Archive for the ‘Drug Rehab’ Category

The Truth About Marijuana

Author: DrugRehab

Many people believe they know all there is to know about marijuana. However, most young people do not even know the simplest fact of what marijuana consists of. Marijuana is made up of the dried flowers and leaves of the Indian Hemp plant, and creates its own chemical known as THC (tetrahydrocannadional). THC is the chemical that creates the mellow feeling familiar to marijuana smokers, sometimes bringing on sleepiness and hunger.

Marijuana is the most commonly used drug in the world. It has been estimated that in 2007 14.4 million individuals in the U.S alone had smoked marijuana on at least one occasion during the previous month. Marijuana is usually smoked as a cigarette or out of a pipe, and at times it is mixed with food or brewed as tea.

Contrary to what many believe, marijuana is a dangerous drug that has many side effects. Because people build up a tolerance to marijuana, a person has to continue to use more and more marijuana in order to attain the desired effect, and as a result can become addicted very quickly. Marijuana is considered a gateway drug that can lead a person into illicit drug use.

If you or anyone you know is addicted to marijuana please call SuccessfulRehabServices on our toll-free Addiction Helpline at 1-877-873-8532. We provide substance abuse counselors who are available to answer any questions you may have regarding drugs, and to assist you in getting the help that you or your loved one needs. You are also welcome to visit our website at www.SuccessfulRehabServices for further information.

There is hope.

It is possible to live a drug-free life.

2009 Successful Rehab Services

A study supported by NIDA (National Institute on Drug Abuse) conducted by Thomas Kosten, M.D., of Baylor College of Medicine, “Cocaine Vaccine for the Treatment of Cocaine Dependence in Methadone-Maintained Patients: A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-Controlled Efficacy Trial” published this October by the Archives of General Psychiatry claimed that an experimental anti-cocaine vaccine resulted in a reduction in cocaine use in 38 percent of the people in the trial that were vaccinated. NIDA Director Dr. Nora Volkaw said, “The results of this study represent a promising step toward an effective medical treatment for cocaine addiction.”

Many experienced drug rehab professionals are not enthused about the prospect of a new “wonder drug” that will treat cocaine addiction with any success. “It is just history repeating itself in regard to drug addiction,” said one Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselor in Oklahoma. “In the 1800’s heroin was invented and promoted to treat morphine and opium addiction. Morphine addicts became heroin addicts. Methadone, developed by the Nazi’s during World War II, was promoted as a cure to treat heroin addiction in the early 1970’s. Subsequently heroin addicts became methadone addicts. Then came suboxone to treat methadone addiction leading to methadone users getting hooked on suboxone and so the story goes. Developing new drugs to treat drug addiction has not worked, history tells us that.”

It is well known that a large portion of the addiction treatment industry has settled on substitute medications as a means to prevent addicts from falling back into their unhealthy lifestyle. According to one drug rehab professional, “The problem with this approach is that it does not help the individual discover and deal with the initial problems that lead them in the direction of drug addiction in the first place. We have found that the solution to solving addiction is to help the person rehabilitate themselves as opposed to ‘treating’ the symptoms of drug addiction for an indefinite and ongoing period of time.”

An effective and successful rehabilitation program we refer our clients to uses a thorough biophysical detoxification program followed by counseling and life skills training to bring about recovery from addiction. Drug replacement–one drug used to replace another drug—is NOT used, so when a person completes this rehab program they are completely drug-free. The length of this program varies from person to person, but on the average it takes three to five months. It therefore meets most long-term rehab requirements of the courts in cases of requests for alternative sentencing to rehab in preference to the addict doing jail time.

If someone you know is struggling with an addiction to drugs or alcohol and you want to help them achieve lasting recovery, please contact us on our toll-free Addiction Helpline at 877-873-8532, or through this website at www.drug-addiction-rehab.net.

There is hope. It is possible to live a drug-free life.

2009 Successful Rehab Services

The Dangers of Using Cocaine

Author: DrugRehab

Cocaine is a powder or crystal form that has been extracted from coca leaves and mixed with many other ingredients. Cocaine is highly addictive. Often a person constantly uses progressively more and more, chasing the first high that was once achieved.

Cocaine is a very deadly substance that has many serious side effects. Some of the side effects are:

•Permanent damage to blood vessels of the heart and brain
•High blood pressure, leading to heart attacks, strokes, and death
•Liver, kidney and lung damage
•Respiratory failure, if smoked
•Infectious diseases and abscesses, if injected

Do not let cocaine claim another life. If you or anyone you know is addicted to cocaine, please call us today on our toll-free Addiction Helpline at 1-877-873-8532. We have substance abuse counselors available to answer any questions you may have regarding drugs, and who can help you find the kind of treatment that is right for you.

There is hope.

It is possible to live a drug-free life.

2009 Successful Rehab Services

Why Drugs Are Not the Problem

Author: DrugRehab

If drugs or alcohol were an addicts fundamental problem, recovery would be academic. Remove the drugs and the person would be “cured.”

The addict’s greatest demon however, is not the Meth he smokes, or the heroin he shoots. It is not in the money he lost or the disease he found. Families spend inordinate amounts of energy pursuing proof of their presence and proving their use, and yet, at the end of the day, the solution is not their removal.

An addict who is stuck in life, depressed, isolated, not behaving rationally, leading a life of dishonesty and shame, buried in guilt and defended by rage, is up against much more than drugs. His problem living life is based on a massively altered survival system, affecting every area of his life. Drugs, which at first may have been used recreationally, become an anesthetic to the resulting pain.

Addicts who become stuck in life evolve into this condition over time. They start out a bit bent and depressed and then they continue to do things that go against their own moral or ethical grain. Later, they may become hostile and more isolated as their transgressions against themselves and others pile up, as more and more feelings of guilt, shame, anger and regret melt together, becoming a blackness in the addicts heart. Things like betrayal, deception, theft, the commission of crimes or felonies, the drug abuse itself, simple meanness and whatever else the average addict is engaged in, weigh down upon him very heavily (whether he will admit to it or not). Typically, there are thousands of moments that can hang an addict up, sucking up his attention, and making him unable to operate.

While on the subject of drugs being used as a solution - it is important to note that inasmuch as an addict may wish it, happiness cannot be found in a bottle of pills, even if they are prescribed. This is one of the grave pitfalls of psychotropic drug use. They do not “fix” one, repair one’s conscience, a persons sense of loyalty, their ability to be honest, or their integrity. Drugs, whether provided under the law and distributed by a pharmacy, do not provide better decisions in life. These things take time and hard work to repair.

The fact that life is difficult is not a “disorder,” and may become even more difficult if one becomes dependent on more drugs to solve life’s problems. Drugs are not the problem to begin with and are not the solution in the end. This is why long term, residential treatment, and complete freedom from all drugs and alcohol is the correct goal for almost all interventions.

Successful treatment centers spend their time returning individuals to a balanced and controlled state of being, repairing a persons orientation in life. A person who is in good shape in terms of his integrity, his ethics, his identity and so on will handle his life, and his circumstances will fall into place, not the other way around.

Take for example, any man or woman addicted to drugs or alcohol and move them a thousand miles away from where they are. Invariably their problems follow.

If a person is able to confront his life and repair the damage of his past in an organized, supervised and supportive atmosphere, and if in doing this he is able to regain his sense of responsibility and identity, then he can be the person who will not go to drugs as a solution any longer. He will be happy and can win in life.

~ Steven Bruno CCDC RAS
Professional Interventionist

Depression

Author: DrugRehab


No Place to Hide: A Historical Perspective of Drug Abuse & Education In America

    Depression is another factor that keeps an addict harnessed in his addiction. Depression is the source of a constant and significant amount of discomfort that prompts continued use. It is also the second major barrier to successful recovery for those seeking help through treatment.

Some of the traditional medical- and psychiatric-based programs rotely diagnose and treat the depression an addict is experiencing as the root cause of the person’s drug or alcohol problem. In actual fact, more times than not, it is a symptom of the problem that manifested itself after the person had become addicted, not before. Oftentimes, in the course of treatment, psychotropic medications are used which temporarily mask the symptom but does nothing to cure it. As these medications wear off, the depression returns, oftentimes magnified. This makes the recovery process much more difficult, if not nearly impossible, for the addict in treatment.

There are physical and mental mechanics at play that create the state of depression and lethargy an addicted person experiences. At a physical level, most addicts are in a declining or poor state of health. When they are high they are in a euphoric, painless state of mind and are numb to the damage drugs and/or alcohol are causing to their body. When they are sober they have no energy and minor aches and pains are intensified. They are physically spent as a result of the severe nutritional deficiencies that follow long-term drug or alcohol abuse. It is these deficiencies that accelerate poor health and put the person in a physically lethargic condition.

At a mental level, they have a difficult time finding joy or happiness in anything while they are not under the influence. An addict at some point surrenders to the idea that they must be high in order to experience anything at an emotional level. They must be high to celebrate an accomplishment, to escape sadness. They must be high to solve problems, to enjoy sex, to have meaningful relationships, to work or to play. The addict really believes and operates on this principle, numb to the actual fact that the quality of their life and relationships with others are on a downtrending spiral.

To give a layman’s explanation of how and why this barrier of depression exists, let’s look at what is happening to a person’s mind and body as the addiction develops. There is another biophysical aspect to this scenario which is created by the drug’s interaction with the body’s natural chemistry. Some of the body’s natural chemicals act as a built-in reward system that encourages us to eat, exercise and procreate. Other natural chemicals act as painkillers that activate when we physically injure ourselves or are experiencing pain. These natural chemicals are directly related to our drive to maintain our physical well-being in one way or another.

In addition to the presence of drug metabolites in the system and the memories associated with drug and alcohol use as described in Part II of this editorial series, the physical brain of the addicted person also identifies the drug or alcohol as an aid that either enhances or restricts the release of these natural chemicals. In some cases the brain identifies some drugs as superior to the body’s natural chemicals. The brain then substitutes the drugs or alcohol for the body’s natural chemicals. As the person starts to use drugs or alcohol on a regular basis, the body becomes depleted of key nutrients and amino acids. (Amino acids are the building blocks for the body’s natural chemicals.) These nutritional deficiencies prevent the body from receiving the nutritional energy necessary to produce and release the natural chemicals.

In short, the drugs take over the functions of the body’s natural chemicals and the person’s brain and body get fooled into thinking that the drugs or alcohol are the natural chemicals. When drugs or alcohol are present in the addict’s system, the physical perception is that the body chemistry is working and all is well. When the drugs or alcohol leave the addict’s system, the brain and body perceive a deficit of the natural body chemicals which adds to the lethargy and lack of enjoyment an addict experiences when not under the influence of drugs or drink. This condition is what adds to the addict’s compulsion and drive to do more drugs or drink more alcohol, despite the often life-threatening consequences an addict is faced with on a day-to-day basis. The drug or alcohol gets misidentified as an aid to the production and release of the natural chemicals when, in fact, it is suppressing the body’s ability to manufacture them.

One final piece of the depression puzzle is what is actually happening in the addicts’ lives. There are broken relationships, sometimes problems with the law or financial problems. Addicts start to distance themselves from the people they love and becomes more and more withdrawn. They may lose their jobs or start experiencing serious health problems. Basically their lives are going down the toilet and the addicts deep down are not happy about it. They are depressed about these circumstances that for the most part are present because of their addictive lifestyles. Depression is an appropriate emotion considering the misery that they are faced with in their lives.

For some medical practitioners in the treatment field to address this depression as a “mental illness or disease” and expect that prescribed medications will somehow fix the person so they can fix these situations in their life seems somewhat irrational if you think about it. It is a fact that these prescribed medications will mask the depression temporarily, but so will their drug of choice. Neither one helps the person restore their physical health or helps them develop the life skills to repair these real life problems, which is the only real cure for this affliction.

 

This article was written by Gary W, Smith, C.C.D.C., Executive Director of the Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehabilitation and Education Center located in Canadian, Oklahoma.

No Place to Hide continued….

Author: DrugRehab

No Place to Hide: A Historical Perspective of Drug Abuse & Education In America

      The first challenge for any addict wishing to kick his addiction is overcoming the mental and physical cravings for drugs or alcohol. Cravings are strong, uncontrollable urges to use drugs or alcohol that drive the addict to once again use addictive substances.
To get an idea of what drug cravings are like, think of a time when you went for a long time without eating a meal and you were really hungry. Hunger is a mental and physical sensation that is triggered when the body needs food for nutrients and energy.
growling stomach and shakiness due to not having eaten will become so great, making the person so uncomfortable, that they will drop whatever it is they are doing and arrange to get food and eat it. As soon as the food is consumed, the hunger pangs stop and the person feels good about satisfying their hunger.withdrawal symptoms and cravings are caused by poor nutrition and the vitamin depletion that follows substance abuse. When a body lacks certain nutrients, it cannot make some substances it needs for health and energy, causing a person to feel tired and moody. Depletion of certain vitamins and minerals can also cause shakiness and pain.type of drugs were taken. Drug tests detect the presence of any drugs or their metabolites.Drug metabolites are like fingerprints of the drug that was taken. Cocaine produces a cocaine metabolite, opiates produce an opiate metabolite, alcohol produces an alcohol metabolite and so on.drugs and alcohol are metabolized, or broken down, in the liver but all tissues in the body will break down drugs or other foreign substances for elimination. Drugs and metabolites leave the body through urine, feces and sweat but they are not fully eliminated. Since drugs dissolve better in oil than water, they have a natural affinity for fats. Therefore any drug residues or metabolites that are not eliminated have a natural attraction to fat cells and so tend to be stored in one’s fat.L. Ron Hubbard made the revolutionary discovery that drug metabolites and other toxins that were stored in the fat cells had the continuing effect of locking addicts in their addictions, and that eliminating these stored deposits was a key to full recovery. He went on to develop a method of extracting those deposits, resulting in improved mental and physical health. This discovery was a critical step forward in the effort to resolve drug cravings.addictive drugs, they will accumulate a series of memories that contain the pain and discomfort associated with drug withdrawal.

The craving for food, driven at a physical level, stimulates memories of eating food, which is followed by a strong desire or compulsion to consume food. Usually when a person is very hungry, they will think about their favorite foods; if they get hungry enough, they can sometimes even smell and taste certain foods.

If a person goes long enough without food, compelling thoughts of eating plus a

A drug craving is similar, but the desire to use drugs is much stronger and more intense. An addict who is craving drugs will feel like life itself is dependent on getting and taking their preferred drug. They will do and say almost anything to get the drug to handle their intense craving. Once they satisfy the craving, they feel relief until the drug wears off and the craving returns.

Some

Withdrawal symptoms and cravings may also result from the toxins (substances the body sees as poisons) that accumulate after repeated drug use. These toxins stress many of the body’s systems, resulting in fatigue, aches, pains and unclear thinking. The addicted person has learned to medicate their mental or physical problems with drugs; they will continue to use drugs as a solution whenever they feel poorly. Therefore attempting to handle addiction with more drugs only makes the problem worse.

Today it is fairly common for many companies and federal agencies to drug test their employees. Through a common urinalysis test, it can be determined if the employee has taken any one of several drugs. This test of a person’s urine not only detects if they have taken drugs, it also detects what

Metabolites are the products left behind in the body when it has broken down a substance so it can be eliminated.

Most

As an example, the active chemical in marijuana, THC, is so fat-soluble that, when consumed, most of it rapidly leaves the bloodstream and lodges in the fatty tissues of the body. From there, it slowly moves back into the bloodstream over a period of weeks or even longer.

Only recently have scientists discovered that fat is actually a vital organ that produces hormones that affect our moods, energy levels and immunity. Chronic use of drugs or alcohol has been shown to disrupt this function. This disruption is one of the factors that cause cravings, as the body attempts to correct the disturbance by craving what it lacks or a similar substance, such as the drugs that originally caused the disruption.

In the late 1970s, American author and humanitarian

Each time a person consumes drugs or alcohol, they retain a complete recorded memory of that life experience. Whether they were happy or sad or had a good time or a bad time, all emotions, feelings and sensations that were present at the time the drug or alcohol was consumed are filed away in the person’s memory. Even if the person blacks out, the experience is still recorded in the mind.

In the case of those addicted to opiates, alcohol, tranquilizers or any other

The body will metabolize (change energy sources into energy) and burn fat cells any time a person undergoes a situation in life that causes their heart rate to speed up. Stress can do this, as can strenuous exercise or intense emotion. Most of us experience these kinds of stressful situations on a fairly regular basis.
When an addict’s body metabolizes fat, if the fat cells contain metabolites from past alcohol and drug use, those metabolites will activate back into the person’s bloodstream as the fat cells burn.

Keep in mind that each type of drug produces its own metabolite. Therefore, if alcohol metabolites were stored in the fat, once those fat cells are metabolized, the body will be reminded of alcohol at a physical level. If the person has taken cocaine, then cocaine metabolites will be released into the bloodstream and remind the body of earlier cocaine use.

The effect of these metabolites being present in the bloodstream will trigger recorded memories of drug-related experiences and discomforts from the past. The person will remember feeling and thinking like they did in the past when they were under the influence of the drug or alcohol. Or they will remember experiencing the pain and discomfort that occurred when they were coming down from the drug. They are prone to use drugs or alcohol again at these times.

This article was written by Gary W, Smith, C.C.D.C., Executive Director of the Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehabilitation and Education Center located in Canadian, Oklahoma.


 
Coming next: The Life Cycle and Mechanics of Addiction Part III: “Depression” The Second Barrier to Successful Recovery

No Place to Hide…

Author: DrugRehab

No Place to Hide: A Historical Perspective of Drug Abuse & Education In America


 Whether a person is genetically or bio-chemically predisposed to addiction or alcoholism is a controversy that has been debated for years within the scientific, medical and chemical dependency communities. One school of thought advocates the “disease concept” which embraces the notion that addiction is an inherited disease, and that the individual is permanently ill at a genetic level, even for those experiencing long periods of sobriety.mental disorder (i.e., clinical depression, bipolar disorder or some other mental illness), and that the mental disorder needs to be treated first as the primary cause of the addiction.chemical imbalances” in the neurological system that must be treated with psychotropic medications after the person has withdrawn from their drug of choice.peer pressure that influences our decision-making process with regard to finding relief from the discomfort. Peer pressure can manifest itself in many different ways. It can come from friends or family members or through some avenue of advertising or promotion which, when combined with the degree of relief we receive from the drug or drink, determines the severity of the use. Simply put, the bigger the problem, the greater the discomfort the person experiences. The greater the discomfort, the more importance the person places on relieving it and the greater the value he assigns to that which brought about the relief.lifestyle changes along the way that will begin to cause the individual’s quality of life to deteriorate. If the drug or alcohol abuse continues unchecked, eventually the person is faced with so many unpleasant circumstances in their life that each sober moment is filled with so much despair and misery that all he wants to do is escape these feelings by medicating them away. This is the downward spiral of addiction. At this point for most there are only three inevitable outcomes: death, prison or sobriety.

    Another philosophy argues that addiction is a dual problem consisting of a physical and mental dependency on chemicals, compounded by a pre-existing

    A third philosophy subscribes to the idea that chemical dependency leads to permanent ”

    The fact remains that there is some scientific research that favors each of these addiction concepts, but none of them are absolute. Based on national averages, addiction treatment has a 16% to 20% recovery rate. The message is pretty clear that these theories are just that, theories, and we have a lot more to learn if we are to bring the national recovery rate to a more desirable level.

    There is a fourth school of thought which has proven to be more accurate. It has to do with the life cycle of addiction. This data is universally applicable to addiction, no matter which hypothesis is used to explain the phenomenon of chemical dependency.

The life cycle of addiction begins with a problem, discomfort or some form of emotional or physical pain a person is experiencing. The person finds this very difficult to deal with.

    Here is an individual who, like most people in our society, is basically good. He has encountered a problem that is causing him physical or emotional pain and discomfort that he does not have an immediate answer for. Examples would include difficulty “fitting in” as a child or teenager, puberty, physical injuries such a broken bone, a bad back or some other chronic physical condition. Whatever the origin of the difficulty is, the discomfort associated with it presents the individual with a real problem. He feels this problem is a major situation that is persisting. He can see no immediate resolution or relief from it. Most of us have experienced this in our lives to a greater or lesser degree.
 
    Once the person takes a drug, he feels relief from the discomfort, even though the relief is only temporary. That drink or drug is adopted as a solution to the problem and the individual places value on the substance. This assigned value is the only reason the person ever uses drugs or drinks a second, third or more times.

    There is a key factor involved in this life cycle scenario that determines which of us become addicts and which do not. The answer depends on whether or not, at the time of this traumatic experience, we are subjected to pro-drug or pro-alcohol influences via some sort of significant

    For those that start down the path of addiction, they will encounter other physical, mental and


This article was written by Gary W, Smith, C.C.D.C., Executive Director of the Narconon Arrowhead Drug Rehabilitation and Education Center located in Canadian, Oklahoma.

Information about Drug Addiction

 

Drug Addiction

 

No one wants to become a drug addict or an alcoholic, but this doesn’t stop people from getting addicted. The most commonly asked question is: How does it happen? How could my son, daughter, mother, father, sister, or brother become a liar, a thief, and someone who cannot be trusted? How could this happen? An why won’t they stop? The first thing you must understand about addiction is, alcohol and addictive drugs are basically painkillers. They chemically kill physical and emotional pain, and also alter the mind’s perception of reality. Drugs can also make people feel numb. For drugs to be attractive to a person there must first be some underlying unhappiness, sense of hopelessness, or physical pain.

 

The Cycle of Addiction

 

It begins with a problem, discomfort, or some form of emotional or physical pain a person experiences, and they will find this pain very difficult to deal with.

 

We start off with an individual who, like most people in our society is basically good. This person encounters a problem or discomfort they do not know how to resolve, or cannot face. This could include problems such as, difficulty fitting in as a child or teenager, anxiety due to peer pressure, work expectations, identity problems or divorce. It can also include physical and mental abuse, personal loss, unresolved unhappiness, and physical discomfort, such as an injury or chronic pain. These problems are real to the individual, and the person is unable to develop any real solution to solve them. Everyone has experienced this in his or her life to a greater or lesser degree. The difference between an addict and the non-addict is, the addict chooses drugs or alcohol as a solution to the unwanted problem, or discomfort.

 

A person tries drugs or alcohol, and the drugs or alcohol appear to solve their problem. Automatically the individual feels better. Because they now seem better able to deal with life, the drugs or alcohol become valuable to them. The person looks on drugs or alcohol as a cure for unwanted feelings. The painkilling effects of drugs or alcohol become a solution to their discomfort. Inadvertently the drugs or alcohol now become valuable because it helped them  feel better. This release is the main reason a person uses drugs or alcohol multiple times. The result of continual use will lead to a potentially life threatening addiction.

 

The use of drugs or alcohol becomes obsessive. The addicted person is trapped, and whatever problem they were initially trying to solve by using drugs or alcohol, has now faded from memory. At this point. all they can think about is buying and using drugs. They lose the ability to control their usage, and completely disregard all the consequences of their actions.

 

The Drug Personality

 

There is such a thing as a drug personality, it’s artificial and created by drugs. Drugs can change the attitude of a person from their original personality to one secretly harboring hostilities and hatreds he or she does not permit to show on the surface. This establishes a link between drugs and increasing difficulties with crime, production, and the modern breakdown of social and industrial culture.

