Your profile
Your profile
Share the story at Stumbleupon
Subscribe to our weekly Bonk Mail
Who is online now?





Addictions Anonymous, 7: Common Elements In Addictions

Article by
Retired clinical psychologist

Read comments (3)

Earlier I mentioned dark feelings and this, I think, is a common factor running through all addictions of whatever sort. Knowing how to live with, control and even eliminate unpleasant emotions is a survivor skill that people have in different amounts. Those who become vulnerable to addiction always seem to lack skills for handling emotions, but these simple skills are neither complicated nor difficult to learn.

We can sympathize with someone in severe physical pain, but when someone is suffering from intense and constant unpleasant emotions we may not even notice it. Even if someone we know complains of feeling wretched, we are at a loss to make helpful suggests, so we simply tell them to cheer up, get over it or go see a shrink.

As you may have noticed in a previous column, about half the items on the list of addictive triggers are activities, not substances. Gambling, collecting stuff and heavy exercise are potential dependencies or addictions that, until recently, were not seen as addictions at all. And who knows what innocent practice we engage in today will become tomorrow’s new addiction? Distinctions become blurred: for example, is sun tanning a substance addiction dependent on light waves, or is it a behavior?

It is easy to make up different classes or types of addiction, types such as substance abuse verses activity addictions. Or, we could divide up the addictions in terms of mood elevators (uppers) and tranquilizers (downers). Still other classifications could be made on the basis of what particular emotions seem to drive the individual addict. What is difficult is to see are the underlying characteristics of all real addictions. At the most general level, unpleasant emotions are evident in every case. Setting up different classes is easy, but I do not think very helpful. Seeing the underlying unity in various addictions is more difficult, and will take willingness to think at a very broad level.

Most likely, there is little point in making a substance versus activity distinction when we have at hand other reliable ways of deciding when any addiction exists in an individual.

Most of the addicted clients in the hospitals where I worked wanted to think that they were just like normal people except for their particular, self-identified dependency. They thought that if they could just learn to stop using their favorite addictive, life would be back to normal. That, of course, is one of the most popular delusions among addicts. They think, If I could just stop doing X, life would be wonderful again.

I don’t want to destroy the hope some addicts have, but there are two problems with this thinking. First, there is some likelihood that, without special care, a new addiction will be substituted for the old one. Call it cross-addiction, but this is very common in someone starting to abstain from a primary addiction. They almost always want something to fill the void left by the old addiction. Second, life has probably never been normal for most fully developed addicts, especially if they started early. They often have little desire or skill for normal living, and when they practice being normal it seems dull or frightening at first. Worst of all, they don’t know how to deal with their darkest feelings, emotions that overtake them when they don’t use their addiction for self-medication

Please keep in mind that I am talking now about very advanced addictions in clients entering a hospital treatment program. Using the list of triggers mentioned in a previous column, we correlated each person’s scores on two sub-sets of items, the substance related addictions and the activity related addictions. Among patients coming to the hospital for treatment, the correlation between the two was extreme. If the client was high in substance use or abuse, he or she tended to be high in non-substance use. Few clients reported having problems with just a single addiction. Multiple addictions were the rule. I learned from interviews that these additional patterns of use often didn’t seem to amount to full-blown dependencies, but they were there. I suspect they were just waiting to grow worse if they were given a vacuum to fill. Although some patterns were not as severe as others, the concern is that what is presently controlled may become a full-blown addiction when the primary addiction is put on hold.

Addictions, however, are not like light switchers, either on or off. Addictions are very fluid affairs growing stronger and weaker throughout life and with changing circumstances. That’s a problem in calling addiction a disease. Although the severity of a physical illness can vary somewhat between individuals, you either do or don’t have a physical illness such as chicken pox. In physical illness, a specific cause can usually be identified and often eliminated. But people can slide up and down the scale of severity with any addiction depending, I think, on the emotional background of life. It is tempting to believe that the addictive agent or activity is the cause of the dependency. Our thinking stops at that point. If that’s all we took as truth, we would become prohibitionists trying to eliminate some very useful things that average or normal people can use and enjoy in moderation, Besides, prohibition always seems to fail and cause even worse social problems.

A large sample of high school students took the same quiz listing their triggers, and had much, much lower total scores. Members of the staff had lower scores than their patients, thank goodness. Among the students with slightly higher scores, the activity addictions predominated. The kids tended to overdo it sometimes in shopping, exercise, collecting and talking. Would these be the children who would progress to substance abuse? We don’t know that, but it is a fascinating question.

[BB]

These particular high school kids in Reno, Nevada lived surrounded by gambling, and many of their parents worked in the gaming industry. Not only were there many large casinos, but also the gas stations and food markets offered slot machines. Nevertheless, few of the kids reported gambling as a problem. The common attitude was that gambling is for the tourists and there were much more interesting things to do. I wonder if hanging out at the mall could be an addiction?

Denial is said to be a hallmark of addiction. This means that the addicted person has trouble seeing a dependency for what it is: loss of control. He or she minimizes, ignores and avoids the problems caused by addiction and usually claims an ability to stop at any time. This denial is well known among recovering people and therapists. Interestingly, denial may have something to do with the spread of Twelve Step recovery programs from alcohol to all manner of addictions. Rather than look at all possible destructive behaviors at one time, most people prefer to pick just one. In the telephone directory of most large cities, and on the Internet, you can find listings for: Alcoholics Anonymous, Gamblers Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous, Emotions Anonymous, Sex and Love Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, Marijuana Anonymous, Credit Abuse Anonymous, Tobacco Anonymous, and more. There are those who even see violent behavior, robbery and child sexual abuse as addictions for some. As I write this I’ve not found anywhere a self-help group that welcomes all addictions of all sorts.

Is this host of different self-help groups good news? At first glance, it would seem wonderful that people are banding together to use the Twelve Steps for recovery for all these different addictions. But I’ve seen what goes on in many of the different groups. In some groups of alcoholics, smoking, sugar use and caffeine consumption rage out of control. Some members of Gamblers Anonymous would benefit from membership in Overeaters Anonymous. Some members of O.A. turn to alcohol after their meetings. Some members of Cocaine Anonymous argue that marijuana is an acceptable recreational drug. Almost all addicts think they are entitled to some rewarding substitute for what they must give up in their primary addiction. We call these feelings entitlement feelings.

A.A. groups sometimes forbid members to mention any problems they may be having with other addictions and insist that members stick to the announced topic. “We can only deal with one problem at a time,” seems to be the slogan. And that, to my mind, suggests massive denial. It also raises the question: what is the real problem after all? What underlies multiple dependencies and what is common to all?

From all these different self help groups arise many wonderful recovery stories; that’s the happy news. Substitute addictions, however, may emerge to make life hell once more. Nothing more than the name of the addiction has changed, and then the whole process of ruin, denial and the need for a new recovery begins again.

I remember one fellow who stayed away from his addiction for years attending meetings of his Twelve Step group where he was a leader, but he never gave up his constant womanizing. He never stopped taking graft money in his construction business. He got drunk a lot, too, because he did not see alcohol as primary problem.

Until and unless we begin to see all these separate addictions as mere symptoms of some deeper, more profound and underlying disorder, the chaos will continue. People will become different, not better. As long as we ignore the serious and likely occurrence of substitute and multiple addictions, relapse will be the rule rather than the exception. New, substitute addictions undermine the resolve to abstain from the primary problem, relapse occurs and life is worse than before.

Mental health professionals take part in the denial conspiracy, but their motivations may have a different origin. In the United States and in some other countries, profit drives the professional’s interest in treating addictive behavior. Under certain health insurance plans we can treat sequential addictions that crop up in the individual over time, but we may be prevented from offering treatment for the same addiction a second or third time.

