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12 Stupid Things That Mess Up Recovery by Allen Berger, Ph.D.

There are as many ways to mess up recovery as there are alcoholics and addicts, but Allen Berger, Ph.D., presents twelve common misguided beliefs and attitudes that can lead to relapse, and he provides a useful guide for working through these problems.

This passage is excerpted from 12 Stupid Things That Mess Up Recovery by Allen Berger, Ph.D. Berger is a nationally recognized expert on the science of recovery. For more than thirty years, he has been on his own journey in recovery while helping thousands of others discover a way of life free from addiction. He is also the author of 12 Smart Things to Do When the Booze and Drugs Are Gone.

I believe that if we are truly to recover from the disease of addiction, we must grow up—emotionally. True recovery is the product of humility that emerges from living and practicing a conscious and spiritual life. In order to attain humility, we must be honest with ourselves. This necessarily includes looking at the stupid things we do, today, in our recovery. I use the term stupid to indicate the things we do that are self-destructive and not in our best interest.

Before we move on to a discussion about how to identify the underlying causes of self-destructive behavior, I want to share how I selected the twelve issues that I discuss in this book. There must be at least a million stupid things that we can do to mess up recovery—all of them self-destructive. A book cataloging all of these would be unwieldy. I wanted to narrow down the list to a more manageable size so I used the following criteria for my selection. I chose what I considered to be the most commonly confronted and critical issues during the early stages of recovery. I define early recovery as the first two years of recovery. The main issues that we confront during this time include breaking the bonds of addiction, establishing a spiritual foundation for our recovery, learning effective tools to deal with ourselves and our relationships, and dealing with the wreckage of our past.

Few of us will relate to all of these issues, but the general themes should be familiar. So without further ado, here are my top twelve nominations for stupid things we do to mess up our recovery:

1. Believing addiction to one substance is the only problem
2. Believing sobriety will fix everything
3. Pursuing recovery with less energy than pursuing addiction
4. Being selectively honest
5. Feeling special and unique
6. Not making amends
7. Using the program to try to become perfect
8. Confusing self-concern with selfishness
9. Playing futile self-improvement games
10. Not getting help for relationship troubles
11. Believing that life should be easy
12. Using the program to handle everything

These twelve things are tried-and-true ways of messing up recovery. In the following chapters, I will elaborate on each of them. Please try and keep an open mind as you read this book. It has been my experience that those who do best in recovery are those who are honest with themselves, open to new ideas and experiences, and willing to take direction.

There’s one more thing I want to talk about before we move ahead to the task at hand. As you read about each of these twelve stupid things, please ask yourself, What would cause me to think in this particular way or behave in this particular manner? The rest of this introduction presents a series of questions to help you become aware of the causes of self-destructive behaviors. The more we become aware of the underlying cause of a particular belief or behavior, the less it controls our life: awareness of what we are doing to ourselves—awareness of how we sabotage ourselves—starts the process of change.

Identifying the Causes of Self-Destructive Behaviors
Psychologists and philosophers throughout modern history have tried to understand why we human beings are so self-destructive. Their discussions have ranged from speculating that a death instinct exists deep within our psyches to believing that personality type, childhood trauma, low self-esteem, or an undercurrent of self-hatred are the culprits behind self-destructive acts.
I believe there are four possibilities to consider when assessing the causes of self-destructive behavior. They are numbered because it is important to consider them in order. I recommend starting with number one and working down the list, until the best fit is discovered:

1. our addiction, or our disease
2. ignorance
3. unreasonable expectations and emotional dependency
4. self-erasure and self-hate

Remember to consider each possibility in sequence. When we identify what motivates or causes our stupid behavior, we begin the process of change. Awareness starts the process of change.

Read Alan’s book:
12 Stupid Things That Mess Up Recovery
Softcover, 136 pages
Hazelden Press
List Price: $14.95
Online Price: $13.45

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STRESS AS AN ADRENALINE ADDICTION A Coach’s Overview By Larry I. Meadows

