How Fear Influences Addiction Recovery
By Dr.Fourkan Ali
Across the UK, there are families that have
tried as best they can to help an addicted loved one get the necessary
treatment to recover. Often times those efforts are ignored or spurned for
reasons family members do not understand. Unfortunately, alcoholics and drug
addicts are unable to see their own condition for what it is. Moreover, even
when they do see it, they are afraid to get well.
The fear addicts face
when considering recovery may seem unreasonable to the rational thinker.
Nonetheless, the fear is very real. Addicts are afraid of a long list of things
because they cannot imagine life without their drugs or alcohol. This fear
prevents some from getting help and others from taking full advantage of the
help they eventually do accept. As any drug addiction expert will tell you, fear directly influences
addiction recovery.
1. Fear of Sobriety – The typical addict uses drugs and alcohol as
a coping mechanism to handle problems that are otherwise overwhelming. Even
considering sobriety means the addict will have to face those problems without
the only coping mechanism he or she knows. Many simply cannot handle the
thought.
1. Fear of Failure – We all experience the fear of failure to one
extent or another. However, for the addict, fear can be overwhelming. If an
addict believes he or she does not have what it takes to succeed, they may not
even try.
1. Fear of Success – Some alcoholics and drug addicts do not fear
failure, they fear success. These types of individuals have a deep-rooted
belief that they do not deserve the benefits of a drug-free life; they do not
deserve to succeed. It is a belief that can be absolutely crippling to the
recovery process.
1. Fear of Rejection – Drug and alcohol use tends to be a communal
thing among fellow addicts. Some fear rejection among their current circle of
friends if they give up addictive behaviour. Others mistakenly believe their
own friends and family members will reject them once they come clean.
1. Fear of Identity Loss – Though it may seem hard to fathom,
alcoholics and drug addicts find their identities in the substances they use.
Coming clean would be tantamount to sacrificing that identity. Moreover, if one
does not know who he or she is, they do not know what their life should
be.
1. Fear of Misery – You may be familiar with the idea of an
addict blaming external circumstances for his or her addictive behaviour. The
same mindset that would assign blame also believes that the current misery will
only be made worse by coming clean. An addict using drugs and alcohol to escape
is often convinced sobriety will consign him or her to a life of misery.
These six fears are very real to the
recovering addict. These are fears therapists must overcome in order to bring a
person to point of being willing to practice abstinence for the remainder of
his or her life. When these fears cannot be overcome, the chances of relapse
are much higher.
Irrational Thinking
Fear directly influences the recovery because
it forms the thought patterns and emotions an individual experiences throughout
the process. For example, if a recovering addict fears failure, he or she may
not be willing to openly address the types of things that drive him or her to
drug use. Another addict fearful of rejection may not be willing to openly
participate in group counselling.
Family members trying to help a loved one
overcome addiction need to understand how real and powerful fear is. It is not that
the addict despises his or her loved ones; it is the overwhelming fear in his
or her mind that gives them no other choice much to turn away the help being
offered. That is the nature of the beast.
0 comments:
Post a Comment