 

In the beginning, a drug user will attempt to withhold the fact of their drug use from friends and family. They will begin to suffer the effects of their own dishonesty and guilt. They may become withdrawn, and difficult to reason with. They may also behave strangely. The more they use drugs or alcohol, the guiltier they will feel, and the more depressed they will become. They will sacrifice their personal integrity, relationships with friends and family, jobs, money, and anything else they may have in an attempt to acquire more drugs. The drugs are now the most important thing in their life.

 

The drug personality includes such characteristics as:

·         Mood swings

·         Unreliability

·         Unable to finish projects

·         Unexpressed resentment and secret hate

·         Dishonesty towards family, friends, and employers

·         Withdraws from those they love and care for

·         Emotional isolation

·         May appear chronically depressed

·         May seem very anxious

·         May begin stealing from family and friends

 

Psychological and Physiological Effects

Drug addiction can have many different effects psychologically with a person, but always damaging the person’s mind. The mind is our most important tool. With our mind, we solve the problems we face in life. Drugs do several things that harm one’s ability to think, or to be fully aware of the present surroundings. These symptoms continue long after the effects of the drugs appear to have worn off. Addictive drugs activate the brain’s reward systems. The promise of reward is very intense causing the individual to crave the drug, and to focus their activities around taking the drug. Addictive drugs have the ability to strongly activate a reward mechanism, also they have the ability to chemically alter the normal functions of the body’s systems, this can produce an addiction. Drugs also reduce a person’s level of consciousness, harming the ability to thinks, or to be fully aware of present surroundings. Because of the effects of drugs on the mind, a person with a history of drug use isn’t always necessarily in the here and now. The drug user is not moving in the same series of events as others. This can be slight, wherein the person is seen to make occasional mistakes, or it can be as serious as total insanity, where the vents apparent to him are completely different from those apparent to anyone else. It isn’t that the drug user doesn’t know what’s going on; it is that they perceive something different. Instead of the actual series of events, which are happening around them.

 

In addition to the psychological stress created by unethical behavior, the addict’s body has also adapted to the presence of the drugs. They will experience and overwhelming obsession with using drugs, and will do anything to avoid the pain of withdrawing from them. This is when the newly created drug addict begins to experience drug cravings. They will now seek drugs both for the reward of the pleasure they give, and also to avoid the psychological and physical horrors of withdrawal. Ironically, the addict’s ability to get high from the alcohol or drugs gradually decreases as their body adapts to the presence of foreign chemicals. They must take more and more, not just to get an effect, but often just to function at all. At this point, the addict is stuck in a vicious dwindling spiral. The drugs being abused have changed the person both physically and psychologically. They have now become a drug addict and/or alcoholic.

 

The Difficulties of Stopping a Drug Addiction

 

Addicts cannot stop using drugs for two reasons:

            1.  Mental and physical cravings caused by drug residues which remain in the body.

            2.  The biochemical personality that drugs cause, and the means the person takes to

                 acquire more drugs.

 

When an addict initially tries to quit using drugs; cells in the brain, which have become used to large amounts of these drugs, are now forced to deal with a much decreased amount of the drug. Even as the withdrawal symptoms subside, the brain demands the addict give it more of their particular drug. This is called a drug craving. Cravings are an extremely powerful urge, and can cause a person to create many reasons why they should continue using drugs or alcohol. He is now trapped in an endless cycle of trying to quit, combined with cravings, relapse, and fear of withdrawal.

 

When a person drinks or uses drugs over a period of time, the body becomes unable to completely eliminate all of the toxins left behind. The drug metabolites, (the substances the body converts drug or alcohol into) although removed rapidly from the blood stream, become trapped in the fatty tissues of the body. The fatty tissue of our body is oil soluble, and it is the oil residues from these metabolites, which become stored in the fat cells. There are various types of tissues, which are high in fat content, causing drug residues to remain there for years. At times of stress, and when the body is exerting energy, the stored drug metabolites are re-released back into the blood stream, causing the body and the brain to react. The former addict now experiences a drug restimulation, or flahback, combined with physical drug cravings. This is common in the months, or even years, after an addict stops using drugs or alcohol.

 

Drug metabolites throughout the body are the end result of drug use. Because these deposits of drug or alcohol metabolites will release back into the bloodstream from the fatty tissues, it will cause many problems during periods of clean time. This will cause physical and mental cravings, and relapse will remain a cause for concern. Left unhandled, the presence of metabolites even in microscopic amounts cause the brain to react as if the addict had again actually taken the drug, and can set up cravings and relapse, even after years of sobriety.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prescription Drug Abuse

Author: DrugRehab

According to CNN, many people who think prescription pain medication addiction just affects celebrities, like Michael Jackson, Heath Ledger and other big names, are in for some shocking news. The Office of the National Drug Control Policy reports more people are abusing prescription drugs currently than cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine combined. In addition, between 1995 and 2005, drug treatment admission for prescription pain medication abuse grew 300 percent.

Right now, prescription drugs are the second most abused drug after alcohol.

While we have seen many big names lose their battles with prescription drug addiction, there are many who have successfully recovered from it and lived to tell their stories.  

One individual who has fully handled his addiction to prescription drugs is Ramsy Darwish. Mr. Darwish recently appeared on a show called America’s “Other” Drug Problem Prescription Medication Abuse with Rick Sanchez and shared his story of addiction and recovery. His drug use started by experimenting with different drugs throughout his adolescent years, until injuries from a car accident started him on pain killers. This quickly led to an escalating addiction of various opiates.

Brought up in a good family who gave him a lot of opportunity, Darwish never thought he would end up a drug addict.  Ramsy struggled with prescription pain medication addiction for many years and burned most of his bridges, until his family intervened and got him help through a longterm drug and alcohol rehabilitation program which successfully addresses the biophysical and life skills aspects of drug addiciton, and which maintians an over 70% success rate for permanent addiction recovery.

On CNN news, Darwish explained that using prescription drugs helped him deal with emotional and physical pain and that typically people start to abuse prescription drugs as a way to handle personal loss and various other problems instead of the original physical pain that the original prescription was written for.   Once thoroughly addicted to the drugs, the drug use creates more and more problems for the person and their family. The only answer lies only in successful drug treatment.

Ramsy’s experience is one example of this.  Unlike many who have lost their lives as a result of substance abuse, he was able to fully recover from his addiction and been stably off drugs for several years and is happily married.  Since his recovery, Ramsy trained to become an addiction counselor and is now helping others to live a drug-free life.

Whether a person is a celebrity, loved one, family member or friend, if they are addicted to prescription drugs, they don’t have to end up like Michael Jackson or Heath Ledger. Successful recovery from prescription drug abuse is possible.

Please contact us at www.successfulrehabservices.org, or call our toll-free Addiction Helpline at 1-877-873-8532 if you or a loved one needs help to overcome addiciton, and live a drug-free life.

Healing Addicted Lives

Author: DrugRehab

 

If you want to be effective in dealing with addiction there are three things that you must learn…  
        
                                                       
 
  • First, you must gain an understanding of what occurs in a person’s life that leads them in the direction of drug and/or alcohol addiction to begin with.
 
  • Second, you must know what taking drugs and alcohol routinely does to a person physically and mentally, and how those physical and mental changes affect the person’s behavior and lifestyle, and sets the trap an addict winds-up in.
 
  • And third, you must learn the most successful course of action to take to successfully heal addiction.
 
The person you love is still there.  It is possible to leave addiction behind for good. It is possible for an addict to rebuild a new and enjoyable life. Full recovery is attainable and dreams of a happy and productive drug-free life for you and your addicted loved one can come true.
 
Get started on the right path NOW. Download and read the Healing Addicted Lives booklet for FREE today and start yourself on the journey to understanding this nightmare we call addiction, as well as what exactly needs to be done to end the nightmare.
 
Click on the link below to begin reading the booklet online. http://www.stopaddiction.com/drugrehab/healingaddictedlives.pdf
 
For further information or assistance, please visit our website at www.SuccessfulRehabServices.org or call us on our toll-free Hotline at 1-877-873-8532
 
We are here to do our best to help you!