- Home
- Addiction Recovery
- Help For Addiction - How To Stay Clean on the Outside
Help For Addiction - How To Stay Clean on the Outside
- By Rosemary Grace Brooks
- Published 11/3/2008
- Addiction Recovery
- Unrated
A person
seeking help for addiction and guidance about how to stay clean from their
addictive behaviours will have a wide variety of options to choose from.
However, most do not realise that in order to stay clean once out of treatment,
a daily programme of recovery is needed such as a Twelve Step Programme to keep
them present and aware.
When a
person is immersed in obsessive and compulsive behaviours, their life revolves
around this behaviour. Whether it is substance abuse, sex addiction, gambling
addiction, alcoholism or any other addiction, the addict will usually have been
on a path of avoidance regarding their feelings and reality for a long while.
Addiction is seen by many today as a disease, incurable, progressive and eventually
fatal if it is not arrested.
Addicts in
recovery often report having felt ‘different’ and somewhat uncomfortable with
life and normality since a young age, despite sometimes appearing normal,
healthy and well balanced on the exterior. Most addictive behaviours are not
simply about the substance or the behaviour, they are about the individual.
Abstinence is the start of the recovery process. Change and healing is the rest
of the process, occurring for the rest of a recovering addict’s life.
Going Into
Rehab
When a
person seeks help for an addiction by going into a rehabilitation centre this
provides a safe and constructive environment for their being able to deal with
their deeply rooted issues and begin a healing process.
Life in a
rehabilitation centre is also a learning experience and preparation for them to
begin a new life after rehab. Any addiction requires the using habit to be
broken and ceased completely before healing can begin.
Intense
therapy will help deal with issues of the past, anger of the present and fear
of the future. However, after a period in treatment, an addict will often
leave, feeling they have been ‘cured’ and can carry on their lives without
attending to themselves any further. This usually leads to relapse, taking the
addict to an even darker place than they were before.
Secondary
Care and a Programme of Recovery
So how does
an addict stay clean after leaving a treatment centre? Therapy and abstaining
for a time seems not to be enough, which is why many treatment centres endorse
working a Twelve Step programme and continued treatment at a secondary care
facility.
A primary
care facility is usually a facility where patients stay on the property under
supervision the entire time. A secondary care facility is a rehabilitation
centre where addicts have more freedom and responsibilities than in a primary
care facility and is an incredibly helpful step in assisting newly recovering
addicts in re-integrating back into normal life in a safe and assisted manner.
An addict
has the best chance of maintaining sobriety if working a programme set to help
them deal with life constructively and provides a tight net of support and
guidance. Life is not easy, whether clean or using. Every person alive has to
face pain. Losing a loved one, work problems, break ups and divorces and other
problems and disappointments, even simple boredom. Yet addicts deal with these
emotions in self-destructive ways.
It is easy
for an addict to slip into old ways. An addict needs constructive methods to
process heavy emotions, the same thing applies to happy emotions. Some addicts
have no idea how to feel happiness and celebrate without using. Extreme
emotions are one of the hardest things for an addict to experience after years
of numbing themselves with compulsive acts which remove them from their
feelings.
Applying
the Steps
The only
price an addict will pay for working a Twelve Step programme is vigilance.
Knowing is
not enough – an addict in recovery needs to work at bettering themselves on a
daily basis. A Twelve Step programme will help them to have a better quality of
life – as has been mentioned, pain is inevitable. Yet misery is optional. With
working a programme, an addict will heal the pain of living and have a method
of coping with life on life’s terms, not the addict’s terms.
A Twelve
Step fellowship offers a daily programme for maintenance and growth for an
addict, mixed with the support of other member’s experience and new comer’s
needs. When two addicts help each other in life to find a better way of living,
true recovery is seen. The main purpose of addicts working a Twelve Step
programme is to help those that still suffer so the suffering may find help and
the addict who is helping may find a way to give back what they have been given.
Such a
fellowship is not affiliated with treatment centres but treatment centres are
allowed to advise clients to follow the programme and work the steps whilst
they are there as well as participating in therapy. A Twelve Step programme is
what will help an addict to stay clean from compulsive and self-destructive
behaviours after leaving treatment.
The
programme consists of attending meetings regularly, working the Twelve Steps
through written work on the Twelve Steps, giving back to their respective fellowship
(such as Narcotics Anonymous), reading literature, working with a sponsor (a
more experienced member of the fellowship – it does not relate to finance),
giving back through service (such as sponsoring, helping out at meetings or
even putting chairs out before a meeting) and allowing a loving higher power
and spiritual principles to work in their lives (the Twelve Steps are not
religious, they are based on spirituality).
Through
working the Twelve Steps, an addict will find their life become more focused on
doing good for themselves, becoming responsible for their actions and finding a
new way to live that is far from the hell of active using. The steps help an
addict stay present and aware of their behaviour and patterns and can be a
powerful force in alerting an addict as to a possible imminent relapse or
negative behaviour.
At
meetings, it is emphasised that “alone we can’t but together we can”. Knowing
that they are not alone is incredibly comforting and helpful for any addict in
recovery – especially an addict that is struggling or wanting to get abstinence
from their compulsive, self-destructive behaviours.
After getting help for addiction and learning how to stay clean, an addict faces quite a big feat in staying abstinent from using. With the help and support of a programme in their lives, they are able to find a reprieve from themselves and live a normal life, without the use of addictive behaviours. Many addicts become extremely successful, marry and become wonderful parents and constructive members of society. But due to the nature of their disease, vigilance and awareness of themselves and their condition as well as working on their patterns is an important tool for their continued survival.
