downfallin
Bluelighter
By prescribing to an ideology formed in 1935 that is spiritually based and discourages progress, we are ensuring that we will never be more successful than we are now. And something is obviously not working. The solution is not to double down and get more people into our current recovery system, but to fix the system itself.
Just imagine for a second what would happen if a doctor prescribed a spiritual remedy for something truly accepted as a disease by the medical community such as diabetes. That doctor would be laughed out of the room and possibly lose their license to practice, because then the patient might feel that they didn’t need insulin and possibly die.
Why then, if we are supposedly taking this opiate epidemic/ general addiction problem seriously is it medically and legally accepted to prescribe a spiritual program for it that claims it is the only way and discourages scientific challenges to its beliefs?
I don’t believe NA and AA are bad, my main problem apart from the spirituality aspect is their adversion to change and progress. There are many aspects that they got correct such as the strong community and much of the structure is very helpful. But they will never progress past what they are today or admit things they got wrong and embrace change. They have many harmful ideologies that are preached that are contrary to what science suggests are benificial practices. One of these ideologies is the strict adherence to complete abstinence. Science has shown that for many, having at least a period of maintenance is the much better option.
We need to put effort into scientifically researching recovery and having a model that embraces change as we learn more about the human mind. That model needs to be the GO TO program. The SMART model is the closest thing I’ve seen to this but it just isn’t endorsed like NA or AA.
I think that AA and NA still have their place, just as alternative medicine and religion have their places, but I think to have real progress in this area we need to start endorsing programs that are science based and are open to change. To do this, we also need to dethrone AA and NA from their elevated status as the GO TO methods for judges sentencing and doctors prescribing.
Just imagine for a second what would happen if a doctor prescribed a spiritual remedy for something truly accepted as a disease by the medical community such as diabetes. That doctor would be laughed out of the room and possibly lose their license to practice, because then the patient might feel that they didn’t need insulin and possibly die.
Why then, if we are supposedly taking this opiate epidemic/ general addiction problem seriously is it medically and legally accepted to prescribe a spiritual program for it that claims it is the only way and discourages scientific challenges to its beliefs?
I don’t believe NA and AA are bad, my main problem apart from the spirituality aspect is their adversion to change and progress. There are many aspects that they got correct such as the strong community and much of the structure is very helpful. But they will never progress past what they are today or admit things they got wrong and embrace change. They have many harmful ideologies that are preached that are contrary to what science suggests are benificial practices. One of these ideologies is the strict adherence to complete abstinence. Science has shown that for many, having at least a period of maintenance is the much better option.
We need to put effort into scientifically researching recovery and having a model that embraces change as we learn more about the human mind. That model needs to be the GO TO program. The SMART model is the closest thing I’ve seen to this but it just isn’t endorsed like NA or AA.
I think that AA and NA still have their place, just as alternative medicine and religion have their places, but I think to have real progress in this area we need to start endorsing programs that are science based and are open to change. To do this, we also need to dethrone AA and NA from their elevated status as the GO TO methods for judges sentencing and doctors prescribing.
Last edited: