Food & Drink0 min ago
Trying To Treat Addiction Issues
37 Answers
Is treating addiction issues (alcohol, drugs, gambling etc) futile?
What I mean is, shouldnt the underlying CAUSE of addiction be treated instead?
Reading dieseldick's post below Re: struggling with drink, its obvious that trying to treat his alcohol issues would be flogging a dead horse unless he had some help managing his other issues? (apologies to dieseldick, just using your post as an example). 12 step programmes to 'treat' addictions dont have a very good track record eg
http:// www.psm ag.com/ books-a nd-cult ure/75- years-a lcoholi cs-anon ymous-t ime-adm it-prob lem-742 68
The link echoes not only my own experience but dozens (if not hundreds) of people that Ive known over the years and yet the public are led to believe that these programmes 'work'. Thats NOT to say that they dont work for SOME.
People aquire addictions for various and diverse reasons but to my mind its like sticking a plaster on a broken bone most of the time...it seems to be 'medicine' but is actually useless.
Appriciate any thoughts,
thank you.
What I mean is, shouldnt the underlying CAUSE of addiction be treated instead?
Reading dieseldick's post below Re: struggling with drink, its obvious that trying to treat his alcohol issues would be flogging a dead horse unless he had some help managing his other issues? (apologies to dieseldick, just using your post as an example). 12 step programmes to 'treat' addictions dont have a very good track record eg
http://
The link echoes not only my own experience but dozens (if not hundreds) of people that Ive known over the years and yet the public are led to believe that these programmes 'work'. Thats NOT to say that they dont work for SOME.
People aquire addictions for various and diverse reasons but to my mind its like sticking a plaster on a broken bone most of the time...it seems to be 'medicine' but is actually useless.
Appriciate any thoughts,
thank you.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.indeed Nailit, but sometimes (often?) the person's addiction takes them to a place where they can't cope with anything. The addiction needs addressing first so that the person is then in a place where they can face and address whatever the underlying issue is. I don't think that any addiction treatment advertises itself as the whole cure to whatever the problem is, only as a method of controlling the addiction.
pixie while food isn't as addictive in the same way that alcohol is, there is (somewhere, can't find it at the mo) research evidence to show that the body can accustom itself to sugar rush by dropping the blood sugar in anticipation. So if someone has a carb heavy elevenses every day, if they skip a day the body will still drop the blood sugar at that time and make the person feel that they "need" food. Also of course people do get addicted to the sugar high itself. I think that the line between a physical addiction and a PURELY psychological one is pretty blurred.
The trouble is that the alcohol affects how you think and how you reason.
Perhaps if you looked back at some of your posts on here that you have put up when you have had a few drinks, you might see what I mean.
For this reason, you kind of have to be off the drink before you can deal with the issues that are driving you towards drink.
Perhaps if you looked back at some of your posts on here that you have put up when you have had a few drinks, you might see what I mean.
For this reason, you kind of have to be off the drink before you can deal with the issues that are driving you towards drink.
the answer is yes......but psychotherapy for that many people would just be too expensive. cbt is rubbish and is not good for severe mental health problems - it is the sticking plaster of therapies, but is being offered en masse by the nhs as the answer for everything. like 10-12 sessions will cure everything.......utter ***! x
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