THECATINTHEHAT
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2005
- Messages
- 8,186
Yeah I agree with that will power thing, the aim is to change your environment/relationships/thinking so that will power is no longer required most of the time imo.
So I quit doing meth for good October 4th 2021. I did it all by myself and my friend who’s also sober keeps telling me I can’t do it by myself and I will break down and use. Can it be done on your own? Anyone with long term sobriety or knows someone with it, who did it on their own? I’m just extremely socially anxious so being around people is a no for me
Would love to see the studies that suggest that if you have linksWell, AA/NA actually has an even lower success rate than people quitting on their own...
Would love to see the studies that suggest that if you have links
Nice one, it was a genuine comment rather than a facetious oneI don't, but I'll look them up![]()
Nice one, it was a genuine comment rather than a facetious one![]()
IMO/ECan it be done on your own?
IMO/E
Yes
I have given up many drugs on my own (though usually there were incentives like family doing without while I use). Some I just "outgrew". Some I stopped because it/they were doing more harm to my surroundings than my addled perceptions otherwise.
But simply put we can do as we wish and have the ability to do so... whatever this may be. We just have to do it and dedicate to whatever changes we may want to make.
Congrats on your success.
This may not apply to all but see no reason it couldnt.
Best wishes
Would love to see the studies that suggest that if you have links
You'd be surprised on who ( and who isn't ) qualified to give advice on this thread and all other Mental health and recovery threads.Yep I agree sounds like someone who shouldn't be giving advice on this topic
wtf?thought you were using that as a synonym for relapse.
Great to read but always should include valid & peer reviewed links, for sources ( valid, empirical resources only tell their rational - even then, not necessarily right for everyone but for those of us who trust in diligence it's only fair to our fellow peeps to aim toward the least, bias approach.)The Effectiveness of the Twelve-Step Treatment
web.archive.org
This very well researched resource includes various studies supporting the point that NA/AA do indeed have lower success rates than spontaneous remission.
Also regarding your last comment, I think in response to me (though I could be mistaken)
'I think most people know that relapse is common but that’s useful I guess.'
I didn't suggest that. I suggested spontaneous remission is common.
This is interesting, can you cite a source for this? I would be curious to read more about itYou may be surprised to hear that statistically speaking, the vast majority of anyone who ever got over an addiction problem did it on their own.
Great to read but always should include valid & peer reviewed links, for sources ( valid, empirical resources only tell their rational - even then, not necessarily right for everyone but for those of us who trust in diligence it's only fair to our fellow peeps to aim toward the least, bias approach.)
As an aside, though the reading makes sense from my experience, personally - met many on BL & IRL who have benefited/maintained a QoL through, AA/NA, so, although, stats may not value them (I have grievances, also, through experience)- i wouldn't rule them out for anyone, desperately in need of help/support. These are not solutions to addiction, nor, should they not be criticised but they shouldn't be ruled-out, either imho. Perhaps, a healthy criticism of social groups/systems & personal actions should be involved in
searching to deal with addiction. Insight is imperative.
What is "spontaneous remission", though?