| ADDICTIONARY: The Addiction Dictionary!
Guide To
A Successful Intervention
Persons
suffering from alcoholism and other drug addictions
are prone to serious denial about the harmful effects
of their behavior on themselves and others. Efforts
to reason with them and convince them to stop causing
such damage are frequently met with denial, defensiveness,
justification or minimization and sometimes even attacks
upon the loved-one that is trying to help.
Talking to such alcoholics and addicts
in a rational and objective manner is often useless
or even counterproductive. In other cases the alcoholic-drug
addict may agree with fact that his behavior is harmful
to himself and others, he may agree that he needs to
stop drinking alcohol and/or using drugs, and in some
cases even make an attempt to stop. This is often followed
by a repetitive cycle of relapse, sometimes lasting
for years. Some addicts develop a sense of remorse,
guilt, and a determination to "never, ever let
that happen again." But, no matter how sorry they
are or how determined they are, they are powerless to
stop drinking alcohol or using drugs on their own for
any real length of time.
Family
and Friends
The people in an addict’s life,
especially those closest to him, become frustrated,
angry, depressed and often hopeless. They have become
well aware that something is seriously wrong and that
the alcoholic or drug addict desperately needs help.
But they are baffled and helpless as to what to do when
the alcoholic-drug addict insists that he is just fine,
that everything is under control and if a problem does
develop, he is fully prepared to take care of it on
his own. He does not, he assures anxious friends and
family members, need any help. If they continue to press
the point he becomes defensive and often angry and may
begin to point out their own shortcomings, to drag up
old conflicts, or simply walks out in a huff –
full of resentment and self-pity for being so grossly
misunderstood and badly treated, because even if he
does have a problem, though he really doesn't think
so, he’s only hurting himself!
Like A Tornado
The turmoil caused by practicing alcoholics
and drug addicts can be considerable and it tends to
get worse rather than better over any period of time.
Addiction causes people who are not naturally that way
to become progressively more self-centered, inconsiderate,
dishonest, defensive and suspicious as time passes.
They may experience unpredictable mood swings, outbursts
of emotional and sometimes physical violence and make
major decisions without any consideration. They begin
to act like the proverbial loose cannon and can cause
a great deal of destruction not only in their own lives
but in the lives of those close to them. Such people
are correctly said to be out of control and those who
care about them often do not know what to do but stand
helplessly by and watch as they create more chaos for
themselves and everyone around them, praying that the
outcome will not be legal problems, an institution,
injury or death and that sooner rather than later he
or she will hit bottom, come to his or her senses and
either stop on their own or seek professional help.
However, though he's roaring through other people's
lives like a tornado, left to his own devices, it usually
requires some type of very traumatic experience to get
an alcoholic or addict to admit that there is even a
chance a problem exists.
Interventions
The technique of intervention gives
those who care about the alcoholic or drug addict a
tool and a forum by which they can express their concern
in a structured, focused format that often leads to
the first step of recovery. A well-organized and properly
conducted intervention has been the gateway through
which many alcoholics and drug addicts have passed from
a miserable existence of addiction to a lifetime of
health, happiness and inner peace.
An intervention consists of a group
of friends, family, co-workers or other important people
in the alcoholic-drug addict's life who will present
in a non-accusatory way their observations and concerns
about the individual's behavior as a result of his or
her alcohol and/or drug use. This is done in a controlled,
objective, and systematic fashion in order to overcome
the denial and minimization of the addict and to present
a unified front of support and care as the plea and
recommendation is made by all present for the addict
to get some help to stop his self-destructive behavior.
Treatment
for the alcoholic or drug addict is sometimes unnecessarily
and dangerously delayed because of the false belief
that the addicted individual must first "hit bottom"
and thus "want to get better" before he is
ready for help. The purpose of the intervention method
is to break through the alcoholic's powerful denial
and avoiding defenses that have been built up and strengthened
over a number of years in most cases- and to connect
him at least temporarily with the reality of his addiction
so that he will accept the help that everyone but himself
is well aware that he needs. The collective feedback
of people who know him well, who have observed and can
describe the effects alcohol or other drugs have had
on his personality and behavior, and the effect that
they have had on them, is a powerful, if only temporary,
antidote to the strange lack or loss of contact with
reality that is called denial.
Properly done, an intervention is confronting
but it is also deeply caring and supportive. Each participant
first affirms the worth of the alcoholic or addict and
their positive feelings for him or her, which in fact
is the only reason they have agreed to participate in
the intervention. If they didn't care, they would just
leave him alone and let him destroy himself. But because
they do care they supply him with their factual observations
of how he has behaved -and frequently misbehaved- due
to alcohol or drugs. One by one and in non-judgmental,
factual terms they describe to him actual negative experiences
that they have had with him because of his drinking
or drug use. There is never any shortage of these when
one is dealing with the kind of alcoholic or addict
for whom intervention is appropriate. The cumulative
effect of these descriptions, coming as they do from
people who know and care about the alcoholic, is to
hold up a mirror before him in which he is forced to
see himself as he really is.
Detox
and Treatment
The aim of most interventions is to
get the alcoholic or drug addict immediately into a
detox
center. Experience shows that promises of reform,
sincere and often tearful as they may be at the time,
seldom hold up down the road without ongoing assistance
of some kind. A well-planned intervention has arranged
the specific detox center in advance, taken care of
all practical objections, and even packed the alcoholic's
suitcase so that he can be driven straight to the detox
facility.
Click
here to view the Intervention Outline
ADDICTIONARY: The Addiction Dictionary!
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