For a select and well-to-do few, going to expensive treatment programs again and again seems like hospital dependence. In other areas of medicine, some hypochondriacs visit one hospital after the other seeking the soothing attention ill health brings. I knew one fellow who was such a hospital pest that he ended up in neurology getting a pre-frontal lobotomy. That cooled him off permanently and he didn’t seem to want much after that.

[BB]

The names of our treatment programs reflect a narrowness of focus: they are usually separately named and often have separate staffs for alcohol, gambling, and drug abuse. People today go for specialized treatment such as alcohol or gambling. Some of these specialized programs are hospital based and some are located in halfway houses or in day treatment centers. These programs often employ recovering peer counselors who may or may not know anything about other addictions or about more general health issues.

Recovering peer counselors, some say, are essential to help in the recovery process. They certainly can serve as good examples. Another view is that they are cheap labor, have little training in health care and serve mainly as Judas Goats leading the innocent addict to financial slaughter by the medical establishment.

Some professionals have built reputations and even financial empires treating specific addictions; they may have invested a great deal emotionally and financially in specialized treatment. The government offers research grants for all the different addictions so that the separation of treatment facilities continues because of money interests. Funding sources often demand a narrow focus. Why, for example, would the casino industry be interested in anyone but the problem gambler? The gaming industry contributes money for research on gambling problems at the same time it uses free alcohol us get clients to gambler more impulsively. They know that many heavy gamblers are also heavy smokers; to that end they spend huge amounts of money for air circulation systems in order to avoid a ban on tobacco. Lavish food buffets also flourish in casinos, and food is used as a complementary thank you for having gambled away a lot of money, so don’t expect the gaming industry to support research on obesity.

Various government agencies have specific legislative mandates to help in very limited areas of addiction and either cannot or will not venture into other fields no matter how pertinent they may be.

We can break through the denial that all addictions share a common psychology and physical bonds only with compelling evidence. So, it starts with a theory of addictive susceptibility or vulnerability, it starts in recognizing what I have called The Addictive Response. If we can build a good general theory of addictive behavior and then show that it works to produce effective treatment, things might begin to change.

Speaking of research, it is very difficult to prove that professional mental health treatment for addictive behavior works at all. If you want to put a new prescription drug on the market, you have to prove that it works and that it doesn’t kill people. The claims made by the producers of over-the-counter medicine are also carefully monitored for truth. But, there are very few long term studies of how well treatment for addictions works, or if it works at all. When we put together a program we pile on whatever seems like it has a chance of helping. As a result we never know which part, if any, had an effect. Was it the lectures, the films, the evening Twelve Step groups or perhaps merely the respite and attention of being cared for? Good follow-up is difficult to do in any case because it’s so hard to track down program graduates even a few months after they leave a program. In spite of the lack of evidence of real benefit, however, programs for addiction grow in number every year and honest efforts to show the effectiveness of treatment are under weigh.

I will always believe, again with little evidence to lean on, that simply admitting a problem and walking through the doors of a treatment program or a self-help group is the single most important cure one can begin for oneself. Recognizing a problem is the first necessary step in solving it.

There are some recovering people and many mental health professionals who claim that changing more than one addiction at a time is impossible. But, that claim is based on the assumption that there is really a multitude of different disorders rather than a single disorder to be treated. A common, underlying disorder would probably require very different treatment methods, different staff training and different funding schemes. Treatment for the Addictive Response would, I’m sure, be rather different from that offered in specialized addiction programs.

I used to call the basic disorder the Addictive Response Pattern (ARP), but The Addictive Response (AR) will do. The general theory of AR also offers a Model of Addiction and Recovery Stages (MARS) that I will present in the next few installments. If we decided there is actually only a single disorder to be treated, the content of what we teach people would be different and would reflect different values, priorities and lifestyle changes, different from those commonly held today. We might see that the task is much greater than we had thought, but we might also find easy, efficient and effective ways to approach change, to formulate methods and goals that we have not yet imagined in our specialized work.

