Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Stick to sharing your experience!!



I recently talked to a guy had lost faith in Alcoholics Anonymous. He shared with me that prior to AA he was drinking a minimum of 26 ounces of booze a day. After joining AA and working the Steps he had over two years of continuous sobriety. Quite an accomplishment!!! He told me his life was so much better because of sobriety and AA. I can totally relate because I drank a 26er of rye a day for a few years prior to sobering up in Alcoholics Anonymous.
Where is this gentleman today? He’s drinking and his quality of life has gone way downhill. So what happened? The gentleman suffers from several mental health issues and is under the care of a doctor who prescribes medication, including benzodiazepines. His “sponsor” told him that he wasn’t sober because of the medications and that all he needed was the 12 Steps. So he stopped going to AA.
I’m not a big fan of benzos; I abused them myself, and consider them highly addictive. However, unlike me, this guy did not abuse them. He followed them as per his doctor’s instructions. His sponsor (and I’ve run into many people like him) made him feel unwelcome in the rooms and so he left. His life is far much worse. I’m not blaming his sponsor for the guy’s relapse but one has to wonder if that guy would have stayed in AA, where he was doing well, if his sponsor wasn’t playing doctor and judge.

I’ve had a sponsee taking benzos, and while I shared my experience of abusing them and the highly addictive nature of the drug, I did not tell him he wasn’t sober and was lying to himself and the Fellowship. His life was much better than it had been prior to joining AA. I’m not a doctor and don’t offer medical advice. This type of thing really irks me. It’s like when an AA member tells a newcomer they are not welcome because they use outside issues when they drink. I’ve run into many people who were turned off the Fellowship by these types of nonsense statements. When it comes down to it I’m the one who decides if my sobriety is compatible to the type of spiritual life I am trying to lead. My sponsor is a guide not a judge.
Dave the Dude 

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Reunion, remember when and informing people


I just had a reunion with two guys I roomed with for a year in 1992 when I attended university. It was a great reunion with lots of stories and Remember Whens. It was at university where I laid the foundation for my drinking/using career. Some of the stories we were telling I didn’t even remember doing. Like mouthing off to a skinhead in a pub and getting decked by him. I do remember we used to do some crazy stuff. Part of my addiction was that I always thought I had to do crazier and crazier things. At university my roomies hung me off a 40 story balcony and swung me around. There was the time where I purposely set my hand on fire, thinking it would go out quickly which it did not.
My friends know about my entry into recovery and involvement in the 12 Steps. They had some interesting questions which reminds of me of how little those not in recovery know about the disease of addiction. My one friend asked me if I could ever see myself having one beer and when I replied no asked me why. I explained that I couldn’t predict what would happen if I had that one beer. I said it would probably lead to me having another and another and another and eventually I’d be worse off than I was when I entered recovery in 2005.
As the Big Books states alcohol is cunning, baffling and powerful. Part of that is the fact that while I’ve been sober for over 12 years if I were to take a drink it would be like I had been drinking for those 12 years. My disease would be that far advanced. Science is unable to explain this phenomenon. As Father Martin said, “only God knows why and he ain’t telling us”. I think that’s why many in the scientific community, some addictions counsellors and therapists as well, have such disdain for the 12 Step philosophy. You can’t quantify the effect of a spiritual awakening. All I know is that it worked for me.

Dave the Dude

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Acceptance will come with education

Deaths due to opiate overdoses are on the rise in the GTA. As a result the race is on to find a solution. Unfortunately with addiction there is no easy solution. Toronto is building three safe injection sites to try to cut down on overdose deaths. Like most harm reduction interventions many people are criticizing this move saying that it’s enabling addicts and/or helping organized crime.
When I first entered into recovery, from my addictions, I was dead set against any type of harm reduction. I held firm with the belief that it was enabling the addict. From personal experience harm reduction didn’t work for me. Over a decade later after my experience working with addicts my mind has opened to some harm reduction. I’m still of the mind that methadone is terrible but am open to safe needle exchanges and injection sites. Harm reduction works in two ways. It cuts down on the harm the addict faces but it also cuts down on the harm the public faces. With safe needle exchange and injection sites less needles will be discarded along the sidewalks, playgrounds and beaches of our communities.
A lot of the public back lash against safe injection sites comes from a lack of education. I think Toronto would be wise to launch a public information campaign of what these safe sites look like. Even after working in the field for over 10 years I had no idea what one of these sites looked like until a colleague explained it to me. In my mind I had this image of a blocked off area with addicts wandering around stoned throwing needles on the ground. For those fans of New Jack City I imagined it much like the public housing crack areas featured in that movie. My colleague explained to me that it’s very sterile and much like a medical office. I think if the public were able to see this they might warm up to the idea of safe injection sites. Inform the public how there are counsellors and nurses on site to talk to addicts about addiction and promote recovery.
Einstein said the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting a different result. This is what the majority of nations, Canada included, have been doing for decades. We need new, best practices, approach. Safe injection sites are part of this new way to tackle addiction. We must look at it as public health matter not a criminal one. If we really wanted to make changes we would follow in the footsteps of Portugal which has decriminalized all drugs and cut its number of addicts in half as well as lowering the crime rate.

Dave the Dude

Thursday, June 22, 2017

My Crazy


One of the reasons I started drinking, which later led to a ton of other types of self-medication, was to lower my anxiety. I’ve always had anxiety issues, even before I knew what anxiety was. One of the things that used to cause me great anxiety was whenever I heard people walking on the floor above me I would get fearful that the floor would collapse and crush me. When I was around 16 I noticed that if I had a few beers this fear would go away. Thus alcohol (AKA: self-medication) became the solution to lowering my anxiety. As years went by my anxiety over certain things would only increase. Here are a few examples of what I like to term “my crazy” (yes, I know that’s not politically correct but I’m talking about myself).
I had to stop chewing gum in my early 20s. For some reason I got it into my head that the repetitive chewing would set something off in my brain that would make it so that I couldn’t stop chewing ever. This would cause my anxiety levels to hit the roof.
When mowing my lawn I would go as quick as possible around large trees as I would begin to fear that a limb would fall off the tree, hit me and either crush or maim me. Hey, it actually happens several times a year. I would also go into a panic if a plane flew over me while I was outside because I thought that it might accidentally drop the blue stuff in the plane’s toilet – which would, of course, fall down and crush me.
When I got into my mid-20s I started having huge panic attacks whenever I sat in the barber chair and he began to cut my hair. I’m still not sure what caused this but I would sit there and tense every muscle in my body until the haircut was done. Who knows what was going through the barber’s head during this time. Flickering fluorescent lights could also cause an attack to come on. One time I was in a store waiting in line for the cash. The flickering light triggered an attack , I dropped the stuff I wanted to purchase and fled the store.
When I was around 25 I was walking home from my favourite hometown pub. I had been a regular there since I was of legal drinking age. There was a shortcut through the woods, across a wooden bridge, that I would always take. As I was crossing the bridge these two guys emerged from the woods and the bigger of the two ran up to me. I asked him how it was going and he rose up his arm saying, “this is how it’s going”, and punched me in the head. I fell down and he proceeded to lay the boots to me. I possummed up until he was done. Afterwards I was in a daze and ended up running in the wrong direction (opposite to where I lived). Following that shit-kicking my anxiety rose extremely high.
I continued to deal with my anxiety, from all the things I have mentioned, by drinking and using other substances. Day by day the anxiety worsened until I was in constant state of panic and my hands would continuously shake. I eventually went to doctor who put me on an antidepressant which I’m still on.
The medication helped but I would still have panic attacks on a regular basis. The daily drinking and constant stimulant use didn’t help matters. I would eventually sober up, and even quit smoking, which greatly lessoned the amount of anxiety in my life. One of the biggest encounters that helped me deal with my anxiety was a conversation I had with a doctor. The company I worked for was offering to pay for smoking cessation products but I had to get approved by the doctor. We started talking about my anxiety and he asked me how I dealt with it. I explained that when I started having a panic attack I would say to myself, over and over, that the anxiety was I feeling was based on irrational fears and nothing was going to happen. The doctor told me that was the worst thing I could do. What I was inadvertently doing was focusing more and more on my irrational fears causing the anxiety to become worse. What I should be doing, he explained, was taking my mind off the thought causing the panic and proceed to doing deep breathing exercises. This helped immensely. Since then I’ve picked up other tips to help me through these trying periods. I learned to pay attention to my body and what it felt like leading up to a panic attack. I can now detect when the beginnings of anxiety occur and start to get rid of it before it turns into a full-blown panic attack. My life has improved greatly by this growth. I still have my challenges. Recently I was involved in a bad car crash where I was rear-ended by a vehicle as I was at a complete stop. I saw the car coming at me seconds before impact. This has caused some new challenges in my battle with anxiety as I commute to work every day. If I didn’t have to look in my rearview mirror it wouldn’t be so bad but that’s not going to happen.

