Wednesday, April 5, 2017

free alcohol rehab

free alcohol rehab

one of my earliest memories is of trying to wake upone of my relatives and not being able to. and i was just a little kid,so i didn't really understand why, but as i got older, i realized we haddrug addiction in my family, including later cocaine addiction. i'd been thinking about it a lot lately,partly because it's now exactly 100 years since drugs were first bannedin the united states and britain, and we then imposed thaton the rest of the world.

it's a century since we madethis really fateful decision to take addicts and punish themand make them suffer, because we believed that would deter them;it would give them an incentive to stop. and a few years ago, i was looking atsome of the addicts in my life who i love, and trying to figure outif there was some way to help them. and i realized there were loadsof incredibly basic questions i just didn't know the answer to, like, what really causes addiction? why do we carry on with this approachthat doesn't seem to be working,

and is there a better way out therethat we could try instead? so i read loads of stuff about it, and i couldn't really findthe answers i was looking for, so i thought, okay, i'll go and sitwith different people around the world who lived this and studied this and talk to them and seeif i could learn from them. and i didn't realize i would end upgoing over 30,000 miles at the start, but i ended up going and meetingloads of different people, from a transgender crack dealerin brownsville, brooklyn,

to a scientist who spends a lot of timefeeding hallucinogens to mongooses to see if they like them -- it turns out they do, but onlyin very specific circumstances -- to the only country that's everdecriminalized all drugs, from cannabis to crack, portugal. and the thing i realizedthat really blew my mind is, almost everything we thinkwe know about addiction is wrong, and if we start to absorbthe new evidence about addiction, i think we're going to have to changea lot more than our drug policies.

but let's start with what we thinkwe know, what i thought i knew. let's think about this middle row here. imagine all of you, for 20 days now, wentoff and used heroin three times a day. some of you look a little moreenthusiastic than others at this prospect. (laughter) don't worry,it's just a thought experiment. imagine you did that, right? what would happen? now, we have a story about what wouldhappen that we've been told for a century.

we think, because there arechemical hooks in heroin, as you took it for a while, your body would becomedependent on those hooks, you'd start to physically need them, and at the end of those 20 days,you'd all be heroin addicts. right? that's what i thought. first thing that alerted me to the factthat something's not right with this story is when it was explained to me. if i step out of this ted talk todayand i get hit by a car and i break my hip,

i'll be taken to hospitaland i'll be given loads of diamorphine. diamorphine is heroin. it's actually much better herointhan you're going to buy on the streets, because the stuff you buyfrom a drug dealer is contaminated. actually, very little of it is heroin, whereas the stuff you getfrom the doctor is medically pure. and you'll be given it for quitea long period of time. there are loads of people in this room, you may not realize it,you've taken quite a lot of heroin.

and anyone who is watching thisanywhere in the world, this is happening. and if what we believeabout addiction is right -- those people are exposedto all those chemical hooks -- what should happen?they should become addicts. this has been studied really carefully. it doesn't happen; you will have noticedif your grandmother had a hip replacement, she didn't come out as a junkie.(laughter) and when i learned this,it seemed so weird to me, so contrary to everything i'd been told,everything i thought i knew,

i just thought it couldn't be right,until i met a man called bruce alexander. he's a professorof psychology in vancouver who carried out an incredible experiment i think really helps usto understand this issue. professor alexander explained to me, the idea of addiction we've allgot in our heads, that story, comes partly from a series of experiments that were done earlierin the 20th century. they're really simple.

you can do them tonight at homeif you feel a little sadistic. you get a rat and you put it in a cage,and you give it two water bottles: one is just water, and the other is waterlaced with either heroin or cocaine. if you do that, the rat will almost alwaysprefer the drug water and almost alwayskill itself quite quickly. so there you go, right?that's how we think it works. in the '70s, professor alexander comesalong and he looks at this experiment and he noticed something. he said ah, we're puttingthe rat in an empty cage.

it's got nothing to doexcept use these drugs. let's try something different. so professor alexander built a cagethat he called "rat park," which is basically heaven for rats. they've got loads of cheese,they've got loads of colored balls, they've got loads of tunnels. crucially, they've got loads of friends.they can have loads of sex. and they've got both the water bottles,the normal water and the drugged water. but here's the fascinating thing:

in rat park, they don'tlike the drug water. they almost never use it. none of them ever use it compulsively. none of them ever overdose. you go from almost 100 percent overdosewhen they're isolated to zero percent overdose when theyhave happy and connected lives. now, when he first saw this,professor alexander thought, maybe this is just a thing about rats,they're quite different to us. maybe not as different as we'd like,but, you know --

but fortunately, there wasa human experiment into the exact same principle happeningat the exact same time. it was called the vietnam war. in vietnam, 20 percent of all americantroops were using loads of heroin, and if you look at the newsreports from the time, they were really worried, becausethey thought, my god, we're going to have hundreds of thousands of junkieson the streets of the united states when the war ends; it made total sense. now, those soldiers who were usingloads of heroin were followed home.