I suspect that denial explains the resistance to seeing different addictions as only signs of a single underlying disorder, but there always reasons for denial and they need to be understood, changed and let go of if we expect progress.






Share this article



Tags:                               



Politics

Factzone: The truth about Kim Jong Il

Kim Jong Il, the leader of the free world, has decided to move on to more fertile grounds, leaving with us just the memories of 8-color rainbows, singing Korean women and couple of nuclear weapons. But who was this man whose next ambition would have been to get the next Nobel Peace prize? Here are just a few facts you should know about.

more
Top 5 Conspiracy Theories Related to John F. Kennedy's Assassination
26.Aug 2011
Since just after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, conspiracy theories abou...read

ISRAEL KEEPING GHADDAFI AFLOAT
10.Mar 2011
...read

Glen Beck Is NOT the Anti-Christ!
10.Mar 2011
Hurtful and fiery rhetoric is now media’s default setting! This slippery and m...read

Recipe for A REVOLUTION! (10 easy steps - try not to get burned!)
28.Feb 2011
Rebellion is cooking in the air. People are mad as hell, and not going to take...read

Opinion

World governments charged with criminal negligence (in response to Megaupload case)

EARTH (thecheers.org) - Federal authorities of the universe have charged the governments of all the countries in the world as well as the operators actually in power in these countries with operating a criminal enterprise, the Galaxy warriors announced Today.

more
The Great OSCARS 2011 – or so it would seem
5.Mar 2011
So, how exciting......a morning off, the Academy Awards. I wish I could say the...read

Top 7 Expensive Bordellos. Prostitution: Shakedown, Tier Down, and Priced Out
31.Jan 2011
According to a report of the Washington DC-based US Department of State, The Ph...read

The Great Secret and Reason for the JFK Assassination
11.Oct 2010
The great question is why the great secret? On June 4 1963, President Kennedy s...read

Don't Do it! The 3 Worst Times to Get Tattoos
4.Oct 2010
As a general rule, tattoos gotten after 2 am are a bad idea. But in a bigger pi...read

Travel

Travel Warning 13 September 2010 - DO NOT TRAVEL TO IRAN
13.Sep 2010
TRAVELWISE has been watching the situation in Iran for some months in relation ...read

more
TRAVELWISE TRAVEL ADVISORY 5th June 2010. DO NOT TRAVEL TO ISRAEL.
5.Jun 2010
Given the recent incident whereby the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad, used...read

TRAVELWISE. 16 APRIL 2010. EUROPEAN TRAVEL ALTERNATIVES
16.Apr 2010
Travelwise issues the following advice in relation to cancelled flights to, fro...read

TRAVELWISE 6 APRIL 2010. AUSTRALIAN AIR TRAVEL. THE BEST WAYS TO TRAVEL BY AIR IN AUSTRALIA.
5.Apr 2010
Regular readers might have seen and read the various advisory and no-fly notice...read

TRAVELWISE 2 APRIL 2010. QANTAS.
2.Apr 2010
Some concerns have been raised in relation to some of the maintenance practices...read



No Payoff From the Playoffs

$16.50 will Get Anyone in the Hall Mr McGwire

Stupid Athlete Tricks




Think Big! Think the World's Largest International Trade Show

Top 9 cool laptop accessories for laptop geeks

Twittering: I'm not that interesting


Cheers






Not bad... Not bad. says on 2008-11-11 23:07:07 about MKmWCkZMHNovWkzfgap
Not bad... Not bad.










Nice site, thanks for information! says on 2008-11-11 17:21:24 about kTaYHuEpvMzZUVbgM
Nice site, thanks for information!










DAESH ONOTOLE V PRAVITELI VSELENNOI! says on 2008-11-11 10:55:26 about jxkpfUWpzDHx
DAESH ONOTOLE V PRAVITELI VSELENNOI!









Post Comment

 
 Your nickname
 
 About what
 
 Your comment
 
Are you human? How much is 1 + 2?
 






The American Republican Party as a Militant Minority

Fortress America: The American Love of Guns

How to Survive a Writers' Critique Group

Growing New Body Parts

The Theater of God

Creativity Requires Discipline

The Agnostic Pulpit: Toxic Advertising

The Agnostic Pulpit: The university eduation fraud

The Day the Wine Rack Collapsed

Obama and the Liberal Personality

A Gentle Death

The Agnostic Pulpit: The Unmentionable Minority

The Narcissism of the Terrorist

An American in London

Ten Reasons Why the United States Should Get Out of Afghanistan

The Agnostic Pulpit: Controlling Greed

The Agnostic Pulpit: The Truth about Christmas

The Agnostic Pulpit: The American War on Sex

The Agnostic Pulpit: Addictions

The Agnostic Pulpit: Self-help

The Agnostic Pulpit: Explaining Non-belief

The Agnostic Pulpit: Voting for the Wives

The Agnostic Pulpit: Food, Obesity, and the Quality of Life

Great American Dumb Ideas: Automatic Citizenship

Great American Dumb Ideas: Writing Contests

Great American Dumb Ideas: Debt-life

Great American Dumb Ideas: Elder Blues

Great American Dumb Ideas: Sanctity of Life

Great American Dumb Ideas: Christmas

Great American Dumb Ideas: Gang Phobia

Great American Dumb Ideas: External Identity

Great American Dumb Ideas: Atheists are Evil

Great American Dumb Ideas: Christian Sunday school

Great American Dumb Ideas: Prohibition

Great American Dumb Ideas: Designer God

Great American Dumb Ideas: Disneyism

Great American Dumb Ideas: Teleligion

Addictions Anonymous, 40: Problems in Learning Serenity

Addictions Anonymous, 39: Problems with Relationships and Sponsors

Addictions Anonymous, 38: Problems with Emotional Pain and Service to Others

Addictions Anonymous, 37: Problems with Anger and Depression

Addictions Anonymous, 36: Problems with Anticipation

Addictions Anonymous 35: Harm Reduction

Addictions Anonymous 34: Therapists Of All Sorts

Addictions Anonymous, 4: A Bit Of History

Addictions Anonymous, 5: They Sneak Up On Us

Addictions Anonymous, 7: Common Elements In Addictions

Addictions Anonymous, 6: Triggers

Addictions Anonymous, 8: Risk Factors

Addictions Anonymous. 11: The Addiction Cycle

Addictions Anonymous, 12: The Stages of Addiction and Recovery

Addictions Anonymous, 10: Dark Feelings

Addictions Anonymous, 3: An Incident on the Boardwalk

Addictions Anonymous, 2: Self-help, Professionals And The Role of Religion

Addictions Anonymous, 9: How Attitudes, Beliefs And Values Create Vulnerability

Designing America, #2: The Constitutional Convention

Designing America: Why Bother?

Designing America :- #4: Some Problems In Constitutional Wording

Designing America: #3: What Changed From 1776 to 2006?

Boris Burns The Bible

Addictions Anonymous, 1: The Challenge Of Normal Living

Addictions Anonymous: Introduction

Addictions Anonymous, 13: A Universal Secular Twelve Steps

Addictions Anonymous, 15: Living With Higher Authorities

Addictions Anonymous, 24: More On Religion In Recovery

Addictions Anonymous, 25: Normophobia

Addictions Anonymous, 27: Normal As The Gold Standard—Part One

Chapter 28: Normal As The Gold Standard—Part Two

Addictions Anonymous 29: The Way to Be, Part One

Addictions Anonymous 30: The Way to Be, Part Two

Addictions Anonymous, 33: Pitfalls In Finding Treatment

Addictions Anonymous, 31: Does Prohibition Work?

