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Mistaken
Beliefs About Relapse
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By: Terry Gorski with additions by: Lee Jamison Mistaken
Belief #3: As long as you do not use alcohol or drugs you are recovering. Fact: Abstinence is only a prerequisite to recovery. It is not recovery.
Recovery requires the appropriate treatment of long and short-term withdrawal
symptoms, and the physical, psychological, and social problems caused
by the addiction. It is switching from a lifestyle centered around using,
to a lifestyle centered around healthy living. Sometimes people recognize
that they are addicted and sincerely attempt abstinence but do not understand
that they need help from others and a recovery program to maintain abstinence.
They just quit. They are surprised when they begin using again, not realizing
that sobriety requires more than just not using. Bill was an alcoholic who
was also a diabetic. His doctors told him if he did not stop drinking
he would die. So he quit. For a year he did not have a drink. However,
he did not change anything else in his life. He continued to associate
with people who drank heavily; he attended social functions where drinking
was the focus of the fun. Bill did not find other ways to
have a good time or relax, neither did he learn to manage the sobriety
based symptoms or the resulting stress. He was abstinent, but he was miserable.
After a year Bill said, If this is what I have to do to stay alive,
it is not worth it. He began to drink again, and after a few years,
Bill died. Many alcoholics who never
use alcohol or drugs are not in recovery. They have nervous breakdowns,
become psychotic, attempt suicide, or become sick with stress-related
illnesses. All of this happens because of what we call the relapse
syndrome. If you believe that not using
is recovery and that using is the only sign of failure to recover, you
will minimize other problems with your recovery and you will switch from
a focus on using to a focus on not
using. You will not focus on a sobriety-centered lifestyle. Focusing upon not using becomes an excuse for not looking
at other life areas. Not using is not recovery; it is just not using.
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