the archives of general psychiatrydid a really detailed study, and what happened to them? it turns out they didn't go to rehab.they didn't go into withdrawal. ninety-five percent of them just stopped. now, if you believe the storyabout chemical hooks, that makes absolutely no sense,but professor alexander began to think there might be a differentstory about addiction. he said, what if addiction isn'tabout your chemical hooks? what if addiction is about your cage?

what if addiction is an adaptationto your environment? looking at this, there was another professorcalled peter cohen in the netherlands who said, maybe we shouldn'teven call it addiction. maybe we should call it bonding. human beings have a naturaland innate need to bond, and when we're happy and healthy,we'll bond and connect with each other, but if you can't do that, because you're traumatized or isolatedor beaten down by life,

you will bond with somethingthat will give you some sense of relief. now, that might be gambling,that might be pornography, that might be cocaine,that might be cannabis, but you will bond and connectwith something because that's our nature. that's what we want as human beings. and at first, i found this quitea difficult thing to get my head around, but one way that helped meto think about it is, i can see, i've got over by my seata bottle of water, right? i'm looking at lots of you, and lotsof you have bottles of water with you.

forget the drugs. forget the drug war. totally legally, all of those bottlesof water could be bottles of vodka, right? we could all be getting drunk --i might after this -- (laughter) -- but we're not. now, because you've been able to affordthe approximately gazillion pounds that it costs to get into a ted talk,i'm guessing you guys could afford to be drinking vodkafor the next six months. you wouldn't end up homeless. you're not going to do that,and the reason you're not going to do that

is not because anyone's stopping you. it's because you've gotbonds and connections that you want to be present for. you've got work you love.you've got people you love. you've got healthy relationships. and a core part of addiction, i came to think, and i believethe evidence suggests, is about not being able to bearto be present in your life. now, this has reallysignificant implications.

the most obvious implicationsare for the war on drugs. in arizona, i went outwith a group of women who were made to wear t-shirtssaying, "i was a drug addict," and go out on chain gangs and dig graveswhile members of the public jeer at them, and when those women get out of prison,they're going to have criminal records that mean they'll never workin the legal economy again. now, that's a very extreme example,obviously, in the case of the chain gang, but actually almosteverywhere in the world we treat addicts to some degree like that.

we punish them. we shame them.we give them criminal records. we put barriers between them reconnecting. there was a doctor in canada,dr. gabor matã©, an amazing man, who said to me, if you wanted to designa system that would make addiction worse, you would design that system. now, there's a place that decidedto do the exact opposite, and i went there to see how it worked. in the year 2000, portugal hadone of the worst drug problems in europe. one percent of the population was addictedto heroin, which is kind of mind-blowing,

and every year, they triedthe american way more and more. they punished people and stigmatized themand shamed them more, and every year, the problem got worse. and one day, the prime minister andthe leader of the opposition got together, and basically said, look, we can't go on with a country where we're havingever more people becoming heroin addicts. let's set up a panelof scientists and doctors to figure out what wouldgenuinely solve the problem. and they set up a panel led byan amazing man called dr. joã£o goulã£o,

to look at all this new evidence, and they came back and they said, "decriminalize all drugsfrom cannabis to crack, but" -- and this is the crucial next step -- "take all the money we used to spendon cutting addicts off, on disconnecting them, and spend it insteadon reconnecting them with society." and that's not really what we think ofas drug treatment in the united states and britain.

so they do do residential rehab, they do psychological therapy,that does have some value. but the biggest thing they didwas the complete opposite of what we do: a massive programof job creation for addicts, and microloans for addictsto set up small businesses. so say you used to be a mechanic. when you're ready, they'll goto a garage, and they'll say, if you employ this guy for a year,we'll pay half his wages. the goal was to make surethat every addict in portugal

had something to get outof bed for in the morning. and when i went and met the addictsin portugal, what they said is,as they rediscovered purpose, they rediscovered bondsand relationships with the wider society. it'll be 15 years this yearsince that experiment began, and the results are in: injecting drug use is down in portugal, according to the britishjournal of criminology, by 50 percent, five-zero percent.

overdose is massively down,hiv is massively down among addicts. addiction in every studyis significantly down. one of the ways you know it's workedso well is that almost nobody in portugal wants to go back to the old system. now, that's the political implications. i actually think there's a layerof implications to all this research below that. we live in a culture where peoplefeel really increasingly vulnerable to all sorts of addictions,whether it's to their smartphones

or to shopping or to eating. before these talks began --you guys know this -- we were told we weren't allowedto have our smartphones on, and i have to say, a lot of youlooked an awful lot like addicts who were told their dealerwas going to be unavailable for the next couple of hours. (laughter) a lot of us feel like that,and it might sound weird to say, i've been talking about how disconnectionis a major driver of addiction and weird to say it's growing,

because you think we're the most connectedsociety that's ever been, surely. but i increasingly began to thinkthat the connections we have or think we have, are like a kindof parody of human connection. if you have a crisis in your life,you'll notice something. it won't be your twitter followerswho come to sit with you. it won't be your facebook friendswho help you turn it round. it'll be your flesh and blood friendswho you have deep and nuanced and textured, face-to-facerelationships with, and there's a study i learned about frombill mckibben, the environmental writer,

that i think tells us a lot about this. it looked at the number of close friendsthe average american believes they can call on in a crisis. that number has been decliningsteadily since the 1950s. the amount of floor spacean individual has in their home has been steadily increasing, and i think that's like a metaphor for the choice we've made as a culture. we've traded floorspace for friends,we've traded stuff for connections,

and the result is we are one of theloneliest societies there has ever been. and bruce alexander, the guy who didthe rat park experiment, says, we talk all the time in addictionabout individual recovery, and it's right to talk about that, but we need to talk much moreabout social recovery. something's gone wrong with us,not just with individuals but as a group, and we've created a society where,for a lot of us, life looks a whole lot morelike that isolated cage and a whole lot less like rat park.

if i'm honest, this isn'twhy i went into it. i didn't go in to the discoverthe political stuff, the social stuff. i wanted to know how to helpthe people i love. and when i came back from thislong journey and i'd learned all this, i looked at the addicts in my life, and if you're really candid,it's hard loving an addict, and there's going to be lots of peoplewho know in this room. you are angry a lot of the time, and i think one of the reasonswhy this debate is so charged

is because it runs through the heartof each of us, right? everyone has a bit of themthat looks at an addict and thinks, i wish someone would just stop you. and the kind of scripts we're told for howto deal with the addicts in our lives is typified by, i think, the reality show "intervention,"if you guys have ever seen it. i think everything in our livesis defined by reality tv, but that's another ted talk. if you've ever seenthe show "intervention,"

it's a pretty simple premise. get an addict, all the peoplein their life, gather them together, confront them with what they're doing,and they say, if you don't shape up, we're going to cut you off. so what they do is they takethe connection to the addict, and they threaten it,they make it contingent on the addict behaving the way they want. and i began to think, i began to seewhy that approach doesn't work, and i began to think that's almost likethe importing of the logic of the drug war

into our private lives. so i was thinking,how could i be portuguese? and what i've tried to do now,and i can't tell you i do it consistently and i can't tell you it's easy, is to say to the addicts in my life that i want to deepenthe connection with them, to say to them, i love youwhether you're using or you're not. i love you, whatever state you're in, and if you need me,i'll come and sit with you

because i love you and i don'twant you to be alone or to feel alone. and i think the core of that message -- you're not alone, we love you -- has to be at every levelof how we respond to addicts, socially, politically and individually. for 100 years now, we've been singingwar songs about addicts. i think all along we should have beensinging love songs to them, because the opposite of addictionis not sobriety.

the opposite of addiction is connection. thank you. (applause)

florida drug rehab

florida drug rehab

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faith based drug rehabilitation

faith based drug rehabilitation

come on up scott scotty well, i don’t even know where to begin. my name’s scott abell, i’m from highlandindiana, i came here on june 6 for alcohol and numerous other substances, and just toget my lifestyle changed. i started young, in high school, um, all my friends were drinking,i grew up in, uh, environments that alcohol was a big form of entertainment and just becamepart of my everyday use. uh, the last few years, i started experimenting with otherdrugs, um, mixing some dangerous combinations from cocaine, pills, uh, i liked the partystyle so i liked to go out at— late at night

so i took whatever kept me up and just oneday, um, realized that i was tired of it, looking at myself in the mirror and saying“you wanna change” and trying to change numerous times on my own, i realized i neededto get some help. pam, thank you, this program’s amazing.it—it taught me how to be a person again, an honest person, it just hit right here fromthe start, so thank you. anger management helped a lot, i didn’trealize how i built up a lot of anger and dealing with that is gonna help me make betterdecisions in life. uh, for the tracks we do here, holistic really helped me reach outsideof my mental thinking to put my thoughts aside and think a little more about what’s important.connie, my counselor here was amazing. she

was— i was her first patient here, she was,um— and i’m also her first graduate, so um, but she really guided me through so manydifferent aspects in life that it— it made me open up to her like i’ve never openedup to anyone. the rest of the staff, um, you guys have allbeen awesome, i mean, just amazing. anytime i needed help, everyone was there for me. peers are amazing, i— i’m— i’m a prettystubborn person sometimes. i— i kept a pretty positive outlook the whole time i was here,but i spent my whole life worrying about what other people thought about me and what i wassaying, but i’ve learned now i don’t even have to think before i speak, it comes outand it’s the right thing, so, i leaned on

a lot of people and i think when i saw peoplethat needed some help i— you know, i helped pick them up, and just, that— that’s thekey part of this whole treatment, is— is your peers. the rest of the peers i’ve met here, youguys, man, what a journey, huh? it was fun, it was actually fun, i can’t believe it. i have no cravings at all, i mean, and haven’thad one— i’ve only been here forty days at the most and not one. i mean this changedmy life. it was my first treatment ever and it’s gonna be my last and i have no doubtabout it so i just— i’m gonna miss everything about this place. but i’ve— i’ve gota lot of angles i’m gonna go and just continuously

counseling, continue with aa/na meetings,support groups, uh, finding a sponsor, leaning on my friends that have been through recovery.just if you’re unsure about anything and you wanna fix your life for the better and—and do what it takes to get your lifestyle back to where you want it to be, this is theplace to come, i mean they’re— the success rate for this place is the third best in thecountry for a reason and the people here and the staff here are amazing. i— i couldn’timagine sitting in a hospital bed trying to just come off a drug, this— this place isgood even if you weren’t on drugs. i mean it— it made me a totally different person,i mean, i would— like i said, i would sugar coat everything and tell people lie afterlie to cover a lie after lie and i can’t

wait to be honest to someone and finally nothave to worry about what i say and this place just changed my whole life.

dual diagnosis treatment

dual diagnosis treatment

everything in our marriage was lost to alcohol.the lies, the money, the worrying; it was unbearable. it didn't matter what i tried,i couldn't stop using. rehab, medication, jail. my parents gave up on me.i had nothing left.i had to find another way. these are some of the stories we hear every day atmorningside recovery. there is hope. never give up. start your new life today. hope begins with a call to morningside recovery.1 855 99 recovery

dual diagnosis treatment centers

dual diagnosis treatment centers

struggling with an addiction? do you feel alone and don't know how to regaincontrol? around 23 million americans suffer from alcoholand drug addiction... ...but only about 700,000 of those seek treatmentfor their addiction. making the choice to enter treatment is amatter of life or death, freedom or captivity. which will you choose? whether you're addicted to drugs, alcohol,sex or an eating disorder, we can help. our qualified specialists can help get youinto the best treatment programs in the country... ...programs that offer medical detox, residentialrehab, intensive outpatient, and more.

you can live a sober life; take the firststep. make the call. lines are open 24/7: 1-855-970-2171 www.nationaladdictionrecovery.com

dual diagnosis rehab

dual diagnosis rehab

regaining control of your life is not impossible, and right path drug rehab denver wants to provide you with the help you deserve for a successful rehabilitation. let our network of providers find the right addiction treatment center for you so that you can improve your self esteem, interpersonal relationships, and vocational productivity after treatment. everyone’s addiction history, and severity varies, but one common contributing side effect is a loss of self control. patients lack structure and selfâ­control in their lives because of the dependency they have developed from their addiction. our network of providers will help you rehabilitate within one of our many sober living homes so that you can adopt the social norms, and interactions that are normally conducted within a household. living in a sober home will ease your transition into your life after recovery, as you will have learned to live normally once again by the time you are dismissed from our facility. our network of providers want to help you adjust to a structure again, which is why we provide a variety of opportunities to grow from such as professional preparation services. with these practices you are able to better prepare yourself after treatment so that you can regain a structure, and establish yourself. some examples of these services including resume building, and simulated interviews. self control isn’t always easy, but our network of providers at right path drug rehab denver will instill you with positive coping mechanisms so that you can replace you addictive tendencies with positive reinforcements. some of those reinforcements include yoga, meditation, and hiking which can all be easily done at home after treatment.structure and selfâ­control can be repossessed. our network of providers at right path drug rehab denver can help provide you with the motivation, and care you deserve so that you can regain self control of your life once more! call (888) 539â­6947 for your chance to regain control.

