state Division for Children, Youth and Families or the Nashua Police Department. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman