aiyanah
_aded
- Local time
- Tomorrow 12:05 AM
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2018
- Messages
- 233
i reckon rehab clinics are treated as vacations by most who get admitted to them.
i know i did that, it wasn't a rehab clinic that made me stop.
it's also problematic when there's the twelve step guide which can be done without a clinical admission and has been proven to work better than the clinics with their noted 95% failure rate which you're informed of upon arrival.
again that's not what got me to stop getting high.
and the 12 step guide just about boils down to giving yourself some purpose even if it doesn't escape the boundaries of "the room" the AA/NA meeting is happening in.
"hey look at me i'm 2 years clean, look how smiley and healthy looking i am, dont you guys that are still using wanna be like me"
albeit one can grow tired of being part of a human zoo rather quickly.
i also reckon there's too much sympathy given to addicts...these are more often than not viciously smart people who you "cannot stop" from getting what they want (they can sneak any narcotic into a rehab facility and find a spot to use it just as discreetly too).
that's valuable, let them know so and tell them to get their act together instead of implying there's this "safety net" waiting for you if your experimenting gets out of hand.
i mean...it's supposed to get out of hand, or else why bother humoring the dragon. how is one meant to find new knowledge without assessing risk first hand in person.
dare i say it's the ego flattening properties of drugs that makes them addictive, opening new avenues of thought constantly that your ego otherwise wouldn't accept without forewarning.
is it healthy to become dependent? no
is there some value to partaking in the activity? most definitely
i get why cocaine users can't stop using cocaine, not a chemical dependency but because it literally forces your brain to concentrate on what you want it to concentrate on.
granted speech might not be quite the same but if the task is a silent one...well.
P.S. alcohol has far more problematic withdrawal symptoms than any opioid, it can sometimes result in death.
i know i did that, it wasn't a rehab clinic that made me stop.
it's also problematic when there's the twelve step guide which can be done without a clinical admission and has been proven to work better than the clinics with their noted 95% failure rate which you're informed of upon arrival.
again that's not what got me to stop getting high.
and the 12 step guide just about boils down to giving yourself some purpose even if it doesn't escape the boundaries of "the room" the AA/NA meeting is happening in.
"hey look at me i'm 2 years clean, look how smiley and healthy looking i am, dont you guys that are still using wanna be like me"
albeit one can grow tired of being part of a human zoo rather quickly.
i also reckon there's too much sympathy given to addicts...these are more often than not viciously smart people who you "cannot stop" from getting what they want (they can sneak any narcotic into a rehab facility and find a spot to use it just as discreetly too).
that's valuable, let them know so and tell them to get their act together instead of implying there's this "safety net" waiting for you if your experimenting gets out of hand.
i mean...it's supposed to get out of hand, or else why bother humoring the dragon. how is one meant to find new knowledge without assessing risk first hand in person.
dare i say it's the ego flattening properties of drugs that makes them addictive, opening new avenues of thought constantly that your ego otherwise wouldn't accept without forewarning.
is it healthy to become dependent? no
is there some value to partaking in the activity? most definitely
i get why cocaine users can't stop using cocaine, not a chemical dependency but because it literally forces your brain to concentrate on what you want it to concentrate on.
granted speech might not be quite the same but if the task is a silent one...well.
P.S. alcohol has far more problematic withdrawal symptoms than any opioid, it can sometimes result in death.