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Bluelighter
so i got this book to learn some things about addiction. this book is opposed to 12-step recovery movements and their belief that addiction is a disease, that you have no control, that you must rely on a Higher Power to stop your addiction, that you must make attend for the rest of your life and the rest of it. bear in mind that i am based in the UK and 12-step treatment isn't as widespread as in the USA.
i found this book very good, as it confirmed some things that i had thought about addiction and drug use already. it puts all the responsibility for addiction - and recovery - on the user, no enabling or codependent BS. the author, jack trimpey, uses what he calls the structural model of addiction, which is the idea that addiction is created in the midbrain, by what he calls your "beast" which mistakenly values your DOC as essential as food or oxygen. to quit, you make a "big plan" which is basically "i will never use again" then apply the "addictive voice recognition technique" - AVRT - which is recognising the voice of your beast, the addictive voice (any thought or feeling that supports using), and separating it for yourself (e.g. if you think "i really want some coke" you rephrase it "it really wants some coke")
the author (a former alcoholic) asserts that the only reason addicted people use drugs is for pleasure. i think this is true. i would try to explain it but it is covered at some length in the book and i don't think i would make a good job of it, but i think that when all the BS justifications are stripped away that is what it boils down to.
i really recommend the book - Rational Recovery - The New Cure for Substance Addiction - there is a new version out called The Art of AVRT but i'm not sure if it's available in the UK. he also has a version specifically aimed at those who have been through 12-step type programs and found them unhelpful, called The Small Book. the new book applies the concept to sex and cigarettes and has updated info about families etc whereas the old one was just alcohol, drugs and gambling. i'm applying the concepts to quit smoking right now, and will do for heroin if i decide to quit.
the website for Rational Recovery is www.rational.org and here is AVRT in a nutshell
has anyone else read the book(s) or familiar with the concept of AVRT? what do you think?
i found this book very good, as it confirmed some things that i had thought about addiction and drug use already. it puts all the responsibility for addiction - and recovery - on the user, no enabling or codependent BS. the author, jack trimpey, uses what he calls the structural model of addiction, which is the idea that addiction is created in the midbrain, by what he calls your "beast" which mistakenly values your DOC as essential as food or oxygen. to quit, you make a "big plan" which is basically "i will never use again" then apply the "addictive voice recognition technique" - AVRT - which is recognising the voice of your beast, the addictive voice (any thought or feeling that supports using), and separating it for yourself (e.g. if you think "i really want some coke" you rephrase it "it really wants some coke")
the author (a former alcoholic) asserts that the only reason addicted people use drugs is for pleasure. i think this is true. i would try to explain it but it is covered at some length in the book and i don't think i would make a good job of it, but i think that when all the BS justifications are stripped away that is what it boils down to.
i really recommend the book - Rational Recovery - The New Cure for Substance Addiction - there is a new version out called The Art of AVRT but i'm not sure if it's available in the UK. he also has a version specifically aimed at those who have been through 12-step type programs and found them unhelpful, called The Small Book. the new book applies the concept to sex and cigarettes and has updated info about families etc whereas the old one was just alcohol, drugs and gambling. i'm applying the concepts to quit smoking right now, and will do for heroin if i decide to quit.
the website for Rational Recovery is www.rational.org and here is AVRT in a nutshell
has anyone else read the book(s) or familiar with the concept of AVRT? what do you think?
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