Pubdate: Sat, 25 Nov 2006 Source: Maple Ridge News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Maple Ridge News Contact: http://www.mapleridgenews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1328 Author: Kristen Thompson A JOURNEY INTO SUBSTANCE ABUSE A Maple Ridge addictions counsellor is challenging mainstream perceptions of substance abuse and treatment therapy in his new book about a novel approach to substance abuse therapy. A Long Night's Journey Into Day, written by Geoff Thompson, a clinical addictions counsellor at Maple Ridge Treatment Centre, is a psychobiography of American Nobel and Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Eugene O'Neill, whose recovery from alcoholism is used as a model for a new approach to addictions therapy promoted by Thompson. O'Neill's struggle, exposed through his writings and interviews, shows how addiction and recovery are not about a medical condition, but about a person overcoming an existential crisis. Thompson suggests mainstream perceptions of substance abuse incorrectly assume addiction is simply a medical or moral defect, rather than a part of the human condition, and proposes the use of an existential psychological method to treatment which, he purports, matches the manner in which O'Neill overcame his own struggle. O'Neill, who died 53 years ago this week at 65, was only able to quit drinking when he found a life worth living. His recovery, said Thompson, depended not on refraining from drinking, but on resolving his own spiritual crisis. He said the perceived lack of a meaningful life, as in O'Neill's case, fuels an addict's dependence on drugs or alcohol. "They're struggling as any other person does. [Many] can't rely on any kind of middle class respectability. They can't say, 'Well, at least I'm a good father or have a job.' They don't have that luxury. They have to face the cosmos naked, and there's no easy way around facing loneliness and boredom. So they use the drug as part of a coping mechanism to survive in that existence." "[O'Neill] was as big an addict as we have at the Maple Ridge treatment centre," said Thompson. It was his approach to life that helped him recover, and Thompson said he can help his patients in the same way. He said that mainstream therapy -- which teaches harm reduction and coping skills -- doesn't do enough to address the underlying cause of addiction, which centre around feelings of displacement, disconnect and a sense of having no purpose in life. Recovery, he said, requires finding a resolution to the deeper existential crisis that fuels drug use. This, he said, is the existential-spiritual approach to understanding and treating addiction. "The idea is actually thousands of years old, but it's recently emerged as a new way of looking at addiction," said Thompson. "It's on the cutting edge of psychology. There's no pathology involved. We're dealing with individuals instead of making sweeping statements. We don't pin it to a drug. The way it's phrased by neurologists is that addiction is not in the drug, addiction is in the person. There's something in the person that makes them vulnerable to that drug." Thompson said the medical community often uses the same existential-spiritual template when counselling geriatric patients and patients in palliative care, but only recently is it being applied to addictions. The title of the book plays on that of an O'Neill play called Long Day's Journey Into Night, an autobiographical account of living with a drug-addicted mother and alcoholic father. Thompson switched the words in the title to represent the struggle through the dark night of addiction to emerge into the light of health. Thompson has been a counsellor at MRTC, a residential addiction centre for men, since 1999, and received his masters degree in counselling psychology at Trinity Western. He is in the process of contributing to another book focusing on the application of this therapeutic process. The first book, he said, lays the groundwork, and "deals with the theoretical aspects of addiction, and now we're going to actually write an application for it." Thompson will co-author the follow-up book with his mentor, Dr. Paul Wong, a clinician and researcher out of Ontario. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine