The aim of Therapy247.com is to help people with afflictions to conquer self defeating behaviour. We need some form of order or path to follow such as following "the A's", following a "Just for Today" guide or sharing your story. Keywords and affirmations are good ways of centering our behaviour and thinking. Let us know how you are doing via a daily blog or by joining a Therapy 247 Club and sharing with us your triumphs and your set backs. Remember, we know how you feel! Share what you have done TODAY to attack your problem with other Therapy 247 members. Sharing your experiences can help so many people including yourself! Find out how it works or take a look at our Recovery Tools.
- Addiction
- Alcoholism
- Anger
- Apathy
- Anxiety
- Been Dumped?
- Body Image Issues
- Boredom
- Breaking Up
- Bullying
- Confusion
- Debt and Overspending
- Depression
- Disappointment
- Doubt
- Eating Disorders
- Envy
- Embarrassment
- Grief
- Intimacy Fear
- Jilted
- OCD - Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
- Panic Attacks
- PTSD - Post Traumatic Disorder
- Physical Pain
- Loneliness
- Moodiness
- Nervous Breakdown
- Pre-Menstrual Syndrome
- Self Esteem
- Self Harming
- Sex Drive - Women
- Summer Depression
- Therapy Glossary
Here are the five elements to effective addiction treatment and successful recovery:
1. Tapping values. Traditional treatment involves cajoling, convincing, or coercing people to quit the addiction - often by dictating to them what their values should be. Successful treatment - like motivational therapy - instead encourages people to discover personal values that will anchor them against the pull of the addiction. Sometimes these countervailing values are quite evident in people. Sometimes deep exploration is required to find and resurface them. When addicts in Moments of Clarity see their true selves in visions or in coffee cups, it simply means they've made contact with their own value structures. Reconnecting to their core values makes it much more likely that people will maintain their recovery.
2. Savoring rewards. To get through the immediate recovery period the person has to appreciate the benefits sobriety brings - better health, more productivity, gratitude of family and friends. People must refocus to see the deep background to their lives rather than the immediate stimulus of the addiction. Successful treatment and recovery involve learning how to focus on these rewards and to savor them.
3. Enhancing resources. People already have resources in their lives - families, skills, experiences - like the ones James Frey relied on to create a new identity as a writer after his treatment. Some people have more resources than others for this task - good educations or job skills, strong families, rich experiences in dealing with the world - resources they often seem bent on ignoring or even destroying. Others need to develop essential skills - through further education, skills training (e.g. communication skills), family therapy, etc. - to add to the solid life foundation they will need.
4. Finding meaning. People need to be motivated to proceed with their lives. This requires something more than just getting to the end of each day. It means uncovering deeper purposes in life - spiritual or altruistic or artistic or professional or family goals. Investing life with greater meaning allows people to shrug off the momentary discomforts or challenges that otherwise could drive them back to addiction.
5. Touching base. People need to recall the rewards from - and their motivations for - achieving sobriety. Research finds that it is often not the kind of therapy that matters as much as continuing contact with the client. Thus, successful treatment touches base regularly with graduates - even if only briefly and at intervals - to rekindle the spirit, the methods, and the goals of recovery.
These five key elements in successful therapy and recovery all contribute to a fulfilling, self-sustaining life. Indeed, recovery isn't about successful therapy, or kicking a habit, or belonging to a support group. It's about getting a life.
Causes: People may initially use alcohol, cigarettes or drugs (both illegal and prescription drugs) to help them cope with emotional problems. People with low self-esteem or anxiety disorders often use drugs or alcohol to feel more confident. Peer-pressure, boredom, escapism and relaxation are other reasons why you may become dependent. Using a substance regularly can cause a change in brain chemistry, so withdrawal symptoms -as well as a compulsive need for the substance- may occur when you try to stop. You might feel as though you cannot cope, go to work, meet friends or even get through the day without the substance.
Effects: As well as the physical side-effects of addiction, abuse of drugs and alcohol can cause many emotional disorders and mental health problems.
Addiction to alcohol increases your risk of epilepsy, certain cancers, pancreatitis and cirrhosis of the liver.
Nicotine raises blood pressure, increases the risk of heart disease, strokes and certain cancers and causes respiratory disease.
Solutions: Tackle the underlying problems that made you turn to drugs and alcohol in the first place.
Regain power; remind yourself that you are in control.
Involve your family in the recovery process and use their support.
Withdrawal from alcohol and opioids may need rehabilitation in a detoxification unit.
Write down the reasons why you want to give up.
Take up new habits like sport, reading or music.
Anxiety | Cancer | Self help groups (Would you like to set up your own self help group?) | Depression | Bipolar Disorder | PTSD Post Traumatic Stress disorder | Agoraphobia | OCD Obsessive Compulsive Disorder | Low self esteem | No self confidence | Inferiority Complex | Been Dumped, Broken Relationship | ADD Attention Deficit Disorder (ADHD) | Confidence building | Anger management
Anxiety management | Pain management
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