"Our society considers hard work, intense recreation, vigorous exercise, rushing through the day, excessive eating, frequent anger, occasional deep depression, and sex without love as "normal", and we have become addicted to the brain chemicals that accompany these so-called normal behavior.
Paul Pearsall
Addiction is not difficult to understand. Accepting that we or a loved one is an addict is difficult. The only reason that people use a substance or a position (power) or food is to change their feelings.
Often the addict has a large reserve of hurt moments or experiences which s/he uses to prove why her/his life is so tragic.
I know this because during my addiction to alcohol I had saved up every hurt feeling or experience and I remember consciously choosing which feelings to use where. This all gets tremendously labor-intensive if the same people are seen very often as new abuses have to be "used". So the ever resourceful addict creates sad, bad, horrible experiences that never happened. I think this behavior could safely be called "crazy".
This behavior is what mental health professionals use to "prove" the mental illness. The problem is no one has been able to prove the medical model of the disease theory. So, as far as I am concerned, the disease theory is a theory.
Instead, I believe, that when we are under the control of an addiction, we make increasingly bad and hurtful choices. Remember, the addict is living in his/her head in a world of their own creation. Pile those crazy choices on top of the fantasy in one's head and the addict is miserable. The misery is self-inflicted and he/she is the only one who can choose to leave that miserable state.
I believe mental health to be fluid and we are each in and out of it several times a day. I know I am healthy when I know I am crazy because I didn't used to know the difference. Today, I have the choice to abandon my crazy behavior.
Addiction is very prevelant in our world. Changemaker defines addiction as any behavior that is chosen to enable a person to live a fantasy. Addicts don't live in reality. They live in a mental world of their own creation. What an addict uses to control his/her feelings and thoughts is not important. Rather it be alcohol, food, religion, other drugs, power, money, etc., the addict is using the addiction for only one reason--to change how they feel. It is said that there are a million excuses for using the addiction but only one reason. And that reason is to change how he/she feels. When someone is living in his/her head, reality rears its ugly head in feelings. So those feelings have to go away—this is what the addiction provides. It takes the feelings away.
We believe that many of us use something from time to time to change how we feel. The addict is the person who uses the addiction on a regular basis to avoid the reality of life around them. For example, alcoholics may be daily drinkers (3-4 days weekly) or weekend alcoholics (mainly drink on the weekends), or periodic alcoholics (drink for 2-3 days in a row but do the drinking at different periods of time--also may go long periods of time (even years)--without alcohol.).
Substance addicts are easy to spot. But many more people are addicted to power (codependency), money, material possessions (living in homes/having automobiles they can barely afford), work (they will say that they have to work because they need the money--often married to poor money managers), sex, etc.
Many people are addicted to feeling bad (the victim role). Remember how we feel is our choice. It is very hard for the martyr to give up that "poor me" behavior but until both people in a relationship are free to give and receive without guilt trips, the relationship is not a positive experience for either.
The disease model of addiction has helped add to the confusion about addiction. Addicts live in a self-induced delusion. The delusion is that the world revolves around them. In reality, the world doesn't revolve around any individual.
As John Powell has written, we each need a Copernican moment when we realize the world doesn't revolve around us. Remember Copernius went against all other thinkers to say that the Sun didn't revolve around Earth, but that Earth revolved around the Sun.
In other words, some of the main issues in addiction treatment are maturity issues. The age at which a person started drinking, using, eating, buying, being overpowering to others, using sex, etc. is the emotional age he/she still is. If he/she started at age 15, which is pretty normal, then he/she is age 14 emotionally.
So recovery is generally about growing up. Another main issue of why people are addictive is to continue to live life in their head or in their imagination. No one knows reality--we only have a perception of reality. But living in our head is not being free and open to life.
As the hero in 10 Million Ways to Die says, "I never knew that I lived in a world that I hadn't created." That is why the addict experiences such anger at having to give up the addiction. It seems to the addict that his/her use can only be pertaining to him/her. In reality, the addiction is affecting everyone in the addict's life.
Recovery and ACOA
In 1976, when I came to AA, there were few female members. In my 3rd month of recovery, I had a profound spiritual experience which I have related in here. I quickly learned to shut up about God as many members wanted to talk about alcohol only. Being female and a God person almost insured that I wouldn't have a lot of group acceptance.
The focus for my recovery took a profound change in direction when I discovered ACOA. I have never "forgot" that I am first and foremost an alcoholic and am deeply grateful to be in recovery. Nor have I ever considered myself as recovered. These beliefs about myself have helped me to stay centered and focused on recovery.
ACOA (Adult Children of Alcoholics) has gone through several name changes. In 1977, (one year after the beginning in my recovery in 1976), a group of Al-Anon members realized that they were all children of alcoholics. This was the beginning of ACOA. In later years, ACOA became ACA and/or COA.
Up until 1983, any Al-Anon meeting I attended was to help heal that child inside me who grew up in a very troubled family. But when I shared at Al-Anon meetings about my alcoholism, I felt a subtle change in the group of some members feeling that I didn't belong in an Al-Anon meeting.
But when I found ACOA or ACA meetings, I immediately knew that I belonged because they talked about feelings. I continued to be completely committed to my recovery with AA groups. But the AA groups were male-dominated groups whose members seemed to be proud of how far they had fallen to their bottoms. So I started attending ACOA and Codependents Anonymous as well as AA.
I can't find any CODEP meetings here in Ft. Lauderdale but I notice that several of the AA meetings include AFL (affliated with family) so maybe some CODEP went there. CODEP was the most fun because it was full of the professionals who were there to lead the rest of us. Right!
ACOA Books
The Changemaker Family of Blogs
The Changemaker Test offers education for self-discovery as we believe that the change within a person involves the courage to see (insight) and the courage to act (action). The test will teach anyone 10 or more labels about themselves.
Therefore, by using the labels to change themselves, the changemaker is the person who decides to learn and make the change happen.
In advocating the self-discovery model for understanding ourselves and others, Changemaker believes that the Changemaker Test can be used to help groups of persons interested in learning about themselves.
Healing begins when, in spite of all the negative self-talk going on inside a person, that person feels someone caring and loving them for no apparent reason. This unconditional love comes in spite of attempts to search for a motive.
The Changemaker Family of Blogs includes five blogs that each includes one of the basic topics from our main site, kathyberman.com.
1) answersbyemail.com -I wrote the Changemaker Test in 1990 and have only recently included it in my work. As a counselor and teacher, I realized that most of the self-discovery labels were only known by counselors. So I took the 5 major personality indicators and arranged a "test" that anyone can use to find 10 of his/her labels.
Therapy is the study of personality but it has been high-jacked by the mental health field to define mental illness. I say high jacked because most people need information/education and not therapy. I don't believe you can help anyone negatively. I have always pictured a person in denial as sitting out in the cold wrapped up in a thin blanket called denial. Many times people want to "help" by yanking off the blanket. How does that help anyone except the "helper's ego"?
2) changemakergroups.com - Changemaker Groups provide short-term specialized direction and solutions to help others to better understand themselves and us. With this direction and self-knowledge others will learn to implement techniques designed to lead to greater self-mastery. These groups are started by lay persons interested in self-discovery and helping others. Anyone with compassion for others and the humility to know that he/she doesn't have the answers for anyone's life except his/her own life.
Groups are the recognized best method for people to gain information and acceptance from others. One of the main underpinnings of AA is that all members are peers. Anyone has the opportunity to share and to be heard. The Changemaker Groups can be started at several free online community sites and/or in person.
3) cmlibrary.com -In 2005, I began selecting and defining the books I felt were the best for ten main topics developed in Changemaker. The topics are core (basic selection of 4 books that could be the foundation for life change), creativity, exercise, food, health, meditation, peace of mind, personal development, spiritual direction, and stress reduction. The core books are comprehensive and may be all the books someone needs. I have included several books I've used as my "textbooks" for my personal growth.
4) healingforyou.com -This blog will include all the topics needed for healing mentally, physically and emotionally. It also includes many links to tools to help you in your spiritual journey. I believe that each of us has a soul and our main life quest is the discovery and growth of our soul. I also believe that our soul is awakened by our creativity and that maturity is becoming that joyful, playful child that God created in us.
5) highenergygoals.com-I quit drinking alcohol in 1976, smoking in 1988, but I had gained weight. For over 10 years, I tried eating different ways with no weight loss. Then in 2006, I developed my basic weight loss plan. I lost 20 pounds which I have kept over for over a year. I am now beginning my Phase 2-20 more pounds. The High Energy plan includes food suggestions, exercise suggestions, and emotional and mental techniques needed for stress reduction. The plan is created by you to include the food, exercise, and techniques that you most enjoy. I know that a total life plan has to be enjoyable to be used.
Squidoo Recovery Lenses
-
Addiction Free!
-
Addiction to anything, be it alcohol, drugs, sex, debt, food etc. can be a painful and debilitating experience for both the addict and those around him or her. This lens is designed to take a little of the mystery and confusion out of taking the nece...
-
Alcoholics Anonymous and Recovery
-
This is a BIG subject and this lens makes no pretence of doing anything more than just scratch the surface. A few books, a few items with the Serenity Prayer and the Lord's Prayer and some links. It's a start, but only a start.
-
-
Recommended Recovery Books.
-
One of the things I discovered when I got clean is that I really like to read! Go figure? Before I entered recovery, I "thought" I hated to read. As a matter of fact I "thought" I hated alot of things that, as it turns out, I don'...
Codependency
But I was fortunate to have a father who had progressed farther in his drinking career and I realized I was going in the same direction. He and I became best friends later after he quit drinking also. How beautiful it was for Dad, Mom and me to be in recovery together. I only say was because they are waiting for me in Heaven. I know they are still here with me also.
Codependents are a trip though. Mom was forever calling me up to say now this isn't being codependent, is it? I would just laugh because I loved her so and tell her that she wouldn't be calling me if she didn't know that whatever she had done was being codependent.
I believe codependents (which I believe means all of us at one time or another) have the hardest recovery because the world rewards them for their behavior. Anyone who smells of alcohol, slurs their words and wants to fight the lamppost doesn't get rewarded.
Squidoo Relationship Lenses
-
12 Step Help, Simplified and Not...
-
The 12 steps are important to millions of people in addiction recovery. I think either you love the twelve steps or hate them, either they are critical to your recovery...or not. This Lens is devoted to those who are having difficulty with the languag...
-
Bad Relationships, Addictive Relationships and Just Plain, Dysfunctional Relationships
-
Bad relationships are no fun, but sometimes a fact of life. Chances are if you are visiting us your life relationships aren't going well. The good news is at least you are looking for some information and help on healing those dysfunctional relations...
-
Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS): An Easy To Understand Explanation
-
Well you have finally achieved abstinence from your drug of chioce, my sincere congratulations. You are certainly making the right choice. So everything will be easy from here on in....ummm...maybe not. Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome is a group of wit...
Codependency Books
My Inner Child
Games People Play was the title of his first book and was a best-seller in the 1960's. After 40 years and 5,000,000 copies, Games is still relevant today. Eric Berne influenced other authors; Thomas Harris, who also wrote about TA with his book, I'm OK-You're OK, and Muriel James's book, Born to Win. Berne founded The International Transactional Analysis Association (ITAA) which is still active and has several of the main ideas at their site.
The main ideas from TA are ego states (parent, child and adult), strokes, transactions, life script, contracts and games people play. One of the newer ideas from the TA group is about the blame game (i.e. why do blame-simply choose steps needed to move forward).
Two of the main concepts for the TA philosophy are we are each worthy of being accepted and people can change. Of the three ego states-parent, child and adult-when I studied TA, I found that I could only identify 2 ego states. I had a very judgmental parent (these are thoughts and ideas I had adapted from my parents) and child (mine was the willful me-only child state. When I first used this information to check myself, I found that I had no adult (the ego state used to live in the here-and-now with responses dependent on new responses). No wonder that I lived in yesterday or tomorrow. I had no inner guide to deal with today.
Books About The Inner Child
by kberman
Having been born in 1940, and
having loved several of my lives before, I am now living my perfect life.
Through the generosity of my husband, I am abl...






