What are the usual drugs that can treat heroin addiction?
October 28, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under Addiction Detox & Rehab
I’ve always thought that it was just therapy, counseling, and rehabilitation that’s used to treat addictions. But recently I found out that others are given medication as well. I was just wondering what these drugs are.
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What do you see when you think of a stereotypical drug addict?
September 29, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under More Addiction Answers
Stereotypical drug addict: what do you think of? Do they only care about drugs? Just what you think.
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Being Addicted
September 24, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under About Addiction
Let’s look at a nuance of addiction that has recently come to the awareness of at least a few. There was a study done in which a person with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was given a certain drug. This drug would have little or no effect on the person without the disorder but to the person with the disorder it set off a PTSD type episode. What does this mean? That the PTSD brain is different from the non PTSD brain. What does that tell us? What is PTSD? A syndrome brought about by traumatic stress. The significance is in the brain itself. The usual trigger of the traumatic event was not present. But the episode took place. Why? The brain chemistry has been altered by traumatic stress. So how would we, now, define traumatic stress? Any traumatic event that caused an alteration in brain chemistry? We’d pretty much have to - knowing what we now know. So what does this mean to the world population. What does this new knowledge tell us about our brains?
Good Doctors will tell you that stress is the number one factor in health problems. Trauma alters brain chemistry. This is significant if we understand that the brain is a electro-chemical machine. That’s really all we know about the brain. When the machine is altered what can we expect?
That’s gonna take a while. But lets say, for sure, any number of processes will be affected. What I want to talk about here is how this plays out in the world of addiction. Dr. M. Scott Peck has long said that all addicted people suffer from the real or imagined effects of abandonment. There are what appears to be abandonment issues present in addicts. However many have never experienced what we would commonly classify as abandonment. If one were to classify abandonment where would we place it? What column would it be in? How about trauma? That’s what it is a isn’t it? A form of trauma. A child who has been abandoned, faced with abandonment, has a stress induced episode. The thought of further trauma sets off the chemical event that results in fear. This is exactly the same process that occurs in the brain with PTSD. Trauma is always associated with fear. Likewise, stress is always associated with fear.
Fear could be considered the opposite of happiness. Security is a quality of happiness for a child. It doesn’t really change as the child grows. Ideas about security change but not the need for security. One can realize that “we will live out our lives amidst a host of nutty people and their nutty ideas and then we grow old and die and move on to different worlds” and feel secure in the knowledge that this small span of time isn’t all that important. One could. How many do? How many don’t? Long term insecurity is traumatic. One of the main factors in insecurity is confusion. Being confused brings on the fear type event. Staying confused for a long time, living in the fear that insecurity brings, must alter the brains chemistry. It has to - since it is traumatic. We already know that trauma changes brain chemistry. What we aren’t settled on is the definition of trauma. I am suggesting that there is enough constant underlying stress in our everyday lives to induce a PTSD type condition in an ever increasing percent of the population of, at least, the United States.
The result of this doesn’t produce a majority of well known addictions. But what is an addiction? Don’t people become addicted to acts or substances that relieve there unwanted conditions (feelings)? The biggest addiction people suffer from today is not drugs or sex or gambling. It’s an addiction to things. Most people are addicted to things. Peoples brains have been altered from the stress and confusion of everyday life in a nutty society. Insecurity messes with the chemical balance of the brain. Constant strain, pressure, stress and fear of failure permanently alters the brain. The most dire result being the inability to think clearly. Add to this a severe case of nation wide malnutrition and you wind up with a population of stressed out, scatterbrained, frightened, addicted people. There is a lot of evidence that says this - stressed out malnourished society - has been intentionally created. But that’s another topic.
When the average person suffers from this trauma induced syndrome most of them seek solace in some level of societal success. They do this because they are told to. By priests and teachers and congressman. Parents, Pastors and professors. Gurus, Life coaches and Motivational speakers. All saying we just need to understand how to manifest wealth and success from our society. Take what society has to offer and make happiness from it. Make something of yourself. That’s just a lie. Anyone who says this is just as delusional as the person seeking answers. The teachers are traumatized, same as the, would be, student. You cannot make something out of nothing. You can not whip up a batch of happiness out of insanity. First we must understand and recognize happiness and sanity. Is society, our society, sane? Is it happy? Is happiness something you can find? That would mean it is a thing that is in a place. Right? Then what does the pursuit of happiness mean? Is it even a sane statement?
The answer to all this addiction and unhappiness is to remove trauma. For all of us over the age of four or five it’s to late to undo the memories. The resulting ideas are racing through our heads all the time. That doesn’t mean we can’t learn to be different. Like a drug addict we have at our disposal ways of changing ourselves. But, like the drug addict we must recognize the problem. We have to admit we have a problem and the chances of fixing it ourselves, with our current understanding, is pretty much non existent. We also need to accept that if we don’t fess up and become willing to “go to any length” to get better, our lives will only get worse.
So where is all this trauma coming from? People. There are only two places that things come from on this planet: nature and people. Nature does not induce the type of trauma that drives us crazy. People and their ideas cause the conditions for trauma. People think up war, society, god, creation stories, right and wrong, rules, laws, all the “isms” one can imagine. Traumatized brains create traumatic environments and it just keeps growing and getting weirder and the trauma gets embedded in the psyche of the society and passed on through generations until we wind up in what we see today. A traumatic environment. Throw in the overall toxicity of the food and drug companies and no one is not effected. The healthiest happiest people on the planet have nothing to do with us. They have had little or no contact with us and don’t pay any attention to us. To them we are a kind of sickness. If we decide to get healthy we must become their students. We can not pretend to be OK any longer. We cannot pretend to be sane people. At this stage pretending is also traumatizing. When you start to look closely at us and our society it’s all traumatizing. We have little in our lives that is not traumatizing. Children are sent to school and told to be still. That’s traumatizing. Usually not enough to destroy the brains ability to function but that’s just the beginning. If they don’t obey orders they are drugged. For they’re own good. That is a move into the deeper waters of insanity. They are forced to participate in the continuance of a insane society. To find “happiness” through achievement. By this time the stage is set for a complete breakdown of the mental system. The break is complete when subservience is accomplished. There is at this point no person left. A program has been installed and that’s what most people operate on. To get off the program is to get outside the machine and there isn’t anything left out there. The machine has encompassed the globe. It has rid itself of most indigenous people and there ideas. It has buried, destroyed and hidden the history of the world. It has criminalized words and ideas like conspiracy, rebellion and independence. All natural occurrences are being eliminated. We have become trauma. We are fear. There is nothing to do but stop.
The first thing all addicts do on the road to sanity, and the restoration of their minds and lives, is stop. The symptom is arrested. What is the symptom of our global addiction? Stuff. Smiles, acceptance, medals, money, houses, cars, fame, people…Just a long list of things. An addiction to things is the result of an excellently executed campaign to control the minds of the masses. We live in pursuit of these things because we are conditioned to associate happiness with them. Even if we deny it, and quote from other books, we obsess. Even in our dreams we strive for the things we don’t have or can’t get. What don’t we have? The road out of the woods may be long. But the first step is simple. Stop. Know that we are being lied to - and Stop.
Thanks to Doug Wilson for contributing this article to our Addiction blog:
Doug Wilson has been looking at systems and the source of unrest in the global population. The results are being compiled at Addiction: In the 21st Century
The Top Three Things You Should Know About Detox
September 18, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under Addiction Detox & Rehab
If you have decided to go through drug detox or alcohol detox, then you should do so in a caring environment which treats the whole person. This is called holistic treatment and helps the mind, body and spirit to strengthen against the addiction. We must rid our lives entirely of the addiction for it to be useful. It helps to understand three things about addictions and detox.
1. A symptom of the addiction is to fear detoxification. Your mind and body have gotten so used to the drugs and they resist even the thought of ridding your system of them. Fear is a very strong emotion but normally, it turns out that the fear of detox is often worse than the actual experience. Our minds conjure up all sorts of outdated and mythical information so that we resist going. The only way to conquer this is by realizing that this happens and by becoming educated about what really happens during detox.
2. There are many tools to help ease the symptoms of withdrawal. It used to be that an alcoholic or drug addict was just left locked in a room to wait out the detoxification but that is no longer the case. There are detox centers that have caring individuals who have either been through the experience themselves or are trained in dealing with detox. There are many physical and psychological tools available to help ease the symptoms of withdrawal, including medications. Going through detox is much easier with these tools available.
3. Detox is one step in the entire process of beating the addiction. It is a very important step, but it is just one. Becoming free of an addiction is a process that will take time and commitment. It is a process that can help you reclaim your life and find happiness again, so it is well worth it. Don’t stop with detox. Follow it through and stay on the journey to being drug and alcohol free.
When we are consumed by drug and/or alcohol addictions, our minds trap us into staying that way. With detox and other methods of dealing with addiction, we learn to overcome the fear we have created for ourselves. Becoming drug and alcohol free and staying that way is a lifelong process but the result is a life that includes happiness and understanding. Addictions keep our minds focused on the negative so we do not see the bright futures that are available once we are free of our addictions. Detox centers have all of the tools you need to succeed. Start your successful journey today.
Thanks to Joe Gardener for contributing this article to our Addiction blog:
What kind of treatments does an alcohol rehab center provide?
July 30, 2009 by Addiction and Substance Abuse Tips
Filed under Addiction Detox & Rehab
Hi,
I was wondering what an usual alcohol rehab center does to treat the alcoholics? Are they expensive? Do they contain mostly drugs? If there are some therapeutic treatments (which I heard), what are they? I would appreciate if you could provide me with more details on these because that will help me see if sending my friend down to a rehab center is the best solution. Thanks.
How To Detox From Alcohol