The operating premise of the adrenaline addiction concept is that some people, usually
under the label stress, use their own adrenaline as a drug. This “addiction to intensity”
has a purpose. It is to repress the conscious emergence of particularly painful underlying
feelings of loss, abandonment, and disconnection, at essential levels.
In compensation, many individuals will accept any form of intensity rather than confront
their inner emptiness. If one particular source of intensity is relieved, a replacement will
emerge. Yet the continued presence of this level of stress within the body is harmful both
physiologically and psychologically. Therefore, some kind of relief is indicated. This
usually requires working with a Coach.
For the untrained Coach, a normal approach would include application of various stress
reduction techniques. While this may help relieve the immediate complaints, the longterm
effect may be essentially palliative in nature. For more permanent stress relief, the
introduction of the concept of adrenaline addiction may prove beneficial.
The primary approach begins as the Coach shifts the person’s focus away from external
sources of stress. Instead, the individual is helped to develop an internal awareness of the
presence, and use, of adrenaline as a drug of choice. Written self-reports (the adrenaline
diary) reviewed by the Coach is helpful in this phase of the process.
Once aware of their adrenaline abuse, the person is encouraged to find conscious ways to
create adrenaline at will. With guidance, they begin to create volitional adrenaline, rather
than habitually selecting something in their environment to react to.
Withdrawal from adrenaline, as a drug state, is then begun. The Coach assists the person
to discontinue some of the more manageable triggers. The difficulty of this task is
compounded by the tendency to replace one adrenaline-producing trigger with another.
As this process continues, an underlying depression is normally uncovered, sometimes
accompanied by the emergence of childhood memories. In severe cases, consultation
with a physician and even anti-depressant medication may be indicated. It is suggested
that, whenever manageable, the use of these drugs should be limited. There are
indications that effective resolution of the underlying phenomena may be slowed by an
over-reliance on medication.
Since this is a long-term procedure, facilitation of this unfolding process is greatly aided
by the use of some kind of continuing peer support. This can be as simple as the creation
of a small adrenaline support group, to the founding of an independent Adrenaline
Addicts Anonymous self-help meeting. (The Adrenaline Addicts Anonymous Web Site
may be found at http://www.adrenalineaddicts.org.)
If the person can tolerate this phase of internal redevelopment, and manages to avoid
adopting too many new adrenaline-producing behaviors, a profound shift eventually
occurs. The individual not only becomes more fully conscious of their use of any
overabundance of adrenaline, but spontaneously begins to avoid its presence. The result,
even when impermanent, is a transformation that is nearly transcendental in nature.
There are cautions. As the process unfolds, there may be a period of withdrawal from
normal activities and relationships. Very often during this phase the person seeks and
experiences some form of spiritual evolution. In time, of course, most individuals return
to a more standard lifestyle, even though permanently modified by this experience.
The first task of the ethical Coach is to educate all involved regarding the fundamental
changes they may experience. Only then should they agree to help anyone set foot on the
pathway of adrenaline addiction recovery.

By
Larry I. Meadows
Copyright @ 1995

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Aftercare is a Real Part of Addiction Treatment

Recovery Coaching needs to be a foundational piece to your returning home from a treatment center Recovery Coaching helps the addict and the family transition into this phase of sobriety. Aftercare is a real part of Addiction treatment. Here are just a few real statistics

FIVE SOBERING FACTS

1. 80% of the people completing addiction treatment will relapse on alcohol, drugs or other compulsive behavior in the 1st year.

2. The first 30-90 days following discharge is the window of greatest vulnerability for relapse after treatment, approximately 30% will slip at least once.

3. Between 25-35% of people who complete addiction treatment will be readmitted to treatment within one year, and 50% will be readmitted within five years.

4. Recovery is not fully stabilized (point at which risk of future lifetime relapse drops below 15%) until five years of sustained recovery.

5. Relapses following addiction treatment produce higher death rates from accidental poisoning, overdose, AIDS, suicide, homicide, cardiovascular and liver disease.

 

The good news is you can go home from the treatment center. The better news is you can maintain your sobriety where ever you live. Going through the transformation from a life of addiction into a life of sobriety is difficult. Your first consideration before leaving treatment should be who will you be talking to? Who will be calling you? Not just random calls, but structured calls and daily calls for a minimum of 14 days as you settle in. This is an integral part of your Recovery, and begins the process of developing your Recovery Plan. A Recovery Plan is your own “custom made recovery program” for the first 14 days out of treatment.
Once home, many individuals find themselves completely separated from everything they knew before treatment and separate from the safe environment of the treatment center. Your old friends and colleagues appear to look at you differently. The smells, sounds, and sensations have all changed from what you now know in sobriety.

 

Returning home from treatment, two things are highly apparent; in sobriety, you do not feel comfortable talking to people who are not in a program, and the people that you have known, when you were drinking, drugging or acting out, do not know the sober you. While you were in treatment you made dramatic changes to yourself. You have changed. You are not the same person. Old friends may have to stay away or put in the effort to get to know you all over again. Family members may have to be reminded; you are trying to make things, choices, and behaviors that are different now.

 
You have the skills to stay sober, but you may not have the experience. Working with a recovery coach will help you learn to master new sober skills and be able to create a new relationship with the people that love you. The people that love you need to learn to accept and understand the “new” you. There are also Family Recovery Coaches for them!
You have been given the gift of sobriety. Just like an Olympic athlete needs a coach to reach a level of mastery in their sport, or a high level executive needs a coach to be the next CEO of their company, you need a coach to achieve the life you want in sobriety. Out of the 20-35% of the people who successfully realize recovery after treatment, 2/3 thirds of them utilize recovery coaches. Join the group!

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