Addictions Anonymous, 23: Group Traditions And Management

Addictions Anonymous, 22: Continuing The Growth

Addictions Anonymous, 14: The Art Of Being Powerless

Addictions Anonymous, 16: The Surrender Of Ego

Addictions Anonymous, 17: Self Knowledge

Addictions Anonymous, 18: Confession, Honesty And The Open Life

Addictions Anonymous, 19: Growth Through Practice

Addictions Anonymous, 20: Asking For Help

Addictions Anonymous, 26: Searching For Normal

Addictions Anonymous, 21: Setting Things Right

Addictions Anonymous, 32: When a Friend Needs Help
Julian I. Taber, Ph.D.
Variouis pulication in research journals and popular periodicals. Two books published.

Julian I. Taber, Ph.D. is a retired clinical psychologist who specialized in the treatment of addictive behavior and is a recognized authority on problem gambling having published a number of research reports in professional journals over the years. He received two national awards for his early work with problem gamblers. His book, In The Shadow of Chance, was published by members of Gamblers Anonymous and is used in professional training workshops. Taber is currently at work on several nonfiction books related to psychology as well as satirical novellas, short stories and non-fiction articles. His articles, stories and essays have appeared in Ultralight Flying, USA Today, Editor and Publisher, The Las Vegas Review Journal, an anthology on September 11 by Sands Publishing, and in a Cup of Comfort Christmas Anthology offered by Adams Media. His essay on autobiography was published in Fulcrum Poetry 2005. Taber lives on Whidbey Island north of Seattle with a Siamese cat named Elsie.



Think Big! Think the World's Largest International Trade Show
DSE is the world's largest international trade show and conference dedicated to digital signage, interactive technology and digital out-of-home networks and it will be taking place from March 6 to March 9, 2012.




FTD New Bonus Offer

Argonaut
Genre: Alternative
The band are led by Core Members, Lorna (Vocals & Synths) an...

The Kut
Genre: Alternative
As three female musicians on the London circuit, questions l...

The Exits
Genre: Electronic
Genre: Electro / Indie / Rock Location Portsmouth, South, U...

Trip Effect
Genre: Rock
A power trio that mashes up alternative/indie/rock with warm...

Jim Scordilis
Genre: Rock
jimscordilis@gmail.com http://www.facebook.com/jimscordil...

Valadis Gaoutsis
Genre: Rock
Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Valantis-G...

Steelianos
Genre: Rock
MYSPACE PROFILE: http://www.myspace.com/steelianos O...

Martian Sun
Genre: Rock
Music for the crazy movie playing in your head....

GL$(GOONZLIVESAVAGE)
Genre: Hip-Hop
Blood relative, born in Little Rock Arkansas. From The Wests...

Comeg
Genre: Rock
COMEG's recording career began in 2002 in a basement in Devo...

Keeping Riley
Genre: Rock
Feel good acoustic driven rock from the Jersey suburbs of Ne...















The Cheers magazine: About us | Contact us | The Cheers Story | Advertising
Work with The Cheers: Writers guide | Write for us | Writer application | Reporter application 
The Cheers:Terms and conditions | Privacy policy | Sponsoring | Sitemap
Sister sites: Tech Blog |  Best Auto Zine | Best poker affiliates | Travel destinations by weather | Cerveza | Okai - critical commentary | Get Beautiful! | The Stock game | Wifi hotspots and wireless laptops | The Daily Bonk | Best Poker Zine | Business thoughts | Political commentary | Most expensive things | Top lists | Free Spanish Courses | World News in ShortTop 10 lists 
Listen: Online radio station | Unsigned musicians | Music reviews | Listen to unknown bands
Travel World: World travel locations | Morocco Agadir travel
Travel: Travel blogs | Travel destinations | Hotel reviews | Beer around the world
Watch: Watch movies online | Watch free tv online | Watch heroes online
Trade: The Stock game | Trading competitions | Trading education
Learn: Business videos online | Business networking | Business strategies | Business ideas
Copyright © 2004-2011 The Cheers magazine / Addictions Anonymous, 7: Common Elements In Addictions &