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Author Topic:   Demonization of Addicts
PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 09:00 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thanks T!

Yeah, let's get back to topic. All I had to do was "ctrl+f, type "Randall" found nothing, moved on.

So... To what extent do you think legality plays into it? Do you think that the specific demonization of drug addicts comes from a hatred of legal digression or defiance? Is it more like, "you went well out of your way to abuse drugs, therefore, you deserve it" kinda thing?

I guess, where do you think that the stigma particularly associated with drug addicts, say, over alcoholics comes from? If you think we can undergo a deconstruction, let's do it.

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 09:05 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thanks PD. And yes, it can be. Yes, that's the line of thinking that a number of people seem to have.

I'd like to copy/paste those articles here, because they are informative, but will have to do so and talk more later. I have to get ready and run out for a bit.

Catch you a little later

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PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 09:06 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Sure, you can definitely do that so we can get back on topic! Run along, cutie! See you later

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PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 09:28 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Also, you are bravely taking the step to end the perpertuation of stigma by clearly and openly speaking about your brother's death. I'm so sorry for your loss, I know it must have been so painful not only to lose him but, especially to addiction. But I must say, you are doing a wonderful thing in honoring him by acknowledging this issue. No one's death or pain should be marginalized because of how "taboo" or looked down upon it is.

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Randall
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posted December 19, 2014 09:46 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I agree that this is a good topic. I know a mother of three who is now sober and free of drugs. She changed her life when she was pregnant with her first child. But when offering empathy to the user, let's not forget the victims. By victims, I mean destroyed lives such as abused spouses, children raised in environments where they live in fear and deprivation, the countless innocent lives lost to people who choose to drive after their drinking binges, and the gradmothers hit on the head so that the crack or meth addict can get another fix.

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 10:06 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by PisceanDream:
Also, you are bravely taking the step to end the perpertuation of stigma by clearly and openly speaking about your brother's death. I'm so sorry for your loss, I know it must have been so painful not only to lose him but, especially to addiction. But I must say, you are doing a wonderful thing in honoring him by acknowledging this issue. No one's death or pain should be marginalized because of how "taboo" or looked down upon it is.

Oh no! That was the woman who wrote that article's brother. *deleted personal info*

Here's the link to the article we are talking about:
http://www.linda-goodman.com/ubb/Forum27/HTML/002165.html

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 10:16 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
To your first post PD. I think it's different for everyone. Like w/ the neighbor I mentioned. I guess because he is not a drug addict and alcohol is legal, and more widely accepted not to mention that he uses it, he thinks okay to think the other is wrong.

Maybe for some it stems from unresolved anger surrounding their own loved ones who suffer from addiction and how that's affected their life. They don't understand that it's not simply a choice and most can't get better without treatment. The last thing they need is someone shaming them.

I guess, like you mentioned ini the other thread, it all boils down to lack of compassion and understanding or education. And yeah, I do think we can undergo a deconstruction. Thanks for wanting to help in doing that.

Be back a bit later to re-post some of those articles.

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Randall
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posted December 19, 2014 10:18 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Addiction to substances (e.g., booze, drugs, cigarettes) and behaviors (e.g., eating, sex, gambling) is an enormous problem, seriously affecting something like 40% of individuals in the Western world. Attempts to define addiction in concrete scientific terms have been highly controversial and are becoming increasingly politicized. What IS addiction? We as scientists need to know what it is, if we are to have any hope of helping to alleviate it.

There are three main definitional categories for addiction: a disease, a matter of choice, and self-medication. There is some overlap among these meta-models, but each has unique implications for treatment, from the level of government policy to that of available options for individual sufferers.

The dominant party line in the U.S. and Canada is that addiction is a brain disease. For example, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), “Addiction is defined as a chronic, relapsing brain disease that is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences.” In this post, I want to challenge that idea based on our knowledge of normal brain change and development.

Why many professionals define addiction as a disease.

The idea that addiction is a type of disease or disorder has a lot of adherents. This should not be surprising, as the loudest and strongest voices in the definitional wars come from the medical community. Doctors rely on categories to understand people’s problems, even problems of the mind. Every mental and emotional problem fits a medical label, from borderline personality disorder to autism to depression to addiction. These conditions are described as tightly as possible, and listed in the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) and the ICD (International Classification of Diseases) for anyone to read.

I won’t try to summarize all the terms and concepts used to define addiction as a disease, but Steven Hyman, M.D., previous director of NIMH and Provost of Harvard University, does a good job of it. His argument, which reflects the view of the medical community more generally (e.g., NIMH, NIDA, the American Medical Association), is that addiction is a condition that changes the way the brain works, just like diabetes changes the way the pancreas works. Nora Volkow M.D. (the director of NIDA) agrees. Going back to the NIDA site, “Brain-imaging studies from drug-addicted individuals show physical changes in areas of the brain that are critical for judgment, decisionmaking, learning and memory, and behavior control.” Specifically, the dopamine system is altered so that only the substance of choice is capable of triggering dopamine release to the nucleus accumbens (NAC), also referred to as the ventral striatum, while other potential rewards do so less and less. The NAC is responsible for goal-directed behaviour and for the motivation to pursue goals.

Different theories propose different roles for dopamine in the NAC. For some, dopamine means pleasure. If only drugs or alcohol can give you pleasure, then of course you will continue to take them. For others, dopamine means attraction. Berridge’s theory (which has a great deal of empirical support) claims that cues related to the object of addiction become “sensitized,” so they greatly increase dopamine and therefore attraction — which turns to craving when the goal is not immediately available. But pretty much all the major theories agree that dopamine metabolism is altered by addiction, and that’s why it counts as a disease. The brain is part of the body, after all.

What’s wrong with this definition?

It’s accurate in some ways. It accounts for the neurobiology of addiction better than the “choice” model and other contenders. It explains the helplessness addicts feel: they are in the grip of a disease, and so they can’t get better by themselves. It also helps alleviate guilt, shame, and blame, and it gets people on track to seek treatment. Moreover, addiction is indeed like a disease, and a good metaphor and a good model may not be so different.

What it doesn’t explain is spontaneous recovery. True, you get spontaneous recovery with medical diseases…but not very often, especially with serious ones. Yet many if not most addicts get better by themselves, without medically prescribed treatment, without going to AA or NA, and often after leaving inadequate treatment programs and getting more creative with their personal issues. For example, alcoholics (which can be defined in various ways) recover “naturally” (independent of treatment) at a rate of 50-80% depending on your choice of statistics (but see this link for a good example). For many of these individuals, recovery is best described as a developmental process — a change in their motivation to obtain the substance of choice, a change in their capacity to control their thoughts and feelings, and/or a change in contextual (e.g., social, economic) factors that get them to work hard at overcoming their addiction. In fact, most people beat addiction by working really hard at it. If only we could say the same about medical diseases!

The problem with the disease model from a brain’s-eye view.

According to a standard undergraduate text: “Although we tend to think of regions of the brain as having fixed functions, the brain is plastic: neural tissue has the capacity to adapt to the world by changing how its functions are organized…the connections among neurons in a given functional system are constantly changing in response to experience (Kolb, B., & Whishaw, I.Q. [2011] An introduction to brain and behaviour. New York: Worth). To get a bit more specific, every experience that has potent emotional content changes the NAC and its uptake of dopamine. Yet we wouldn’t want to call the excitement you get from the love of your life, or your fifth visit to Paris, a disease. The NAC is highly plastic. It has to be, so that we can pursue different rewards as we develop, right through childhood to the rest of the lifespan. In fact, each highly rewarding experience builds its own network of synapses in and around the NAC, and that network sends a signal to the midbrain: I’m anticipating x, so send up some dopamine, right now! That’s the case with romantic love, Paris, and heroin. During and after each of these experiences, that network of synapses gets strengthened: so the “specialization” of dopamine uptake is further increased. London just doesn’t do it for you anymore. It’s got to be Paris. Pot, wine, music…they don’t turn your crank so much; but cocaine sure does. Physical changes in the brain are its only way to learn, to remember, and to develop. But we wouldn’t want to call learning a disease.

So how well does the disease model fit the phenomenon of addiction? How do we know which urges, attractions, and desires are to be labeled “disease” and which are to be considered aspects of normal brain functioning? There would have to be a line in the sand somewhere. Not just the amount of dopamine released, not just the degree of specificity in what you find rewarding: these are continuous variables. They don’t lend themselves to two (qualitatively) different states: disease and non-disease.

In my view, addiction (whether to drugs, food, gambling, or whatever) doesn’t fit a specific physiological category. Rather, I see addiction as an extreme form of normality, if one can say such a thing. Perhaps more precisely: an extreme form of learning. No doubt addiction is a frightening, often horrible, state to endure, whether in oneself or in one’s loved ones. But that doesn’t make it a disease.
http://blogs.plos.org/mindthebrain/2012/11/12/why-addiction-is-not-a-brain-disease/

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Randall
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posted December 19, 2014 10:25 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
They’re screaming it from the rooftops: “addiction is a disease, and you can’t stop it without medical treatment”! But why are they screaming it so loud, why are they browbeating us about it, why is it always mentioned with a qualifier? You don’t hear people constantly referring to cancer as “the disease of cancer” – it’s just “cancer”, because it’s obvious that cancer is a disease, it’s been conclusively proven that the symptoms of cancer can’t be directly stopped with mere choices – therefore no qualifier is needed. On the other hand, addiction to drugs and alcohol is not obviously a disease, and to call it such we must either overlook the major gaps in the disease argument, or we must completely redefine the term “disease.” Here we will analyze a few key points and show that what we call addiction doesn’t pass muster as a real disease.
Real Diseases versus The Disease Concept or Theory of Drug Addiction

In a true disease, some part of the body is in a state of abnormal physiological functioning, and this causes the undesirable symptoms. In the case of cancer, it would be mutated cells which we point to as evidence of a physiological abnormality, in diabetes we can point to low insulin production or cells which fail to use insulin properly as the physiological abnormality which create the harmful symptoms. If a person has either of these diseases, they cannot directly choose to stop their symptoms or directly choose to stop the abnormal physiological functioning which creates the symptoms. They can only choose to stop the physiological abnormality indirectly, by the application of medical treatment, and in the case of diabetes, dietetic measures may also indirectly halt the symptoms as well (but such measures are not a cure so much as a lifestyle adjustment necessitated by permanent physiological malfunction).

Volkow NIDA Brain ScanIn addiction, there is no such physiological malfunction. The best physical evidence put forward by the disease proponents falls totally flat on the measure of representing a physiological malfunction. This evidence is the much touted brain scan[1]. The organization responsible for putting forth these brain scans, the National Institute on Drug Abuse and Addiction (NIDA), defines addiction in this way:

Addiction is defined as a chronic relapsing brain disease that is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences. It is considered a brain disease because drugs change the brain – they change it’s structure and how it works. These brain changes can be long lasting, and can lead to the harmful behaviors seen in people who abuse drugs.

The NIDA is stating outright that the reason addiction is considered a disease is because of the brain changes evidenced by the brain scans they show us, and that these changes cause the behavior known as addiction, which they characterize as “compulsive drug seeking and use”. There are three major ways in which this case for the disease model falls apart:

the changes in the brain which they show us are not abnormal at all
people change their behavior IN SPITE OF the fact that their brain has changed in response to repeated substance use
there is no evidence that the behavior of addicts is compulsive (compulsive meaning involuntary) (point two addresses this, as well as some other research that will be presented)

This all applies equally to “alcoholism” as well. If you’re looking for information on alcoholism, the same theories and logic discussed here are applicable; wherever you see the term addiction used on this site, it includes alcoholism.
Brain Changes In Addicts Are Not Abnormal, and Do Not Prove The Brain Disease Theory

On the first count – the changes in the brain evidenced by brain scans of heavy substance users (“addicts”) do not represent a malfunctioning brain. They are quite normal, as research into neuroplasticity has shown us. Whenever we practice doing or thinking anything enough, the brain changes – different regions and neuronal pathways are grown or strengthened, and new connections are made; various areas of the brain become more or less active depending upon how much you use them, and this becomes the norm in your brain – but it changes again as you adjust how much you use those brain regions depending on what you choose to think and do. This is a process which continues throughout life, there is nothing abnormal about it. But don’t take my word for it, listen to Sharon Begley, science writer for the Wall Street Journal, who has spent years investigating it and writing both newspaper columns and books on neuroplasticity[2]

The term refers to the brain’s recently discovered ability to change its structure and function, in particular by expanding or strengthening circuits that are used and by shrinking or weakening those that are rarely engaged. In its short history, the science of neuroplasticity has mostly documented brain changes that reflect physical experience and input from the outside world.

So, when the NIDA’s Nora Volkow and others show us changes in the brain of a substance user as compared to a non-substance user, this difference is not as novel as they make it out to be. They are showing us routine neuroplastic changes which every healthily functioning person’s brain goes through naturally. The phenomenon of brain changes isn’t isolated to “addicts” or anyone else with a so-called brain disease – non-addicted and non-depressed and non-[insert brain disease of the week here] people experience brain changes too. One poignant example was found in the brains of London taxi drivers, as Begley and neuroscientist Jeffrey Schwartz pointed out in The Mind and The Brain. [4]
Is Being A Good Taxi Driver A Disease?

A specific area of the brain’s hippocampus is associated with creating directional memories and a mental map of the environment. A team of researchers scanned the brains of London taxi drivers and compared their brains to non-taxi drivers. There was a very noticeable difference, not only between the drivers and non-drivers, but also between the more experienced and less experienced drivers:

There it was: the more years a man had been a taxi driver, the smaller the front of his hippocampus and the larger the posterior. “Length of time spent as a taxi driver correlated positively with volume in…the right posterior hippocampus,” found the scientists. Acquiring navigational skills causes a “redistribution of gray matter in the hippocampus” as a driver’s mental map of London grows larger and more detailed with experience.

An abridged earlier version of this article appears in the 2014 edition of reference/textbook "Addiction: Opposing Viewpoints" from Cengage Learning/Greenhaven PressAn abridged earlier version of this article appears in the 2014 edition of reference/textbook “Addiction: Opposing Viewpoints” from Cengage Learning/Greenhaven Press

So, the longer you drive a cab in London (that is, the longer you exert the mental and physical effort to quickly find your way around one of the world’s toughest to navigate cities), the more your brain physically changes. And the longer you use drugs, the more your brain changes. And indeed, the longer and more intensely you apply yourself to any skill, thought, or activity – the more it will change your brain, and the more visible will be the differences between your brain and that of someone who hasn’t been focused on that particular skill. So, if we follow the logic of the NIDA, then London’s taxi drivers have a disease, which we’ll call taxi-ism. But the new diseases wouldn’t stop there.

Learning to play the piano well will change your brain – and if you were to compare brain scans of a piano player to a non-piano player, you would find significant differences. Does this mean that piano playing is a disease called Pianoism? Learning a new language changes your brain, are bilingual people diseased? Athletes’ brains will change as a result of intensive practice – is playing tennis a disease? Are soccer players unable to walk into a sporting goods store without kicking every ball in sight? We could go on and on with examples, but the point is this – when you practice something, you get better at doing it, because your brain changes physiologically – and this is a normal process. If someone dedicated a large portion of their life to seeking and using drugs, and their brain didn’t change – then that would be a true abnormality. Something would be seriously wrong with their brain.

Its not just physical activity that changes our brains, thoughts alone can have a huge effect. What’s more, whether the brain changes or not, there is much research which shows that the brain is slave to the mind. As Begley points out elsewhere, thoughts alone can create the same brain activity that would come about by doing things[2]:

Using the brain scan called functional magnetic resonance imaging, the scientists pinpointed regions that were active during compassion meditation. In almost every case, the enhanced activity was greater in the monks’ brains than the novices’. Activity in the left prefrontal cortex (the seat of positive emotions such as happiness) swamped activity in the right prefrontal (site of negative emotions and anxiety), something never before seen from purely mental activity. A sprawling circuit that switches on at the sight of suffering also showed greater activity in the monks. So did regions responsible for planned movement, as if the monks’ brains were itching to go to the aid of those in distress.

So by simply practicing thinking about compassion, these monks made lasting changes in their brain activity. Purely mental activity can change the brain in physiologically significant ways. And to back up this fact we look again to the work of Dr Jeffrey Schwartz[3], who has taught OCD patients techniques to think their way out of obsessive thoughts. After exercising these thought practices, research showed that the brains of OCD patients looked no different than the brains of those who’d never had OCD. If you change your thoughts, you change your brain physically – and this is voluntary. This is outside the realm of disease, this shows a brain which changes as a matter of normality, and can change again, depending on what we practice choosing to think. There is nothing abnormal about a changing brain, and the type of changes we’re discussing aren’t necessarily permanent, as they are characterized to be in the brain disease model of addiction.

These brain change don’t need to be brought on by exposure to chemicals. Thoughts alone, are enough to rewire the very circuits of the human brain responsible for reward and other positive emotions that substance use and other supposedly “addictive” behaviors (“process addictions” such as sex, gambling, and shopping, etc.) are connected with.
The Stolen Concept of Neuroplasticity in the Brain Disease Model of Addiction

Those who claim that addiction is a brain disease readily admit that the brain changes in evidence are arrived at through repeated choices to use substances and focus on using substances. In this way, they are saying the disease is a product of routine neuroplastic processes. Then they go on to claim that such brain changes either can’t be remedied, or can only be remedied by outside means (medical treatment). When we break this down and look at it step by step, we see that the brain disease model rests on an argument similar to the “stolen concept”. A stolen concept argument is one in which the argument denies a fact on which it simultaneously rests. For example, the philosophical assertion that “reality is unknowable” rests on, or presumes that the speaker could know a fact of reality, it presumes that one could know that reality is unknowable – which of course one couldn’t, if reality truly was unknowable – so the statement “reality is unknowable” invalidates itself. Likewise, the brain disease proponents are essentially saying “neuroplastic processes create a state called addiction which cannot be changed by thoughts and choices” – this however is to some degree self-invalidating, because it depends on neuroplasticity while seeking to invalidate it. If neuroplasticity is involved, and is a valid explanation for how to become addicted, then we can’t act is if the same process doesn’t exist when it’s time to focus on getting un-addicted. That is, if the brain can be changed into the addicted state by thoughts and choices, then it can be further changed or changed back by thoughts and choices. Conditions which can be remedied by freely chosen thoughts and behaviors, don’t fit into the general understanding of disease. Ultimately, if addiction is a disease, then it’s a disease so fundamentally different than any other that it should probably have a completely different name that doesn’t imply all the things contained in the term “disease” – such as the idea that the “will” of the afflicted is irrelevant to whether the condition continues.
People change their addictive behavior in spite of the fact that their brain is changed – and they do so without medication or surgery (added 4/18/14)

In the discussion above, we looked at some analogous cases of brain changes to see just how routine and normal (i.e. not a physiological malfunction) such changes are. Now we’re going to look directly at the most popular neuroscientific research which purports to prove that these brain changes actually cause “uncontrolled” substance use (“addiction”).
This supposedly explains why drug use becomes compulsive.This supposedly explains why drug use becomes compulsive.

The most popular research is Nora Volkow’s brain scans of “meth addicts” presented by the NIDA. The logic is simple. We’re presented with the brain scan of a meth addict alongside the brain scan of a non-user, and we’re told that the decreased activity in the brain of the meth user (the lack of red in the “Drug Abuser” brain scan presented) is the cause of their “compulsive” methamphetamine use. Here’s how the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) explains the significance of these images in their booklet – Drugs, Brains, and Behavior: The Science of Addiction :

Just as we turn down the volume on a radio that is too loud, the brain adjusts to the overwhelming surges in dopamine (and other neurotransmitters) by producing less dopamine or by reducing the number of receptors that can receive signals. As a result, dopamine’s impact on the reward circuit of a drug abuser’s brain can become abnormally low, and the ability to experience any pleasure is reduced. This is why the abuser eventually feels flat, lifeless, and depressed, and is unable to enjoy things that previously brought them pleasure. Now, they need to take drugs just to try and bring their dopamine function back up to normal.

[emphasis added]

They go on that these same sorts of brain changes:

..may also lead to addiction, which can drive an abuser to seek out and take drugs compulsively. Drug addiction erodes a person’s self-control and ability to make sound decisions, while sending intense impulses to take drugs.

[emphasis added]

That image is shown when NIDA is vaguely explaining how brain changes are responsible for “addiction.” But later on, when they try to make a case for treating addiction as a brain disease, they show the following image, which tells a far different story if you understand more of the context than they choose to mention:

brain scan prolonged abstinence

Again, this graphic is used to support the idea that we should treat addiction as a brain disease. However, the authors mistakenly let a big cat out of the bag with this one – because the brain wasn’t treated at all. Notice how the third image shows a brain in which the red level of activity has returned almost to normal after 14 months of abstinence. That’s wonderful – but it also means that the NIDA’s assertions that “Addiction means being unable to quit, even in the face of negative consequences”(LINK) and “It is considered a brain disease because drugs change the brain… These brain changes… can lead to the harmful behaviors seen in people who abuse drugs” are dead wrong.

When these studies were done, nobody was directly treating the brain of methamphetamine addicts. They were not giving them medication for it (there is no equivalent of methadone for speed users), and they weren’t sticking scalpels into the brains of these meth addicts, nor were they giving them shock treatment. So what did they do?

These methamphetamine addicts were court ordered into a treatment program (whose methodology wasn’t disclosed in the research) which likely consisted of a general mixture of group and individual counseling with 12-step meeting attendance. I can’t stress the significance of this enough: their brains were not medically treated. They talked to counselors. They faced a choice between jail and abstinence. They CHOSE abstinence (for at least 14 months!) – even while their brains had been changed in a way that we’re told robs them of the ability to choose to quit “even in the face of negative consequences.” [5]

Even with changed brains, people are capable of choosing to change their substance use habits. They choose to stop using drugs, and as the brain scans above demonstrate – their brain activity follows this choice. If the brain changes caused the substance using behavior, i.e. if it was the other way around, then a true medical intervention should have been needed – the brain would’ve needed to have changed first via external force (medicine or surgery) before abstinence was initiated. They literally wouldn’t have been able to stop for 14 months without a real physical/biological medical intervention. But they did…
Substance Use Is Not Compulsive, It Is A Choice
The brain disease model of addiction is a bogeyman. "Here Comes the Bogey-Man" by Goya, circa 1799 The brain disease model of addiction is a bogeyman.
“Here Comes the Bogey-Man” by Goya, circa 1799

There doesn’t seem to be any evidence that substance use is involuntary. In fact, the evidence, such as that presented above, shows the opposite. Nevertheless, when the case for the disease is presented, the idea that drug use is involuntary is taken for granted as true. No evidence is ever actually presented to support this premise, so there isn’t much to be knocked down here, except to make the point I made above – is a piano player fundamentally incapable of resisting playing the piano? They may love to play the piano, and want to do it often, they may even be obsessive about it, but it would be hard to say that at the sight of a piano they are involuntarily driven by their brain to push aside whatever else they need to do in order to play that piano.

There is another approach to the second claim though. We can look at the people who have subjectively claimed that their substance use is involuntary, and see if the offer of incentives results in changed behavior. Gene Heyman covered this in his landmark book, Addiction: A Disorder of Choice[3]. He recounts studies in which cocaine abusers were given traditional addiction counseling, and also offered vouchers which they could trade in for modest rewards such as movie tickets or sports equipment – if they proved through urine tests that they were abstaining from drug use. In the early stages of the study, 70% of those in the voucher program remained abstinent, while only 20% stayed abstinent in the control group which didn’t receive the incentive of the vouchers. This demonstrates that substance use is not in fact compulsive or involuntary, but that it is a matter of choice, because these “addicts” when presented with a clear and immediately rewarding alternative to substance use and incentive not to use, chose it. Furthermore, follow up studies showed that this led to long term changes. A full year after the program, the voucher group had double the success rate of those who received only counseling (80% to 40%, respectively). This ties back in to our first point that what you practice, you become good at. The cocaine abusers in the voucher group practiced replacing substance use with other activities, such as using the sports equipment or movie passes they gained as a direct consequence of abstaining from drug use – thus they made it a habit to find other ways of amusing themselves, this probably led to brain changes, and the new habits became the norm.

Long story short, there is no evidence presented to prove that substance use is compulsive. The only thing ever offered is subjective reports from drug users themselves that they “can’t stop”, and proclamations from treatment professionals that the behavior is compulsive due to brain changes. But if the promise of a ticket to the movies is enough to double the success rate of conventional addiction counseling, then it’s hard to say that substance users can’t control themselves. The reality is that they can control themselves, but they just happen to see substance use as the best option for happiness available to them at the times when they’re abusing substances. When they can see other options for happiness as more attractive (i.e. as promising a greater reward than substance use), attainable to them, and as taking an amount of effort they’re willing to expend – then they will absolutely choose those options instead of substance use, and will not struggle to “stay sober”, prevent relapse, practice self-control or self-regulation, or any other colloquialism for making a different choice. They will simply choose differently.

But wait… there’s more! (Added 4/21/14) Contrary to the claims that alcoholics and drug addicts literally lose control of their substance use, a great number of experiments have found that they are really in full control of themselves. Priming dose experiments have found that alcoholics are not triggered into uncontrollable craving after taking a drink. Here’s a link to the evidence and a deeper discussion of these findings: Alcoholics Do Not Lose Control. Priming dose experiments of cocaine, crack, and methamphetamine users found that after being given a hit of their drug of choice (primed with a dose) they are capable of choosing a delayed reward rather than another hit of the drug. Here’s a link to a discussion of these findings: Drug addicts don’t lose control of their drug use.
Three Most Relevant Reasons Addiction Is Not A Disease

So to sum up, there are at least two significant reasons why the current brain disease theory of addiction is false.

A disease involves physiological malfunction, the “proof” of brain changes shows no malfunction of the brain. These changes are indeed a normal part of how the brain works – not only in substance use, but in anything that we practice doing or thinking intensively. Brain changes occur as a matter of everyday life; the brain can be changed by the choice to think or behave differently; and the type of changes we’re talking about are not permanent.
The very evidence used to demonstrate that addicts’ behavior is caused by brain changes also demonstrates that they change their behavior while their brain is changed, without a real medical intervention such as medication targeting the brain or surgical intervention in the brain – and that their brain changes back to normal AFTER they VOLITIONALLY change their behavior for a prolonged period of time
Drug use in “addicts” is not compulsive. If it was truly compulsive, then offering a drug user tickets to the movies would not make a difference in whether they use or not – because this is an offer of a choice. Research shows that the offer of this choice leads to cessation of substance abuse. Furthermore, to clarify the point, if you offered a cancer patient movie tickets as a reward for ceasing to have a tumor – it would make no difference, it would not change his probability of recovery.

Addiction is NOT a disease, and it matters. This has huge implications for anyone struggling with a substance use habit.

References:

1) NIDA, Drugs Brains and Behavior: The Science of Addiction, sciofaddiction.pdf
2) Sharon Begley, Scans of Monks’ Brains Show Meditation Alters Structure, Functioning, Wall Street Journal, November 5, 2004; Page B1, http://psyphz.psych.wisc.edu/web/News/Meditation_Alters_Brain_WSJ_11-04.htm
3) Gene Heyman, Addiction: A Disorder of Choice, Harvard University Press, 2009
4) Sharon Begley and Jeffrey Schwartz, The Mind And The Brain, Harper Collins, 2002
5) Links to the 2 methamphetamine abuser studies by Nora Volkow:

http://www.jneurosci.org/cgi/content/full/21/23/9414

http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/reprint/158/3/377

Important Notes from the author to readers and especially commenters:On “badness” or immorality: please do not attribute to me the idea that heavy substance users must be “bad” or “immoral” if they are in fact in control of and choosing their behavior. I do not think this. I think that at the time they’re using, it is what they prefer, given what life options they believe are available to them – and I don’t think it’s my job to decide what other people should prefer for themselves, and then declare them bad if they don’t live up to my vision of a “good” life. That’s what the disease recovery culture does, de facto, when they present the false dichotomy of ‘diseased or bad’. To say that addiction is chosen behavior is simply to make a statement about whether the behavior is within the control of the individual – it is not a judgment of the morality of the behavior or the individual choosing it.On willpower: please do not attribute to me the suggestion to “use willpower.” I have not said that people should use willpower, nor do I think it’s a coherent or relevant concept in any way, nor do I think “addicts lack willpower” or that those who recover have more willpower, nor, and this is important, do I believe that a choice model of addiction necessarily implies willpower as the solution.

“Addicts” do not need extra willpower, strength, or support, to change their heavy substance use habits if that is what they want to do. They need to change their preference for heavy substance use, rather than trying to fight that preference with supposed “willpower.”

On compassion: please don’t accuse me of not having compassion for people who have substance use problems. You do not know that, and if you attack my motives in this way it just shows your own intellectual impotence and sleaze. I have a great deal of compassion for people with these problems – I was once one such person. I am trying to get at the truth of the nature of addiction, so that the most people can be helped in the most effective way possible. I don’t doubt the compassion of those who believe addiction is a disease, and I hope you’ll give me the same benefit of the doubt. I assure you I care and want the best for people – and I don’t need to see them as diseased to do so. When you see someone who’s gotten themselves into a mess, don’t you want to help, even if it’s of their own making? Why should we need to believe they have a disease to help them if the mess is substance use related? I don’t get that requirement.
Some Agreement I’ve Found From Addiction Researchers (added 6/10/14)

I began working out my understanding of the brain disease model back in 2005 as I started working on a book about addiction; published this article in 2010; and was happy to find in 2011 when I went back to work with Baldwin Research that they had arrived at a similar conclusion. The way they stated it amounted to “either everything is addiction, or nothing is” – referring to the fact that the brain changes presented as proof of addiction being a brain disease are so routine as to indicate that all behavior must be classified as addiction if we follow the logic.

I was also gratified to have found a neuroscientist who arrived at the same conclusions. I think Marc Lewis PhD and I may disagree on a few things, but it seems we may see eye to eye on the logic I presented above about such brain changes being routine, and thus not indicative of disease. Check what he wrote in 2012 for the PLOS Blog, Mind The Brain:

every experience that has potent emotional content changes the NAC and its uptake of dopamine. Yet we wouldn’t want to call the excitement you get from the love of your life, or your fifth visit to Paris, a disease. The NAC is highly plastic. It has to be, so that we can pursue different rewards as we develop, right through childhood to the rest of the lifespan. In fact, each highly rewarding experience builds its own network of synapses in and around the NAC, and that network sends a signal to the midbrain: I’m anticipating x, so send up some dopamine, right now! That’s the case with romantic love, Paris, and heroin. During and after each of these experiences, that network of synapses gets strengthened: so the “specialization” of dopamine uptake is further increased. London just doesn’t do it for you anymore. It’s got to be Paris. Pot, wine, music…they don’t turn your crank so much; but cocaine sure does. Physical changes in the brain are its only way to learn, to remember, and to develop. But we wouldn’t want to call learning a disease.

….

In my view, addiction (whether to drugs, food, gambling, or whatever) doesn’t fit a specific physiological category. Rather, I see addiction as an extreme form of normality, if one can say such a thing. Perhaps more precisely: an extreme form of learning. No doubt addiction is a frightening, often horrible, state to endure, whether in oneself or in one’s loved ones. But that doesn’t make it a disease.

I think that quote is very important, because it highlights neuronal changes that occur in the same region implicated in addiction (whereas the examples I presented earlier in the article represented some other regions).

In a brilliant paper titled “The naked empress: Modern neuro science and the concept of addiction”, Peter Cohen of The Centre for Drug Research at University of Amsterdam, states that:

The notions of addiction transformed into the language of neurology as performed by authors like Volkov, Berridge, Gessa or De Vries are completely tautological.

He essentially argues that Volkow et al take for granted that heavy drug and alcohol use is uncontrolled, identify neural correlates, and present them as evidence of uncontrollability. Yet they don’t do so with other behaviors, and he provides plenty of examples. He notes that they start with assumptions that certain patterns of behavior (e.g. heavy drug use) are uncontrolled, and others are controlled – based purely on cultural prejudices. He accurately identifies addiction as a learned behavior, or as routine bonding to a thing, and then expresses something very close to my thesis presented above (that all learned/intensely repeated behaviors result in “brain changes”).

The problem of course is that probably all learning produces temporary or lasting ‘change in neural systems’. Also, continuation of learned behavior may be functional in the eyes and experience of the person but less so in the eyes of the outsider. Who is right? We know of people remaining married in spite of-in the eyes of a beholder- a very bad marriage. Who speaks of lasting ‘neural change’ as the basis of the continued marriage? But, even when a person herself sees some behavior as counter functional, it is not necessarily seen as addiction. It may be seen as impotence, ingrained habit or unhappy adaptation. It all depends on which behavior we discuss, not on the brain.

The great points contained in this article would be done an injustice if I tried to sum them up here, so check it out for yourself at The Center for Drug Research University of Amsterdam. As with Marc Lewis, I suspect that Peter Cohen and I might have some substantial disagreements about the full nature of addiction and human behavior in general, but I think we at least agree that the changes in the brain of an “addict” do not necessarily represent disease, and more likely represent a routine process.

Writing in 2013 for the journal Frontiers In Psychiatry, esteemed behavioral and addiction researcher Gene Heyman pointed out something so painfully obvious that we don’t even take notice – no causal link has ever been found between the neural adaptations caused by excessive substance use and continued heavy use. That is, correlation is not causation:

With the exception of alcohol, addictive drugs produce their biological and psychological changes by binding to specific receptor sites throughout the body. As self-administered drug doses greatly exceed the circulating levels of their natural analogs, persistent heavy drug use leads to structural and functional changes in the nervous system. It is widely – if not universally – assumed that these neural adaptations play a causal role in addiction. In support of this interpretation brain imaging studies often reveal differences between the brains of addicts and comparison groups (e.g., Volkow et al., 1997; Martin-Soelch et al., 2001) However, these studies are cross-sectional and the results are correlations. There are no published studies that establish a causal link between drug-induced neural adaptations and compulsive drug use or even a correlation between drug-induced neural changes and an increase in preference for an addictive drug.

Did you get that? Let me repeat the words of this experienced researcher, PhD, and lecturer/professor from Boston College and Harvard who, in addition to publishing scores of papers in peer reviewed medical journals has also had an entire book debunking the disease model of addiction by Harvard University press (I say all of this about his credentials so that I can hopefully STOP getting commenters who say “but you’re not a doctor, and what are your credentials wah, wah, wah,……” here’s a “credentialed” expert who essentially agrees with most of what I’ve written in this article – so please, for the love of god, save your fallacious ad hominems and appeals to authority for another day!)- he (Gene Heyman PhD) said this, as of 2013:

There are no published studies that establish a causal link between drug-induced neural adaptations and compulsive drug use or even a correlation between drug-induced neural changes and an increase in preference for an addictive drug.

And this was in a recently published paper in a section headed “But Drugs Change the Brain”, in which he continued to debunk the “brain changes cause addiction” argument by saying:

There are no published studies that establish a causal link between drug-induced neural adaptations and compulsive drug use or even a correlation between drug-induced neural changes and an increase in preference for an addictive drug. For example, in a frequently referred to animal study, Robinson et al. (2001) found dendritic changes in the striatum and the prefrontal cortex of rats who had self-administered cocaine. They concluded that this was a “recipe for addiction.” However, they did not evaluate whether their findings with rodents applied to humans, nor did they even test if the dendritic modifications had anything to do with changes in preference for cocaine in their rats. In principle then it is possible that the drug-induced neural changes play little or no role in the persistence of drug use. This is a testable hypothesis.

First, most addicts quit. Thus, drug-induced neural plasticity does not prevent quitting. Second, in follow-up studies, which tested Robinson et al.’s claims, there were no increases in preference for cocaine. For instance in a preference test that provided both cocaine and saccharin, rats preferred saccharin (Lenoir et al., 2007) even after they had consumed about three to four times more cocaine than the rats in the Robinson et al study, and even though the cocaine had induced motoric changes which have been interpreted as signs of the neural underpinnings of addiction (e.g., Robinson and Berridge, 2003). Third [an analysis of epidemiological studies] shows that the likelihood of remission was constant over time since the onset of dependence. Although this is a surprising result, it is not without precedent. In a longitudinal study of heroin addicts, Vaillant (1973) reports that the likelihood of going off drugs neither increased nor decreased over time (1973), and in a study with rats, Serge Ahmed and his colleagues (Cantin et al., 2010) report that the probability of switching from cocaine to saccharin (which was about 0.85) was independent of past cocaine consumption. Since drugs change the brain, these results suggest that the changes do not prevent quitting, and the slope of [an analysis of epidemiological studies] implies that drug-induced neural changes do not even decrease the likelihood of quitting drugs once dependence is in place.

Read the full paper here – it’s an amazingly concise summary of the truths about addiction that contradict many of the accepted opinions pushed by the recovery culture – Heyman, G. M. (2013). Addiction and Choice: Theory and New Data. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 4. doi:10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00031
Why Does It Matter Whether or Not Addiction Is A Brain Disease?

When we accept the unproven view that addiction and alcoholism are brain diseases, then it will lead us down a long, painful, costly, and pointless road of cycling in and out of ineffective treatment programs and 12 step meetings. You will waste a lot of time without finding a permanent solution. When we examine the evidence, throw out the false disease concepts, and think rationally about the problem we can see that addiction is really just a matter of choice. Knowing this, we can bypass the rehabs, and find the true solution within ourselves. You can choose to end your addiction. You can choose to improv your life. You can choose to stop the endless cycle of “recovery” and start living. You don’t need to be a victim of the self-fulfilling prophecy that is the brain disease model of addiction. There are alternative views and methods of change which I hope you’ll take the time to learn about on The Clean Slate Addiction Site.

There are many different ways to argue against the brain disease model of addiction. I have only presented 3 basic arguments here. But beyond just addiction, many modern claims of “brain disease” are fatally flawed, in that they are founded on the logically impossible philosophical stance of psychological determinism. From this standpoint, any evidence of any brain activity is immediately interpreted as a “cause” of a particular mind state or behavior – with no regard for free will/the ability to choose one’s thoughts and thus behaviors. If you understand the impossibility of psychological determinism (or “epiphenomenalism”) then you’ll take all such claims with a grain of salt. For a detailed examination of this issue, see the following article: The Philosophical Problem with the Brain Disease Model of Addiction: Epiphenomenalism
How To End Addiction, Substance Dependence, Substance Abuse, Alcoholism, and General Drug and Alcohol Problems (updated 1/31/2014)

Due to the fact that most conventional rehab and addiction treatment programs follow the false belief that addiction is a disease, they are generally not effective at dealing with these problems – so I really can’t ethically recommend any “treatment” programs other than a run of the mill detoxification procedure if you feel you may be experiencing physical withdrawal symptoms – you can find that through your local hospital or emergency room; by asking your primary care doctor; or by calling 911 if you feel your life is in danger due to withdrawal (beware that withdrawal from alcohol and some prescription drugs such as the class known as benzodiazepines can lead to fatal seizures). But what comes after detoxification is simply personal choices, and treatment programs actually discourage productive personal choices by attempting to control people and feeding them nonsense such as the disease theory and idea of powerlessness.

If you want to end or alter your own substance use habits you need to make different choices, and commit to those new choices for a long enough time that they become habitual, or your new norm. How do you orient yourself towards this and get in the proper mindstate? It all starts at the level of thought. You have to believe it is possible for you to change, and believe that there are more enjoyable lifestyles available to you. It’s not easy, and I don’t mean to downplay anyone’s struggles by saying this behavior is a choice. Any habit can feel terrifying to change, but that doesn’t mean it’s impossible.
For extreme users, there are two main stages to quitting:

1 – The early period where you stop using even though you crave it strongly.

This is the part that feels the hardest. It can sometimes last a few days, weeks, or months. People do it all the time though, most on their own without formal help – and a smaller percentage do it while attending a 28 day program, or a 90 meetings in 90 days regimen of 12-step meetings. The funny thing about the 12-step route is that the main advice given is “don’t drink, and go to meetings.” So, while they’re denying your ability to choose, they tell you to choose not to drink or drug – “one day at a time.” In the 28 day rehab route, the same thing is happening – while your power of choice is being denied, you are choosing to stay sober at a rehab rather than to leave and get high or drunk. In every case people are choosing to change their substance use habits. It seems the only exception to this would be jail, or some other type of coercion.

The part that makes the early stage so tough is that from your current perspective (which has been created by repeated choices to use substances), drugs or alcohol are the things that you know you can do that will probably make you feel better than anything else. So it feels as if you’re denying yourself the best possible thing available to you; it feels as if an incredible force is involved (and it is, but we’ll get to what exactly that force is in a minute). It’s a huge conflict, but you hold on, because you want to end the pain that often accompanies the pleasure of heavy substance use.

For people to make a different choice, they need to make a change in the way they see their options. That is, they need to judge their potential choices differently. This is what happens when people say, as they do in AA, “I got sick and tired of being sick and tired.” At the very least, they are essentially saying that “my life would be more satisfying if I simply subtracted drug use from it”, and for many people that is enough. They have come to believe that a better lifestyle than their current one is available to them. Such thinking reflects the fact of a change in perspective – they no longer see the substance use as such a valuable choice – and they do envision there life, without much change other than removing substance use from it, as a happier option. Interviews with people who have quit heroin, cocaine, and alcohol without treatment or support groups reveals a “cognitive evaluation” process that is much the same – they say they realized they wanted to grow up, be more responsible, spend more time with their families, finally get their career off the ground, etc.

For many though, all they realize at the beginning is that the substance related problems are too painful – but they don’t necessarily believe there is any doable lifestyle available to them that will make them happier than getting high and drunk. So they are in the middle, in conflict – they love getting high, but they hate its negative consequences. These are the people who feel the most hopeless, helpless, and lost. They have no vision of something better, so stopping substance use, even for a few days feels like an incredible feat of willpower to them. They don’t know what they want.

Going to rehab or to AA gives some people a framework for getting through this early stage. Many just go to detox. But the vast majority get no formal help at all, and still manage to get through the early period of change. I’m all for people doing whatever they feel will help them at this early stage. However, most of the formalized help options seem to fail when it comes to stage 2…

2 – Making your short term changes last.

Once you get out of the woods of the momentum of habit and possibly physical withdrawal symptoms comes the next issue: how to make this change last.

It will last if you change your perspective. If you are focused on a lifestyle you believe will bring you greater happiness, then cementing your short term change into long-term change will feel almost effortless. Do people who do this have more willpower than the ones who can’t seem to do it and keep going back to their old habits? NO – and I can’t say this strongly enough: willpower is not the issue here. The person who lives life for some time believing that being high on drugs or alcohol would be amazing, and then eventually goes back to doing just that – is exercising their will. They are doing what they want to do. They are not weak. They often show great strength – in the act of procuring money for drugs; buying the drugs; and trying to use the drugs while going undetected by family members and others who are policing their activities.

The issue is not one of strength of will – it’s of the will itself. They still judge heavy substance use as their best feasible option for happiness. For them to change their habit in the long-term, they need to come to believe that some other lifestyle is more “worth it” and doable for them than the “addict” lifestyle is.

This is where formal addiction treatment and support groups usually fail these people. They offer them no way to grow past this desire and shift their gaze to more attractive lifestyles. In fact, the things they teach and do at addiction treatment programs actively divert people’s attention away from the task of finding better options. They keep people focused on the wrong things:

The need for support. This implies inherent weakness, and a need for strength from outside the individual. They are not weak, they are strongly pursuing their will.
Battling an imaginary disease. The desire for heavy substance use is taken for granted as something the “addict” will always have, because it comes from a genetic or neurological defect / malfunction.
Hitting bottom, Confronting Denial, etc. They teach people that it needs to get bad enough to deter them from further use – and in fact, many believe they need to keep going to meetings to remind themselves of how bad it could get if they used again. This keeps them in the mode of, again, taking the desire for granted as a constant presence, and battling it. The problem is, most “addicts” already understand and experience many of these costs, and yet they choose to use anyways, because they see substance use as their most attractive feasible option for happiness.
Avoiding triggers. Objects and images are granted great power because they may trigger memories, and thus are to be avoided “don’t drive past the bar” is the perfect example – the logic being that seeing the bar will trigger you to go in and drink. If you have somewhere you believe better to be at than the bar, then it will “trigger” nothing except perhaps a memory of things you did at the bar – but your actual behavior will be determined by your beliefs about what choices will get you the positive results you desire in life.
Triggers 2.0: Stress, anxiety, depression, etc. The more modern, supposedly progressive treatments focus on emotional and psychological problems as the “underlying causes” (i.e. more complex triggers) to be avoided, or else the “weak” “addict” will be caused to use drugs and alcohol. Again, people behave in ways they believe are their best path to happiness. Yes, depression may make the quest for happiness even more urgent – but if the person perceives some better feasible route to happiness other than drug and alcohol use, they WILL NOT choose to use drugs or alcohol. Stress, anxiety, and depression, are all very normal parts of life that people deal with in a multitude of ways. The treatment industry instills beliefs that overcomplicate these problems, creating an unnecessary causal connection between them and substance use in the minds of “addicts” in their care. Yes, these problems should be dealt with, but people shouldn’t be taught to neurotically hunt for the slightest hint of negative emotion as evidence of a pending relapse. They should be looking for the choices that can bring them the greatest life satisfaction.

There are more. I could keep going. But the basic point is this: when people truly believe they have better feasible choices available than heavy substance use, then they don’t use substances. Many people get sober initially to reduce painful consequences – to be just ever so slightly happier than they are in the “addicted” state. But that’s not a very happy place. Over time, if they really develop their belief in happier life options, and start pursuing those options, they lose the will to use substance heavily. They replace it with a will to live out whatever their vision of a happier lifestyle is.

Some people will never choose to perceive that anything is better than heavy substance use. It is a choice to think that way. Nobody can force another person to judge things another way. It is a volitional act. What can be done, is that we can give people helpful information, that they can then choose to use to find and develop happier options for themselves. Or you can give them misinformation like the disease model, and useless tasks like avoiding triggers, that will subvert their efforts.

I understand the people in the recovery community and addiction treatment industry mostly mean well, and believe what they preach, but I think they are sadly mistaken. Addiction is not a disease, and therefore not an issue of weakness or external forces causing this behavior – it is behavior people freely choose because they believe it is their best option for happiness. If they come to believe some other course of behavior will be more rewarding and within reach for them, then they will follow that course of action, and their change will last.

The solution then, is to change one’s mindset – but the brain disease model of addiction essentially says this is an irrelevant matter.
http://www.thecleanslate.org/myths/addiction-is-not-a-brain-disease-it-is-a-choice/

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 10:29 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Randall:
Attempts to define addiction in concrete scientific terms have been highly controversial and are becoming increasingly politicized.

Most people are aware of this. Thank you for the contribution, just don't spam the thread with them okay?

Thanks.

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Randall
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posted December 19, 2014 10:29 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
There are several reasons why, unlike traditional 12-step programs, Narconon does not teach our clients or students that addiction is a disease.
Addiction is a Disorder, not a Disease

The first and foremost reason is that it is scientifically incorrect statement to describe addiction in such a manner. Currently, mental health diagnoses having to do with addiction are all classified as “disorders,” not diseases..

In other words, scientists are only able to prove the obvious about addiction: that it definitely causes various harmful effects to a person as well as causes his behavior to markedly deviate from the norm. A person addicted has different thought patterns and values than the average Joe in our current culture. However, a disorder is simply a list of symptoms that commonly occur together. For example, part of the “disorder” of addiction includes a possible loss of appetite as well as periods of irritability. These are just symptoms, clues to what is going on, not an actual description of some mythical chemical imbalance or infection in the body.
Symptoms of Addiction Disorders

More examples of symptoms of addiction disorders include the emotional need and desire to have a drug, impaired judgment, physical craving for a substance, etc. But a disorder is very different from a disease.

Something can only be called a disease in the medical community if it can be proven to exist, if you can test for it and possibly cure it. You can measure it. There are ways to deduce physically as to whether or not a person has this disease.
There is No Blood Test for Addiction

Therefore in the medical community, addiction isn’t called a disease. You can’t give a blood test to someone in order to detect if they have alcoholism or drug addiction before the fact. You’re only able to look at someone who is addicted and say “Hey, this person is addicted.” You can label them with having an addictive disorder. The label, however, does little to help a person quit.
Labels Stick

Which brings us to the second reason we don’t call addiction a disease. Medically and technically, that term is incorrect. Additionally, labeling someone with a disease has actually been proven to cause the symptoms of the label to persist. Labels stick. The more often someone hears they have a disease they will never be cured of, the more they tend to believe it. The label of addiction saddles the person with all the symptoms of the disease, sometimes whether they have them or not. Part of the problem an addict has is that he’s gotten to the point where so many things have gone wrong in his life and he has so many regrets about his decisions that he has trouble taking responsibility for his addiction. So the label makes it easier and justifies why he does what he does.
Responsibility

Normally people have trouble taking responsibility for the mess they have made; it is hard to confront. Unfortunately an addict has made a big mess. This results in him taking little responsibility for his life. Because of that, he’s going to take more drugs. The less responsibility he takes for his life, the worse life gets, the more he feels a need to take the drugs in order to hide these things from himself and gloss them over. For addicts, drugs provide rose-colored glasses to filter an otherwise stormy and troublesome day.

Stamping a label on someone actually denies them responsibility. They’re able to say “Wow, you know, I have an addiction disease. That explains my behavior.” Also, it explains and justifies future addictive habits.

Factually and statistically, enforcing that someone has a disease actually lowers the person’s chance to recover.
To Recover, You Have to Know it’s Possible

The third and final reason Narconon does not call drug addiction a disease is because for someone to beat addiction, for someone to beat any enemy, they have to believe that enemy can be beat. For someone to conquer addiction and recover from it completely, he or she must know that addiction can be conquered. They have to know they don’t have to live with addiction for the rest of their lives.

What Recovery Means at Narconon Riverbend Retreat

Recovery at Narconon Riverbend Retreat doesn’t mean the person has to fight with themself for the rest of their life in order to resist using drugs. Recovery means the person no longer has the impulse to abuse drugs. Recovery means they are doing so well in life, and is so happy, and so successful, and has all the skills that he needs to cope with life, they no longer needs drugs in order to escape their troubles. They are able to live a happy, drug-free, sober life without compulsions to use.
The Beginning of the Process of Recovery

The very beginning of the process, where an addict goes from addiction all the way to full recovery, is the belief that it can be done. The belief that addiction isn’t part of a person’s core make-up, and that it can indeed be conquered, is fundamental to any lasting change. In traditional 12-step programs, they’re missing this step. The real first step is knowing that addiction can be beat. Traditional 12-step programs continually try to drill into the person’s head that he has a disease, that he will always be a “recovering addict.”

Narconon Riverbend’s New Life Retreat’s graduates are “ex-addicts,” not “recovering addicts.” They were addicts. They are addicts no longer. And with one of the highest success rates of any drug rehab in the nation, Narconon New Life Retreat has proven itself as an effective long term drug rehab.

For more information about the Narconon program, or to learn how we can help you or your loved one overcome addiction and get back the life you’ve always wanted and knew you could have, call us and speak with an experienced, helpful drug rehab counselor. Call 1-800-473-0930.
http://www.drugabusesolution.com/drugs-of-abuse/why-drug-addiction-isnt-a-disease

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PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 10:33 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Oh my! I apologize for my misunderstanding... I'm sorry about your father. May he rest in peace

And I'm also very sorry to know that you had dealt and suffered with many people who underwent serious addiction. It is still commendable that you choose to address this issue. It's a really important one I believe, and it ties into a much larger framework of negative and skewed thinking.

You're right, there are definitely various reasons from where the stigma arises. Did you ever feel that stigma, implicitly even, towards the addicts in your life that you knew? And if you did, it certainly seems you have overcome it. How did you? In either way, I'd like to hear your perspective on this. Please feel free not to discuss anything that surely feels too sensitive.

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Randall
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posted December 19, 2014 10:33 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Randall     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I'm not spamming. You posted a few articles claiming addiction is a disease, so I am posting a few that show otherwise. I feel that it does a grave disservice to those who have drug habits (habit being the operative word, and habits can be changed) by claiming it is a disease, because IMHO that relieves them of responsibility for their actions.

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ariestaurus
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posted December 19, 2014 10:36 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for ariestaurus     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
My uncle is an alcoholic. He alienated his family, stopped working which caused them to lose their home, and the children grew up with watching their parents fight all the time. They saw their mother kicking their father out of the house in tears, calling him a 'drunk ******* '. They didn't sleep in the same bed for 15+ years prior to their divorce. My aunt waited until the youngest child turned 18 before she divorced him.

