Healing Begins Within the Family

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

BOOK REVIEW: ADDICTION IN THE FAMILY – 

July 10, 2021 – Dr. Louise Stanger is an Ivy League Award winner (2019 Interventionist of the Year from DB Resources in London and McLean Hospital – an affiliate of Harvard), educated social worker, popular author, internationally renowned clinician, interventionist and speaker and an expert on mental health, addiction, process disorders and chronic pain. She is the founder of All About Interventions and is an authentically kind, warm and compassionate person.

Addiction in the Family is Dr. Stanger’s fifth book.  Her practical, hopeful, and family centric approach provides compassionate guidance that teaches the reader how to navigate the unique challenges posed when a family member is suffering from substance use disorder (SUD). Through real-life examples of loss, hope, and recovery, Addiction in the Family provides insight into what the loved one is battling and how their struggle impacts entire family units. 

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What Can Surfing Tell Us About Addiction?

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

BOOK REVIEW: THE DROP – 

July 7, 2021 – Then came this: “That many surfers have struggled with drug addiction will probably come as no surprise.” If, like me, you’ve read more books about, say, the origins of the War of 1812 than you have about surfing, this fact likely will come as a considerable surprise, akin to suddenly discovering that America’s Cup winners are notorious for their love of shooting smack. But the evidence is in, and Ziolkowski provides a merciless roll call of surfing’s top-tier, style-setting giants dying of overdoses, getting shot in botched coke deals, being pinched for smuggling and generally ruining their lives.

Many of the most striking passages in “The Drop” burrow into the correlations between surfing and drug abuse, some overt and others hidden. For starters, the surfer and stoner archetypes hit American pop culture at roughly the same time, the former through the seminal surfing film “Gidget,” of which Ziolkowski performs a surprisingly fecund thematic excavation. An addict’s first hit and a surfer’s first wave are neurologically linked through the “thrill of being gathered up and borne along as if by magic.” While drug addiction eventually makes the abuser unemployable, Ziolkowski writes that the surfer will often “arrange to be underemployed.” Procuring street drugs, with their dangerously irregular dosages, can be an unpredictable but oddly thrilling ordeal. Surfing, too, is thrilling precisely because of its unpredictability — which Ziolkowski says accounts for its so far total failure to register as a spectator sport.

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How I Was Welcomed to Rehab

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WITH 12 STEPS –   

JULY 6, 2021 – Ron’s gold track pants make a swishing sound as he walks toward me, his right hand outstretched. Tall and skinny with the impeccable posture my mother would love, he’s probably in his late twenties. He yawns and apologizes for yawning while leading me through a maze of hallways to a small room with a twin bed, a chair with initials carved into the seat, a tall dresser—and no door.

“Call it a way station,” he says, gesturing from the threshold like he’s revealing a prize on a game show. “As long as there’s no contraband in your bag and no red flags go up in your intake evaluation, you’ll be in general population tomorrow morning.” He follows me into the room and stands at the foot of the bed with his arms folded. I hug my bag and stare at the shiplap wall.

“Okay, so here’s the deal,” he says. “Every morning we’re up at six, except Sundays when you can sleep in. That means seven. Group therapy every day, and AA and NA meetings. Physical fitness, meditation, recreation, lectures on sober living—the whole nine. Unless you have a doctor’s note, everything’s mandatory, so don’t think about trying to ditch. Capisce?”

Does he want me to say “Sir, yes, sir”? I nod and drop my bag on the bed, trying not to laugh at his dorky impression of a drill sergeant.

“This will be your life for the next twenty-eight days. Once you’ve been here a week, you get phone privileges. Forty-five minutes a day. Abuse those privileges and sayonara the phone.”

“Some folks don’t go home for 18 months. Some never do. All depends on how bad your disease is. Questions?”

“I promised my mom I’d call when I—”

“Holy smokes, Dave. Has it been a week already? I could have sworn you just got here.” He grins. “No, all kidding aside. Mom knows you’re here. I just talked to her. Part of my daily routine is a check-in with your folks.”

“My parents are divorced.”

“Yep.”

“Will you talk to both of them every day?”

“Mom and Dad have as much to learn about recovery as you do. And fortunately for you and them, Hazelden does a terrific job of educating parents about enabling and tough love, everything they need to know to help you avoid old patterns when you’re back home in six months or—”

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St. Francois center closure could put patients at risk

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – METHADONE OR DIE! – 

July 9, 2021 – “It was working. It was working great, I was able to go to work every day and not be sick. I was able to be productive, like, you know I had hope,” said another client named Jason.

It’s unclear who forced the clinic to close or why. Jason said that employees told clients that the D.E.A. forced the medical facility to close. News 4 reached out to the St. Louis office of the D.E.A. and a spokesperson said it wasn’t their agency. News 4 also reached out to the Missouri Department of Mental Health but hasn’t heard back.

Rural American has been hit hardest by the opioid epidemic but has limited medical facilities and treatment programs. The next closest medicine-based treatment programs are in St. Louis and Cape Girardeau. Many clients say they don’t have the time or money to drive that far and back every day to get treatment. Washington University psychiatrist, Dr. Laura Bierut, who specializes in addiction at Barnes-Jewish Hospital, said she was very concerned about how the treatment for the clients was abruptly halted when the clinic closed.

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Opioid addiction apps sharing sensitive data with third parties

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

NOT BETTER APP –   

July 7, 2021 – Despite the vast reach and sensitive nature of these services, the research found that the majority of the apps accessed unique identifiers about the user’s device and, in some cases, shared that data with third parties.

Of the 10 apps studied, seven access the Android Advertising ID (AAID), a user-generated identifier that can be linked to other information to provide insights into identifiable individuals. Five of the apps also access the devices’ phone number; three access the device’s unique IMEI and IMSI numbers, which can also be used to uniquely identify a person’s device; and two access a users’ list of installed apps, which the researchers say can be used to build a “fingerprint” of a user to track their activities.

Many of the apps examined are also obtaining location information in some form, which when correlated with these unique identifiers, strengthens the capability for surveilling an individual person, as well as their daily habits, behaviors, and who they interact with. One of the methods the apps are doing this is through Bluetooth; seven of the apps request permission to make Bluetooth connections, which the researchers say is particularly worrying due to the fact this can be used to track users in real-world locations.

“Bluetooth can do what I call proximity tracking, so if you’re in the grocery store, it knows how long you’re in a certain aisle, or how close you are to someone else,” Sean O’Brien, principal researcher at ExpressVPN’s Digital Security Lab who led the investigation, told TechCrunch. “Bluetooth is an area that I’m pretty concerned about.”

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Robert Downey Sr., Filmmaker and Provocateur, Is Dead at 85

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

A MAN OF HIS TIME, A MAN AHEAD OF HIS TIME, A MAN FOR ALL TIME – 

July 7, 2021 – The film, though probably a financial success by Mr. Downey’s standards, made only about $2.7 million. (By comparison, “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” that same year made more than $100 million.) Yet its reputation was such that in 2016 the Library of Congress selected it for the National Film Registry, an exclusive group of movies deemed to have cultural or historical significance. Also much admired in some circles was “Greaser’s Palace” (1972), in which a Christlike figure in a zoot suit arrives in the Wild West by parachute. Younger filmmakers like Paul Thomas Anderson (who gave Mr. Downey a small part in his 1997 hit, “Boogie Nights”) cited it as an influence. None other than Joseph Papp, the theater impresario, in a letter to The New York Times after Mr. Canby’s unenthusiastic review, wrote that “Robert Downey has fearlessly descended into the netherworld and come up with a laughing nightmare.” (Mr. Papp’s assessment may not have been entirely objective; at the time he was producing one of Mr. Downey’s few mainstream efforts, a television version of the David Rabe play “Sticks and Bones,” which had been a hit at Mr. Papp’s Public Theater in 1971.)

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Former Deputy and COO Bill Collins goes to any Wavelengths helping clients

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

FOLLOWING THE LAWS OF RECOVERY – 

July 5, 2021 – To me, law enforcement is about people and building relationships where trust can be established. When there is trust, anything can happen. I could tell you countless stories from my almost 30 years in law enforcement where that was proven true. Wavelengths is not much different from law enforcement in my opinion. Our clients are at a point in their lives where they are here because they cannot do it on their own. They need help.

When they get to Wavelengths, they do not have much trust in anyone. They have been judged, taken advantage of, victims of crimes, and have lost much of what is important in life. The most impactful loss would be that of self-worth.

Plain and simple, addiction destroys.

Over my many years in law enforcement, I have first-hand seen addiction turn good people into something they are not. Addiction tears apart relationships, livelihoods, and families. The impact of addiction is incredible and far-reaching.

What I have taken from my years of experience in law enforcement to my current position at Wavelengths is the building of trust. At Wavelengths, we create an environment of trust so we can help rebuild the lives of people suffering from addiction. We do not judge them based on their past. I have told many of our clients that you can’t go back and change the beginning, but you can start today and definitely change the ending.

We learn from their past and focus on the future and the great possibilities that are out there for them if they want it. The key being: “If they want it.” If they want it, they can do it. We provide the right environment, skilled counselors and therapists, and all the tools they need to overcome their addiction.

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‘Choose to live’: Dan Carden’s emotional speech about alcohol addiction

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – A NEW HERO – 

July 1, 2021 – “Drinking was destroying my body, it was damaging me and my relationships in so many other ways,” he said, adding he used alcohol to escape and give up on life.

Carden said his family supported him and friends “quite literally saved my life”, but that it took Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, psychotherapy and counselling to get to the point where he was healthy, loved life and had a wonderful partner.

“I’ve gone from not recognising addiction in myself for so, so long to seeing it everywhere and doing its worst damage in the most deprived communities,” he said.

Carden said addiction was “killing more people and ruining more lives than ever” and had led to the deaths of several MPs – and yet many “would still rather hide its ugly reality”.

In a message to young people, the former frontbencher said: “Pride is about celebrating who we are without shame. In the end, it’s a simple choice: choose to hide or choose to live. My advice is choose to live.”

The Conservative former minister David Mundell said Carden had made a “hugely impressive, moving” speech, while another, Crispin Blunt, praised him for being “very brave about the journey he has been on”.

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‘Stay in the soul’: treatment program a lifeline for men

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

BOYS TO MEN – 

June 29, 2021 – Diverse in age and race, the group is assembled for a monthly Birthday Night, which will celebrate three residents whose birthdays fall in May as well as 18 men who are marking sobriety anniversaries of one month to 14 years.

Executive director Brent Burmaster, who marked 14 years of recovery from alcoholism in June, stands behind a vintage wood lectern exuberantly dispensing gold-plated sobriety coins along with personal praise for each recipient. Many of the residents have cycled in and out of rehabilitation programs. Most have been in jail — some prison — so Burmaster developed Soul’s Harbor’s six-month residency program using a holistic approach along with principles from his 25-year career as an IBM sales executive. The strategy incorporates occupational therapy in service of the nonprofit or its four thrift stores — a major source of funding — as well as mental health therapy, CrossFit exercise, money management training, yoga, temporary jobs with partner companies like Eddie Deen & Co. Catering, health care via a weekly mobile clinic operated by Parkland Health & Hospital System, pet therapy with Pepper and guidance about educational opportunities and trade school.

Most of the residents have children, and a Nurturing Fathers Program is set to start in September.

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This rabbi was addicted to opioids

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

BACK FROM THE LAND OF NOD –   

June 29, 2021 – “In some ways, this is very personal and I can totally respect somebody’s feeling like, ‘this is my business, it doesn’t affect what I do.’ I feel about it differently,” Perice said.

“My congregants trust me. Who am I to not trust them? I feel like I’m honoring that trust by telling them something like this about myself, and I think that’s a very important part of this, honoring the trust people have put in me.”

Using to ‘feel normal’

Perice’s addiction began as many do: with a car accident, chronic back pain and a prescription for Vicodin.

The accident happened in 2007 when Perice was an undergraduate student at Temple University in Philadelphia and on track for a career in politics. While the Vicodin helped his back pain, he found himself needing higher and higher doses as his tolerance for the original dose increased. When his doctor tried to get him to cut back, he began “doctor shopping,” seeking new physicians to prescribe more pain killers. Eventually he bypassed the doctors altogether to buy pills, until he was taking up to 80 milligrams of OxyContin each day.

Perice said the pills were never about getting high.

“I was dealing with depression and anxiety, like a lot of people in their early 20s, and I think for some reason, when I would take opiates for this pain, it would seem to just calm me down,” Perice said. After taking pills for a certain amount of time, he said, “you’re taking it to feel normal.”

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