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

drug treatment

drug treatment

it was the most peaceful, joyous, incredible,life changing experience i've ever had in my life. there were scary parts, forebodingparts … i always knew there was beautiful and joy and peace on the other side of it.it was freeing, it was really freeing. this is alana. she’s describing what shefelt after she took a dose of this stuff — psilocybin. it’s a naturally occurring psychedelic compound,the kind you find in magic mushrooms. but she wasn’t tripping in a dorm room orat woodstock — it actually wasn’t recreational at all.if anything became unreal or i was feeling nervous or not in touch with reality, i wouldsqueeze his hand and he would squeeze mine back just to reassure me that i was okay andeverything was alright.

it was part of a controlled medical test tosee if psychedelics could be useful in helping people quit cigarettes. alana had been smokingfor 37 years before her session with psilocybin, and she hasn’t had a cigarette since. research on psychedelics for medical use ispreliminary. most studies suffer from really small sample sizes. that’s partly because thefederal government lists lsd and psilocybin as schedule 1 drugs. so researchers face extrared tape, and funding is really hard to come by. vox writer german lopez reviewed dozens ofstudies that have been done. he found that psychedelics show promise for treating addiction,ocd, anxiety, and in some cases, depression. one small study of 15 smokers found that 80percent were able to abstain from smoking

for six months after a psilocybin treatment.in a pilot study of 12 advanced cancer patients suffering from end-of-life anxiety, participantswho took psilocybin generally showed lower scores on a test of depression.and smaller study suggested psilocybin treatment could also help people with alcohol dependencecut back on their drinking days. we don’t have all the answers as to whatexactly these treatments are doing in the brain. but they seem to work by providinga meaningful, even mystical experience that leads to lasting changes in a patient's life. the issues that i talked about, or thought about, or went into during my experience were transformative in the sense that i got to look at them through a different lens.

i know this sounds weird, i feel like i have more connections in my brain that i couldn'taccess before that feeling that alana is describing is actuallypretty spot-on. when you take lsd your brain looks somethinglike this. you can actually see a higher degree of connectivitybetween various parts of the brain, it’s not limited to the visual cortex. this communication inside the brain helps explain visual hallucinations — and the researchers argue that it couldalso explain why psychedelics can help people

overcome serious mental issues.they wrote that you can think of psychiatric disorders as the brain being “entrenchedin pathology.” harmful patterns become automated and hard to change, and that’s what can makethings like anxiety, addiction and depression very hard to treat. that’s albert garcia-romeu, he’s a johns hopkins researcher who worked on studies ofof psilocybin and smoking addiction, like the one that alana's involved with. he says that when participants take psychedelics,

one of the big remaining questions here ishow long these benefits actually last after just the one-time treatment.a review of research on lsd-assisted psychotherapy and alcoholism found no statistically significantbenefits after 12 months. and a recent study on psilocybin and depressionfound that benefits significantly dropped off after three months. and of course are some big risks to usingpsychedelic drugs. it’s hard to predict a patient’s reactionand some might actually endanger themselves. those predisposed to psychotic conditionsare especially at risk for having a traumatic experience while on the drug.it’s difficult to draw solid conclusions

from the existing studies.but there’s more than enough promise here to merit further research and further fundingfor that research. as matthew johnson of johns hopkins said,"these are among the most debilitating and costly disorders known to humankind.” forsome people, no existing treatments help. but psychedelics might. one thing you might still be wondering is why so much of this research is so new, when we've known when we've known about psychedelics for thousands of years. well since these drugs are so old, they can't be patented, which means that pharmaceutical companies don't really have any incentive to fund any research into them.

so that really leaves it up to governments and private contributors to fund all these studies. and there actually was a lot of research done into these drugs in the 50s and 60s, but there was a big enough backlash to the abuse of psychedelics in that period, especially around events like woodstock, that funding really dried up, and research stopped. and that's why it's only now that we see this research happening, with private, not government contributions.