I lived with them for a month at a time on different occasions (when my parents went on trips and I was too young to stay at home alone). He was never around, always holed up in the basement drinking and smoking. They never had a positive father figure. My aunt, on the other hand, was an amazing parent.

He would also get drunk and say inappropriate things to me. He'd often tell me, "Man, I need to get laid!", and told me to tell guys to wash their c*cks before putting it in my mouth (???). Those were his exact words! Yes, he was drunk, but my god... Not the worst thing an uncle has done to me, but it was very creepy and weird, and I never felt comfortable being alone with him. He fell into a DEEP depression after his divorce. Couldn't get off the couch and drank like a fish.

Soon, his father, who is now 92, told him to come back to India so the family could take care of him. He went, and was given his own apartment and 2 servants. My family is very rich, so he was given everything he wanted. He continued to obsess over his ex-wife. The man is VERY delusional, still referring to her as his 'wife', even though she is now in a serious relationship with another man, and has no interest in seeing him whatsoever.

Fast forward to 10 years: in April of this year, we found out he was diagnosed with heart failure, kidney failure, and HIV. The doctors have given him 6 months-2 years to live. Even on the meds, he continued to drink/smoke, which made him wither away even faster. His family spent thousands of dollars per month on his medical treatment, but his insistence to keep drinking kept him in/out of the hospital. His father thought he should be brought back to Canada for medical treatment. He came here in November, and has been living with me and my parents since.

Alcoholism has ruined his life, his family's life, and has turned our lives upside down. He has lost his home, burdened his elderly father, and made his children resent him.

When they come to visit and take care of him, there is an air of resentment and frustration. They are so angry with him, but his delusions mask him from seeing the reality of what he is done. In his mind, he was the perfect father and husband, which is baffling to everyone else!

While I understand alcoholism is a disease, it is very hard for me to feel compassion for him. It sounds terrible to say it, but I cannot help the way I feel...

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PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 10:41 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
The conversation is on the stigma associated with drug addicts not a debate on whether it's a disease or isn't a disease........... But ok.

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Faith
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posted December 19, 2014 10:46 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Oh my god T.

I had no idea.

No idea.....

Seriously wish I could hug you, even though I would be crying so hard if I could.

Thank you for telling us. God, that is the worst thing imaginable.

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PisceanDream
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posted December 19, 2014 10:46 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for PisceanDream     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
@ariestaurus, do your feeling stems from feeling unable to forgive the damage that his alcoholism has caused his family?

Have you guys ever sought professional help for him?

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 10:47 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by PisceanDream:
Oh my! I apologize for my misunderstanding... I'm sorry about your father. May he rest in peace

And I'm also very sorry to know that you had dealt and suffered with many people who underwent serious addiction. It is still commendable that you choose to address this issue. It's a really important one I believe, and it ties into a much larger framework of negative and skewed thinking.

You're right, there are definitely various reasons from where the stigma arises. Did you ever feel that stigma, implicitly even, towards the addicts in your life that you knew? And if you did, it certainly seems you have overcome it. How did you? In either way, I'd like to hear your perspective on this. Please feel free not to discuss anything that surely feels too sensitive.


Yes, I have witnessed that stigma with family members. I guess because I think I understand it personally, I can't hold onto anger about it towards others, even after everything that has happened. Sure I have been angry, but it dissipates rather quickly. Other emotions surrounding it are stronger than that one. I get more angry about the people (one in particular) that should know better, but still choose to use any opportunity to demonize other family members about it.

It's a lot to get into and I'm not sure if I really want to here anymore.

quote:
I'm sorry about your father. May he rest in peace

Thanks a lot

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 10:54 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Randall:
I'm not spamming. You posted a few articles claiming addiction is a disease, so I am posting a few that show otherwise. I feel that it does a grave disservice to those who have drug habits (habit being the operative word, and habits can be changed) by claiming it is a disease, because IMHO that relieves them of responsibility for their actions.

That is fine for you to post that viewpoint. Many people have it and you and they are all entitled to it.

I happen to believe that that is not the whole truth. And i think it does a disservice to addicts out there.

You can call it a habit and believe it's an easy one to change by choice and that they are all simply looking ways of relieving responsibility from themselves etc., but I know otherwise.

I won't be arguing with you or people like you that hold those kinds of opinions either.

BTW, no one is saying they can't be changed. They most certainly can. With a lot of support and professional help, just like with any other disease.

So thank you for your contribution. We now know where you stand on the subject. Unfortunately that is not the whole truth. You can believe it is if you want to.

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Faith
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posted December 19, 2014 10:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I haven't read the whole thread, but on the point of "taking responsibility." That's true...but there needs to be compassion and no judgement.

My father was an alcoholic before I was born. He drank and smoked heavily for a long time...I was born when he was 48.

He got sober with the help of Alcoholics Anonymous.

*composing myself* Um....

He never stopped going to AA meetings. He never stopped walking into these meetings, with his very straight posture, 6'3" frame, handsome face and nice clothes, like a dignified grandfather, and saying, "I'm just like you. I want a drink every single day. I fight this demon every day." For over 30 years he did this.

He never really talked about it to his children. But when he started dying, every day, someone from AA would show up at the hospital crying at his bedside.

Many of these people stopped me and my siblings in the hallways to tell us how important our father was to them.

Eventually they started conducting the AA meetings AT the hospital so everyone could be with him at once.

~~~ I'm losing it ~~~~

At his funeral, the entire back of the church was filled with recovering alcoholics. When my uncle gave the eulogy and mentioned my father's devotion to the cause of overcoming alcoholism, so many people started crying, it sounded like this tidal wave of tears...

Honestly the most touching tribute to my father's life that anyone gave.

Just wanted to share my background.

I will probably delete this.

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 11:02 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Faith:
Oh my god T.

I had no idea.

No idea.....

Seriously wish I could hug you, even though I would be crying so hard if I could.

Thank you for telling us. God, that is the worst thing imaginable.


Thanks Faith Now you're gonna make me cry.

I know most of the old members know. Though a lot of these people are gone. I didn't know you didn't know. Yeah, life has not been easy ever since then. I will be dealing with the effects for the rest of my life. I'm getting through it though. Some days are better than others. I probably won't ever fully heal from it, but i'm doing my best.

Thanks for the hug. I needed it.

*note to everyone else. I'm starting to feel worn out talking about this subject now so if anyone responds and I don't get back too thoroughly, don't think I am ignoring you. Feeling a bit burnt out today.

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BellaFenice
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From: Sparkles the Unicorn-When will your faves?
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posted December 19, 2014 11:10 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for BellaFenice     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thank you to all you brave ladies for sharing your touching stories, alcoholism is a very tough disease to battle. I could prove that it is a disease based on physioloical outcomes (because it is pretty common knowledge), but that is not the point of the post.

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Faith
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posted December 19, 2014 11:11 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Originally posted by T:
Thanks Faith Now you're gonna make me cry.

Sorry! My daughter just walked in and asked me why I'm crying.

All of this is too sad...way too sad...

I understand about you needing a break. No, I had no idea what you went through, but I will say that your recovery...the way you have pieced yourself back together...is awe-inspiring, jaw-droppingly phenomenal. You are an amazing person and I'm sorry if this makes you cry again but I'm SURE your father is super, super proud of your comeback.

Will let you go...

We'll talk more about pizza and fun stuff later...

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T
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posted December 19, 2014 11:11 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for T     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Faith ....just wow.....that is the most beautiful story. Your father was a beautiful human being and I'm so glad you shared that story. I needed to smile, even a teary one.

Just amazing .....to not only help oneself, but at the same time so many others at the same time. Beautiful

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Faith
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posted December 19, 2014 11:12 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thanks T.

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