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Alcohol Recovery Center Intensive Residential Treatment Program
Jack Peterson Director Alcohol Recovery Center Ontario, Oregon
The delivery of quality residential treatment requires three essential
ingredients. Each is indispensable. These ingredients include:
- Understanding the dynamics of the illness
- Formulating all treatment methods toward direct treatment of the disease
- Maintaining a highly motivated treatment team
These are what determine the success of a treatment program.
Abstract
Alcoholism and chemical dependency are discussed in the context of of the
Alcohol Recovery Center Intensive Residential Treatment Program. Three elements
essential to the delivery of quality residential dynamics of the illness;
formulating all treatment methods toward direct treatment of the disease; and
maintaining a highly motivated treatment team. Alcoholism and chemial
dependency are typical medical dependcy are typical medical diseases that
contain components of mental and emotion compulsions that recur even when active
drinking or drug use is arrested. Drawing on the teachings of Father Joseph
Martin, the author states that alcoholism and drug additction teach its victims
how to be afraid; one gets rid of fear by learning to love again. Treatment is
a process in which clients are placed in a position of learning to love.
Self-sacrifice, delayed gratification, and ego deflation are all key elements of
success in intensive residential treatment. It is important for a counselor to
act in a mature manner and not sacrifice honesty for the client's approval. The
author advises that counselors should not compare themselves to, compete with,
or criticize other counselors. |
Understanding the Dynamics of Alcoholism and Chemical Addiction
Alcoholism and chemical dependency are typical medical diseases which
contain components of mental and emotional compulsions that recur even when
active drinking or drug use is arrested. Dr. Frederick A. Montgomery,
addictionologist and author of Alcoholism and Chemical Dependence,
states:
- Psychoactive prescription drugs constitute a large number of drugs
available for medical use. These drugs may be prescribed for persons who are
chemically dependent and/or alcoholic; consequently, the issue of prescription
drugs and their interactions with alcohol and other chemicals becomes important.
Commonly, people who become dependent upon prescription drugs have an
underlying genetic predisposition for alcoholism. Their initial prescription
drug dependence moves gradually into alcohol dependence as well, because
prescription drugs and alcohol satisfy physiologic needs in the same fashion.
Polydrug dependence is a common occurrence in most alcoholism treatment
facilities. Many of these drugs are prescription drugs easily obtained by the
chemically dependent person.
Role of Prescription Drugs
The abuse of prescription drugs results in more injuries and deaths to
Americans than all illegal drugs combined. In 1983, there were 1.5 billion
prescriptions dispensed and several hundred million pills were diverted to
illicit use. Prescription drugs are involved in almost 60 percent of
drug-related emergency room visits, and 70 percent of drug-related deaths are
commonly associated with alcohol. In almost every case of prescription drug
abuse, there is also a dependence on other drugs and/or alcohol.
People who are genetically prone to the development of alcoholism may
inadvertently find themselves dependent on medications prescribed for legitimate
reasons. Physicians view many of these drugs as being relatively harmless. But
to those persons who are genetically predisposed, the medications become
gateways to drug dependence and/or alcoholism. Abstinence from all psychoactive
drugs is the only reasonable method to deal with chemical dependency.
Accepting the Violation of Personal Values
Violations of conscience can be considered to be "invoking precedence."
Once an invoking precedence has occurred, a psychological phenomenon takes
place in the subconscious that conditions the alcoholic/chemically dependent
person to learn to live with the fact that one's behaviors have fallen below
one's own values. This type of situation makes it easier with each recurrence
for the client to live with the behaviors that violate his or her personal
values.
With inhibitions chemically altered, the alcoholic/addict does not have the
same level of psychological defenses that would normally prohibit unacceptable
behaviors. As the illness progresses, there tends to be a progressive
diminishment in the effectiveness of the inhibitions. Each unchecked violation
of values will promote the capacity for even greater violations.
The client becomes mentally ill as he or she begins to cope with the
implications of the depth and seriousness of those violations. Rationalizing
becomes a way of life as the client tries to block out the psychic pain. The
client blames something or someone else . . . the same process he or she uses
concerning denial of the drinking and drug problem.
Once the unacceptable behavior is established and "owned" through
a process of "condoned" repetition, it becomes attitudinal and
eventually hardens into a state of being. The client has developed rational
defenses to protect himself or herself from the psychic pain corresponding with
that self-knowledge. Rather than using the defenses as he or she once didto
stop the self from committing the act that was unacceptablethe client
begins to use defenses to explain away personal responsibility. This is an
important shift in emphasis. At this point, the defenses are no longer the
tool; they are the master. The shift in emphasis is not noticed, because the
behaviors are perceived by self to be condoned. What is not seen is that the
behaviors are in direct conflict with the client's own values. It has been said
that the alcoholic drinks because heor shecan't not drink.
The alcoholic acts the way heor sheacts because heor shecan't
not act that way.
The Process of Affixing Blame
Whether the alcoholic/addict is using or not, whatever behaviors have been
solidified into a state of being are now "acceptable" options, because
the client has effectively hardened or shielded self from the truth that would
make the person feel bad about it. With the passage of time, that same person
will forget the fact that the violations of personal values had anything to do
with chemical use. The greater the pain, and the higher the number of
unacceptable incidents of values-violation, the greater the deception has to be.
With time and distance placed between the chemically addicted person and that
person's behavior comes a natural lack of comprehension of cause and effect.
The chemically addicted person has a free-floating mass of negative emotions
long detached from the incidents that caused them. Once this has followed the
course to its end, the person is left with several potential target objects for
blame. Some blame self and undergo all types of self-destructive changes,
usually manic or depressive in nature. Many are often diagnosed as having
unipolar or bipolar disorders. Some blame others and become antisocial or
psychopathic. Still others are not quite sure who or what is to blame and begin
to manifest behaviors similar to a paranoid schizophrenic. Others may blame the
system or the government, become very antiauthoritarian, and join various hate
groups and organizations that are antiestablishment. Some blame God and develop
all manner of spiritual troubles. Their guilt, shame, and remorse for past
misdeeds prohibit them from approaching the truth they fear. The question might
well be asked, "What kind of punishment can a person warrant whose guilt is
greater than the misdeeds?"
People coming into contact with a person suffering from any one of the
mentioned delusions will often unwittingly support that negative assumption,
because many aspects of the person's belief system seem plausible. In fact, if
the beliefs had not been plausible, they would not have been adopted.
The Significance of a Sense of Self
Some youth begin drinking or taking drugs when their personalities are still
in the developmental stage. This is the other destructive situation where the
psychological phenomenon develops of invoking precedence through a violation of
the client's values. Society makes a definite distinction between a juvenile
record and an adult record for good reason. A child needs to learn the
limitations in which he or she must abide, and that takes some testing of
limits. Driving fast, fighting, stealing, cursing, lying, and pretending are
natural in adolescence . . . but are quite inappropriate at age 25 or 30.
Sometimes we see cases of arrested adolescence, where the client has not yet
established his personality. This same person may well have violated his or her
own values before starting to drink "in search of self," and that
created the invoking precedence that carried over into adult life, making the
person feel and act inappropriately as weighed against his or her own values.
I do believe that if the client becomes more aware of himself or herself as
a worthwhile productive person, that client will less obsessively focus on past
unacceptable acts and will pay more attention to present behaviors and values.
Rather than closely examining causes and motivations for behaviors that occurred
before, during, and after drinking and drug-taking episodes, it is better to
require a client to begin to examine "Who am I?" Then, the answer to
the dilemma will lie in the process of learning once again to function within
the confines of his or her personal values. Though the client may well be
legally responsible for his or her actions, the person is in no way morally
responsible for doing things he or she did not "want" to do, for those
actions were obviously against the client's will. Proof of that statement is
observed easily through identification of conflicts. The proof of conflict
shows the value violations, and that is much easier to establish than the true
cause of the unacceptable behaviors.
- Since periods of abstinence
without active involvement in the recovery process do absolutely nothing to
forestall the antisocial or criminal behaviors, a person who is just not
drinking or using chemicals cannot be considered to be in recovery.
- When not involved in the recovery process, the alcoholic/addict who does
things that conflict with his or her values is still simply manifesting
alcohol/drug-related behaviors. The behaviors should not be viewed as the
client's "true" personality. Although it is necessary to hold such a
person legally responsible for these behaviors, the client is not morally to
blame for recurrent behaviors adopted in the practicing/addictive cycle of
behavior.
- We should not only be aware of the possibility of the recurrence of
unacceptable behaviors in the chemically dependent person prior to recovery, but
we should be trained to expect it.
- Once the unacceptable behavior is established and owned through repetition,
it becomes attitudinal . . . and eventually hardens into a state of being. The
same process works in reverse for productive behaviors that are practiced and
accepted over an adequate period of time to establish the behaviors as first
attitudinal and then as the person's subconscious state-of-being.
- The client cannot be morally responsible for his or her conduct until
stable recovery has been established.
- If recovery is not promoted, we are enabling the client to continue
manifesting behaviors that were established while the person was drinking or
using drugs. We each have some responsibility in that regard. As
representatives of the helping profession, we need to get the person involved in
behaviors and activities that are conducive to recovery and to shield the client
from behaviors and activities that are consistent with the illness and in
conflict with the client's own values.
- Whether the alcoholic/addict is using or not, whatever behaviors have
become established as a state of being are now an acceptable option to that
person, because the client has effectively hardened or shielded the self from
the truth that would make the client feel bad about it. After the precedent has
been set, self-worth drops to the level of the violation.
- Treatment is required to help rehabilitate the client's defense system to
its former sensitivity.
- Only restoration of the client's defense system will allow the client to
act within the confines of his or her true value system.
- The greater the alcoholic/addict's pain and the higher the number of
acceptable incidents of values-violation, the greater the deception has to be.
With time and distance placed between the chemically addicted person and the
unacceptable behaviors comes a natural lack of comprehension of the true cause
and effect. The client has a mass of free-floating negative emotions long
detached from the incidents that caused them.
- Residential treatment should focus on the reestablishment of cause and
effect through clarification of what really happened when the alcoholic/addict
used. The Alcohol Recovery Center (A.R.C.) uses the first-step preparation as a
tool for that purpose. The "blame" will accurately be shifted from
self, others, the system, or the government to alcohol or drugs.
- Once the cause and effect have been clarified, the client will be out of
denial. Aftercare needs to be an ongoing process of maintaining that
clarification. Self-help meetings are very important. Without ongoing
maintenance of tractable ego, the client will soon revert to his or her former
personality. The ego will inflate and cause a return of the delusion created by
that client's defenses, and the client will start blaming self, others, the
system, and so forth, and use again.
The person who, once started, cannot control use of chemicals, is the one
who creates the most problems for our society. Such an individual may show
periods of control but, once he or she returns to chemical use, problems
inevitably occur. It is just a matter of time. Such persons are the most
resistant toward accepting treatment and the most apt to be misdiagnosed unless
there is a thorough chemical addiction history. That dilemma is through no
fault of the consulting physician, since the chemically dependent (addicted)
person is unable or unwilling to level with the doctor. The chemically addicted
person is grossly deluded by his or her psychological defense system.
Typically, these individuals are in their early twenties and feel that other
people are picking on them. Any attempt to help the individual is viewed as
interference, unless it is monetary in nature with "no questions asked."
The chemically addicted person will have developed a support system of
people willing to "enable" that person to continue using drugs or
alcohol. He or she will continue to have crisis after crisis that requires
financial support. The crises will appear real, but in actuality are stories
made up for the purpose of obtaining money to support the addiction.
Interestingly, the person who becomes the chief enabler becomes just as
deluded as the chemically addicted person. That often complicates the
possibility of the addicted person getting the help that he or she needs.
Ironically, the chief enabler is a highly responsible person in other areas of
life and can become a rather formidable "opponent" when one is trying
to help the chemically addicted person. Treatment for both is available and
appropriate. If the chemically addicted person is not to blame, how much more
not to blame is the person or persons who have been adversely affected by the
client's illness?
Treatment of Alcoholism and Chemical Addiction
Father Joseph Martin said that alcoholism and addiction teaches its victims
one thing: how to be afraid. It is not surprising to learn that at the
base of all anger is some unconscious fear. People with alcohol and drug
problems are fearful, angry people.
By the time a client arrives at treatment, there has been an enormous amount
of pain associated with out-of-control behaviors. Loss of control produces
enormous fear. Clients fear losing loved ones, losing freedom, losing financial
security, health, reputation, and, at times, even sanity. When people do things
they deem to be bad, they feel that they are losing their personal moral
integrity.
Out-of-control behaviors cause disruption in society. Police often
intervene to protect the rights of others. If we have children, social service
agencies intervene to protect those children. If we use illegal drugs, we often
are stopped by drug enforcement officers. Many of us have had to go to jail,
and pay fines, and have been placed on probation because of our drug- and
alcohol-related behaviors. All these interventions have one thing in commonauthority.
It seems logical that we develop a resentment toward people in authority. We
often feel picked on, singled out, or set up. We often begin to believe that
our main problem is with the system. We often feel that if they would just
leave us alone, things would be all right.
Most of us did not come to treatment because we wanted to. We often came
because we felt we had to. Our first response to treatment is often similar to
our response to policemen, jailers, or narcs. It was us against them. We
rebelled against the possibility of "them" finding out things about us
because we didn't trust them. It has been our experience that anything we said
could be used against us in a court of law.
Father Joseph Martin said, "We are meant to love." A person
caught up in chemical addiction is not able to love in a mature way, because
addiction demands that we take. Love is giving. The primary ingredient in
love is self-sacrifice. It is doing something for someone else at sacrifice of
self. How can we reach out to others and share with them something we haven't
got? Chemical addiction robs us of our openness. It robs us of our trust. It
makes us doubt other people's motives. It makes us accuse those we love of
things we know deep down are not true. It often makes us avoid being around
those we love. We hide from them. We are afraid to let them know us as we
really are, because we don't like ourselves and know that if they really knew
us, they wouldn't like us either.
How does one get rid of fear? By learning to love again. All of us seem to
have one of two choices, to love others or to fear others.
Some people have the idea, "You've got to learn to love yourself before
you can learn to love others." Self-love is the alcoholic's main problem.
The alcoholic's selfishness and self-centeredness (caused by overdeveloped
defenses) block him or her off from loving others. I think alcoholism and drug
addiction are extreme examples that prove selfishness and self-centeredness stem
from vain attempts to experience love through the process of loving one's self.
Treatment is a process whereby clients are placed in a position of learning
to love. Clients are constantly asked to share with others their experiences,
strength, and hopes. They are asked to speak when they would rather not. When
a client does something he does not "want" to do, isn't that client
sacrificing of self? This is an expression of love. Self-sacrifice,
delayed gratification, and ego deflation are all key elements of success in
intensive residential treatment.
It sounds too simplistic. It is simple, but it is not easy. A lifetime of
selfishness is not easy to break. It requires a change in attitude, a change in
focus, and mostly a change of heart.
Maintaining a Qualified and Motivated Treatment Team
Work in the field of alcoholism and drug addiction brings with it certain
difficulties. One dilemma I have noted is that the very factor which motivates
many people to want to work in this field often proves to be the major factor
leading a sincere person to leave the career of his or her choice. We are all
changing (for the better or worse) as we adapt to new situations. For persons
who are starting careers in the alcoholism or drug addiction field, there
actually needs to be change in the basis of their motivation. We all want to
get to know our clients, get involved in their lives, and help them along the
road to recovery. One of the major causes of stress and burnout is getting too
close to the client. Getting involved in too much small talk, too much personal
disclosure (on the counselor's part), or too much inappropriate joking and
laughter erodes the professional ethics of counseling.
A client whose life has been selfish, self-centered, and out of control
suffers from many problems, maybe the most obvious being emotional immaturity.
I believe there needs to be an imaginary gulf (not a wall) between the client
and counselor, especially in the beginning of the treatment process. I believe
it to be necessary that there is a contrast between maturity and immaturity.
When a counselor engages in conversation (even nonverbal) that is basically
immature, two major things occur:
- You have descended to the
emotional level of the client, and you are
being counseled to the extent and degree that you remain in the immature
setting or allow it to progress.
- You are unwittingly becoming part of the problem because you are merely
reflecting what they are. When this occurs, their opinion of you is diminished.
A client whose life has been a series of superficial relationships soon gets
the feeling that you are no different than they, and therefore may have little
to offer. This creates a situation Dr. Steven Glen describes by the term "naive
clarity," wherein no positive changes occuryou just reflect what they
are.
Qualities of the Mature Counselor
A mature counselor familiar with traps of co-dependency in the treatment
setting will not sacrifice honesty for the client's approval. A mature
counselor is not in the business to find and make new friends, even though that
is often the long-term result. A mature counselor insists on sharing with the
client at a level of maturity and expects the client to rise to the occasion.
When this occurs, counseling is in the mode conducive to change in the client.
Neither the client nor the counselor is diminished in a therapeutic setting in
which information is exchanged at a level of maturity.
Once the client becomes aware of who you are, the client will respond
accordingly. A counselor needs to create an imaginary gulf between himself or
herself and the client who is talking nonsense, if for no other reason than that
it simply doesn't work. Personal integrity is the counselor's hallmark. With
it, when you speak the client will listen. The client will listen seriously.
The client will listen intently. Without establishing a personal integrity of
maturity between counselor and client, no matter what is said, it is taken with
a grain of salt. The client cannot trust himself or herself and feels that, if
you are not somehow different, he or she won't trust you, either.
When the counselor requires that the client be addressed with maturity,
inevitably the client responds similarly and is counseled. The majority of
counseling is not in the group setting, in one-to-ones, or in lectures, but is
in impressions gathered prior to the actual counseling session. How we present
ourselves, how we interact with other staff members, and the manner in which our
client sees us handling ourselvesall combine to create an impression of
integrity or an impression of immaturity.
Father Joseph Martin's "Chalk Talk" shows the personality of the
alcoholic represented by the formula E/I (emotions predominating over the
intellect). As long as the client's emotions are in primary control, there will
be immaturity. That does not mean we are to treat clients like children. That
is their problem; others have treated them like children for too long. Clients
need to be approached as adults, treated as adults, and expected to act and
react like mature responsible adults. A part of treatment's responsibility is
to diminish immature out-of-control behaviors and to foster a degree of
self-control and self-discipline representative of adult behavior.
Attitudes Counselors Need to Avoid
Initially, counselors doing their job will not be liked by the clients.
However, they will be respected. It is more important to win their respect than
to win their friendship. With the passage of time, clients who act responsibly
begin to reap the positive benefits of their actions. Their view of the
counselor will change as their views of themselves change. They will ultimately
appreciate the counselor's work, respect the counselor's judgment, and learn to
love the counselor, as the counselor has taught them how to love others.
We all have a hidden desire to be the one to get someone well. To realize
we each have played a part in that process is inspiring. But, to feel
responsible for independently bringing about that change can be disastrous. The
counselor who finds himself or herself taking credit for someone's achieving or
maintaining sobriety will soon find himself or herself taking responsibility for
the client who doesn't. When a counselor takes credit for positive changes,
that same counselor suffers with/for the client who chooses to drink or use
drugs again. To allow a client to credit a counselor with his or her sobriety
is a setup. A successful counselor is a person who is well trained, a team
player, cooperative, inspirational, a positive example, and willing to work
consistently within the parameters of her or his limitations. The primary
limitation that must be faced early on in the career of a counselor is: "I
am powerless over the alcoholic/addict" and "I cannot manage the
alcoholic/addict."
Before a client reaches A.R.C., he or she has been through about 90 percent
of what is required to get well. We know that, because we understand the
characteristics of the illness. Clients have done exhaustive "research"
into their drinking/drug taking. They have had loved ones go the extra mile for
them. They have had crises. They have lost loved ones. They have been given
hundreds of "second chances." They have tried everythingwith
the exception of what it really takes to get well. They have not accepted the
truth about themselves nor have they accepted the truth about their condition.
Our job is to see that they receive the unadulterated truth. We know the truth
will hurt. They sense the truth will hurt. We know the truth will not
be immediately accepted, but we have the responsibility to present the truth as
often as we see error.
Knowing the Limits of Helping
We teach clients how to love others, so that their experience of having love
will be manifested in every area of their lives. As they begin to embrace
reality with all the fervor they did the bottle or drug, the desire to drink or
use drugs will be removed.
I must focus on my area of expertise. I am primarily a drug and alcoholism
counselor. I understand alcoholism and drug addiction to be primary to
the solving of other problems caused by the disease.
A counselor must not waste precious treatment time trying to control people,
situations, and conditions of the client's external life. The futility of this
is apparent in the sense that, if those problems were eliminated, the client
would not feel the need for change. Every client's psychosocial history
represents the futility of his or her attempts to change life to allow for
continued drinking and using drugs. Every newly sober alcoholic honestly
believes conditions drove him or her to drink. To the extent that we buy into
this lie, we reinforce the client's obsession to "somehow, someday, control
and enjoy my drinking." It has not worked over the past many years and it
will not work for us!
We must continually work to increase the client's conscious awareness of
blaming people, situations, and conditions for what was caused by the disease of
alcoholism and drug addiction. The counselor who remains within his or her
field of expertise and displays maturity and empathy in the conveyance of truth
is always impressive. The old adage: "To thine own self be true"
illustrates where the primary focus must be.
Working as a Team
The simple formula that has helped considerably throughout my 15 years of
counseling is the "three Cs" as explained to me by Gordon Lucky.
Applied to other counselors, it simply teaches, don't compare (yourself to)don't
compete (with)and don't criticize other counselors. We must each develop
the method of teaching clients the truths we know based on our own
personalities. We see a vast diversity of personalities in treatment. We have
a vast diversity of personalities among staff.
Cooperation and forgiveness will help the team function in a cohesive
manner. That is what we all want, and that is what we all must do.
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Last Updated 11-7-02
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