As a result of my experience with anxiety, depression and addiction I have the unique opportunity to help others in similar positions. For that I am grateful.
Dave the Dude 

Monday, June 5, 2017

Happiness doesn't sell

I watch a lot of TV and films and there seem to be a lot more that have at least one character who is battling an addiction and/or in recovery. I often find myself cringing at the depiction of 12 Step meetings in the entertainment I watch.
Most recently I’ve been watching a TV show, from a few years ago, called The Killing. One of the main characters is in recovery and attends 12 Step meetings. When the show has a scene in a meeting it depicts everyone there as being miserable. The show Flaked is similar too. It has many of the people at the meeting looking sick, sad and sorry and when someone is sharing it’s always a recounting of the misery they caused and how sorry they are. Don’t get me wrong we have to make accept and make amends for our past but there’s so much more to recovery than that.
What attracted me at the very first Alcoholics Anonymous meeting I attended was that the majority of people of at that meeting were laughing, smiling and sharing positive things as we went around the table. If everyone there had been miserable I’m pretty sure I would not have stuck around. The members at that meeting, and the thousands of meetings I’ve attended since, had something that I wanted – happiness, joyfulness and freedom. That’s what actually happens at 12 Step meetings.
Sure when a newcomer arrives they are in a sick, sad and sorry state – just as I was. That’s how we know that person is new and once we become aware of this that person becomes the most important person in that room. When I left my first meeting all the people who shared surrounded me in the parking lot, welcomed me and told me about other meetings to attend. One of the traditions of 12 Steps is attraction rather than promotion. We don’t go out and proselytize but rather act as examples of what the 12 Step program can do so that when someone is ready to give up the high cost of low living they know where to go.
In past blogs I’ve stated how much I like the television show Mom. It’s about a group of women in Alcoholics Anonymous. I’ve been criticized by people in the program who point out the show is not a good depiction of the program. I beg to differ. Even though they are not openly talking about the Steps they are, at least, depicting the people in the program as changing in a positive way. The meetings don’t portray a group of miserable people but, rather, happy people dealing with life on life’s terms. It doesn’t shy away from characters having bad moments but neither does it have those bad moments the main theme of the show. It even showed the life and death danger of addiction when one storyline had a character die of an overdose.
I’d rather see a watered down version with people being happy in their recovery than one with all members being miserable. Maybe someone struggling will see a show depicting alcoholics/addicts struggling, but happy, in their recovery and that person will decide to come to a meeting. As I’ve heard over and over – it doesn’t matter how you came to the program it just matters what you do once you arrive. But alas, I guess happiness isn’t good entertainment.

Dave the Dude

Monday, April 24, 2017

If BIll W. did it then so can you!!

Every so often I return to a subject that I am passionate about – educating the public on the disease of addiction to get rid of the stigma its sufferers face. Recently in a recovery Facebook group I read a lot of negativity aimed towards people who do testimonials for treatment centres that helped them in their recovery. There was lots of ignorance surrounding the topic. This ignorance stems from a total misunderstanding of 12 Step fellowships’ tradition of anonymity.
Many people seem to think if you do a testimonial for a treatment centre then you are breaking your anonymity. We are allowed to tell people we are in recovery. Nowhere in the 12 Traditions of Alcoholics Anonymous (or other Fellowships) does it say you are not allowed to tell people you are in recovery. The tradition states you are to remain anonymous on the level of press, radio, film and Internet regarding your membership in a specific fellowship. I can go online right now (as I often do) and tell whomever I want that I have, “recovered from a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body” (Alcoholics Anonymous, 1939) without breaking any tradition of anonymity. Anonymity does not mean secrecy. If we keep the fact that there is a solution to addiction secret then those in need of help will remain ill.
Alcoholics Anonymous co-founder Bill Wilson went public on July 24, 1969 about his recovery when he testified in front of a Congressional subcommittee  on the impact of alcoholism. This testimony occurred 19 years after AA adopted the 12 Traditions. Bill began his testimony by saying:

Mr. Chairman, Senators, we of AA, it is already apparent; we are going to have reason for great gratitude on account of your invitation to put in an appearance here. For me this is an extremely moving and significant occasion. It may well mark the advent of the new era in this old business of alcoholism.
I think that the activities of this committee and what they may lead to may be a turning point historically. This is splashdown day for Apollo 1. The impossible is happening. Like my dear friend Marty [Marty Mann], who has just spoken to you, I share with her the opinion that in this field of alcoholism we are now seeing the beginning of the achievement of the impossible.
Because of my appearance here as an AA member, I have to limit myself pretty much to statements about AA. But you must remember that as time passes in these hearings a great many AA's will be testifying as citizens, and they will be far more free to express opinions on the general field and their activities in it than I am.
So I take it that my mission here today will be to acquaint you with the resources that AA may reveal for treatment, for education and so on.

Bill makes mention of Marty Mann (the first woman of AA and outreach person) as well as other AA’s who spoke in the public arena. Bill, et al knew that the tradition of anonymity is one of spirituality and not meant to stop the message of hope from being spread. If the 12 Step Movement’s co-founder did not have an aversion to talking about his own recovery then I don’t see how anyone else can find fault when others do it as well.
Some 12 Steppers also seem to hold a real antipathy towards treatment centres. I can’t count the times I’ve heard someone share in a meeting something negative regarding going to treatment. This negativity is often spread by those who have no experience going to treatment thus they are offering their opinion - going against our policy of experience, strength and hope. I’m not saying all treatment centres are good (see previous blogs) but one can’t lump them all together. I went to three centres and the final one helped solidify my 12 Step foundation. It helped me a great deal and I am proud to say I went there. As I’ve heard, and said many times, it doesn’t matter how you get to the 12 Step rooms but, rather, that you are here now.
When someone recovers from cancer they are not ashamed and are encouraged to share their message of hope. Yet many 12 Steppers shame those in recovery who try to spread their message of hope. Rather than shame these people should be applauded. Every year there are Recovery Day celebrations in Canada and the United States. While many of these celebrations in the U.S. are attended by thousands the one held in Canada’s largest city, Toronto, is barely attended at all. In fact, from what I saw in the summer of 2016 there were less than a couple hundred (if that) there. I know that this lack of attendance is garnered by the misunderstanding 12 Steppers have in the Greater Toronto Area of anonymity. Alcoholics Anonymous won’t even put a booth up at Toronto’s Recovery Day to hand out information. I wonder what Bill Wilson would think of that?  With such low numbers turning out to celebrate recovery is it little wonder the government spends very little money on addiction programs such as residential treatment centres? If the people who should care don’t then why should others care? If large numbers did turn up, advocating for those who suffer from addiction, the government would take notice. The reason: they want your vote.

Dave the Dude

Friday, March 31, 2017

It's the Little Things

I’m an avid talk radio listener and this past week one of the show hosts was opining over the growing trend of people always being late. As a recovered alcoholic/addict I feel it is part of my recovery to always (barring something beyond my control) be on time. When I tell someone I’m going to meet them at a certain time that is a commitment I have made. To be late is breaking that commitment. I broke enough commitments when I was active in my addiction and I have no desire to return to that way of life.
Many will read this and say it’s no big deal – that it’s just a little thing and will not affect one’s recovery either way. I beg to differ. I firmly believe that there is no little things when it comes to the 12 Steps’ design for living. I must practice the 12 Step principles in all my affairs. This includes being on time.
It also includes making my bed in the morning. Some would ask “why make your bed if you’re going to mess it up again at night? No one is going to see it”. I make my bed because I respect myself and I deserve to retire at night in a neatly made bed. For me, and I only speak for myself, it feels better going to sleep in a made up bed than a messy one. I also try to keep myself neat in appearance. Not that I don’t lounge around in track pants on my days off work, but when I’m out and about I wear clean regular pants and shirts. Now, I’m not walking around in a suit and tie all day. I wear T-shirts and jeans for the most part but they’re not the clothes I slept in. I suit up and show up as the old timers taught me.
I do my best not to swear up a storm. When I was active in my addiction I swore a lot. As a person in recovery I’m trying to lead a different type of life and therefore speak in a civil manner. I’m not perfect as the Big Book tells us, “it’s progress rather than perfection” and I swear here and there (especially when I’m driving) but I swear much less than I used to.
Other little things that I do are: let other drivers in when they signal to change lanes; return money if I’m given too much change; be polite to those I encounter be they friend, family, stranger or foe; respect my elders; respect myself; don’t take things personally (and the three other Agreements via don Miguel Ruiz); don’t let dishes pile up in my sink; etc.
The way I was living when active in my addiction didn’t happen all at once. The toxicity of that life snuck up on me one little thing at a time until the unlivable became livable, the noxious lifestyle became the norm. If I let the little things slip then eventually I may let my sobriety slip (SLIP: Sobriety Loses Its Priority) and I’ll return to a life of degradation.


Dave the Dude

Friday, March 24, 2017

How My Higher Power Expanded

When I came into Alcoholics Anonymous I was wary of the whole Higher Power thing. I’d spent a great deal of my drunken time (and some of my sober time) mocking and criticizing those who believed in God. I remember being at an open discussion meeting talking about Step Two. I was sharing how I couldn’t get past this whole God thing. One of the people at the meeting came up to me afterwards and said something I’ll never forget, “it’s came to believe, not believe right away”. Those words allowed me to realize I just had to be willing to open my mind to the fact that there might be some sort of Higher Power out there. I soon realized that alcohol and the other substances I had been using were man made yet they had become my Master – my Higher Power, if you will. If something so insignificant could cause me to give it all my money, be put above family, friends and work than there had to be something greater than that and therefore greater than myself.
My first Higher Power was Alcoholics Anonymous as a whole. Not any individual person as we are all human and fallible. However, the Fellowship was made up of a group of positive people giving off positive energy which I could grasp on to. They wanted nothing from me but for me to get well. As I went through my Steps and started to concentrate on my Step 11 my higher power expanded into what Carl Jung (friend of AA) called the Collective Unconscious. I feel that we, humans, animals, plants, etc., are all connected in the universe. There is even scientific evidence of this. I also expanded my conscious contact with my Higher Power by getting into Toltec Spirituality by reading The Four Agreements by don Miguel Ruiz and then several other books he and his son, of the same name, have written.
Just before I celebrated five years of sobriety my father passed away. I had been living with him for a couple years prior to recovery and then the whole time, once I joined AA. I respected my father, Mort, immensely. He was a man of integrity. Following the death of my dad whenever I came to a fork in the road, where I was unsure of the right thing to do, I would ask myself, “what would Mort do (WWMD)?” This helped me to pause and make, what I felt, was the right decision in trying to practice the principles of AA in all my affairs. I began asking what WWMD more often and often. So much so that I feel that the spirit of my father has become an integral part of my ever changing Higher Power and my conscious contact with it.

Dave the Dude

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Karma - what comes around goes around!

Since I got sober I’ve been pretty good at maintaining my serenity with a few exceptions. The biggest exception is when I’m driving. I still lose my patience and get irritated while driving. Be it a slow driver in the fast lane, people who don’t signal or general commuter chaos I try my best to stay calm but don’t always pull it off. I know it is progress rather than perfection but my progress in this area has been very slow. When the frustration takes ahold of me what usually happens is I start shouting and swearing. My window isn’t open or anything, I’m just shouting and swearing to myself but I lose it!

I was commuting home the other day when traffic came to a chaotic standstill. A police vehicle was blocking traffic and not doing a very good job of directing it. Motorists were trying to get around the obstruction in various ways but there was no rhyme or reason to what they were doing. My frustration level blew a gasket and I began to swear up a storm inside my car. When I finally made my way through the intersection I saw that there had been a bad accident.

The next day I was commuting to work when I had to stop as the motorist in front of me was waiting for traffic to ease up so she could make a left-hand turn. It was one lane either way. The impatient part of me wanted to go onto the shoulder of the road to get around but the patient part of me won out and decided to wait until the motorist turned. As I sat there waiting I glanced in my rearview mirror and saw a SUV quickly approaching. My first thought was, “Fuck! That guy ain’t going to stop”, my second thought was, “what should I do?” There was no time for a third thought for that was when the guy smashed into me. I estimate he was going around 90 km/hour (even though he told the cop he was going 60). My car spun around several times, I have no recollection if I hit the car in front of me, and ended ass end in a pole, facing the opposite direction of oncoming traffic. Needless to say I suffered some injuries (back, neck, stomach, and leg muscles) and have to do a few months of physio.
I’m a firm believer in karma. What comes around goes around. What I’ve been racking my brain trying to figure out is whether or not my impatience over the traffic delays caused by the accident, I wasn’t involved in, set into motion some bad karma. Did that bad karma have something to do with my own accident the day after? I like to think it didn’t but am not so sure.

Dave the Dude

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Harm Reduction - More Like Harm Inflation!!!

I recently wrote a blog about my how I understand that in some circumstances harm reduction is necessary. However, as I have more and more exposure to our methadone system I still think it does more harm than good. The Ontario Addiction Treatment Centres (OATC) is where the majority of addicts who use methadone go to take their daily dose. It was brought in so that people didn’t have to travel long distances to seek methadone treatment. Methadone is used for people wanting to stop using opiates. It’s part of the whole harm reduction model. Good in theory but in many cases it’s just enabling people to continue with in their addictive behaviours.
Someone who is on methadone must carry out regular urine testing so that doctor’s prescribing the drug can know if the person is using other substances. If this is the case there’s a good chance the person may not be suited for the methadone program. For over 10 years I’ve worked at various addiction centres where urine testing is a regular part of treatment. The credible centres have “supervised urine tests” to ensure the client is not providing fake urine. I’ve met many people who receive methadone from the OATC and they tell me there is no supervised urine testing. A person can sneak clean urine in and pass the test with ease.
Methadone does not provide freedom from addiction. Granted, people are not seeking out drug dealers or shooting up using dirty needles (those who actually follow the harm reduction program) but they still are tied to the clinic they are associated with as they need that daily methadone drink. I have a client who was all happy because her father plans to take her on vacation to South America. What she hasn’t taken into consideration is that the OATC clinic she goes to isn’t going to give her a few weeks of methadone carries, and if they did, she wouldn’t be able to take them across the border.
Many of the people I come in contact with are using crack, cocaine, marijuana and/or a plethora of other substances on top of their daily methadone dose. These people tell me, they are providing fake urines to the OATC so that they can continue to abuse the system. What is happening is that their addictions become worse and they don’t have to face the consequences of their actions. The majority of these clients are on Ontario Works so the good old taxpayer is footing the bill for the methadone. This is not harm reduction – it’s harm inflation and no one benefits. In my opinion a better system would be to provide methadone with a goal towards abstinence. This would be more beneficial, health wise, to the client, and financial wise, to the taxpayer. Maybe the province needs to look at paying for Suboxone which is a much better tool to help an opiate addict achieve abstinence.
Until the province stops basing addiction strategies on pie-in-the-sky thinking and begins taking a more reality-centred approach the harm in harm-reduction will only become worse.
Dave the Dude

Monday, February 27, 2017

Not everyone gets it!

One the reasons that fellowships like Alcoholics Anonymous, Cocaine Anonymous, etc. work so well is that people are able to identify with each other. Stories, feelings and thoughts I comfortably share in AA would probably shock many people not in the fellowship. If not shocked they probably wouldn’t find something humorous that myself and other recovered alcoholic/addicts do. For example one of my favourite jokes is: What is the difference between and alcoholic and an addict? An alcoholic will steal your wallet. An addict will not only steal it but also help you look for it. To an “earth person” (someone not in recovery) this is not funny at all but to many people in AA, CA, etc. it is.
I was lucky enough to change careers when I entered into recovery. I became an addictions counsellor working with alcoholics/addicts. The majority of staff that I worked alongside with were also in recovery and/or had a family member who were. I got used to making comments, jokes, etc. that they understood and did not need an explanation for. I’m now realizing how great that was.
Due to unexpected occurrences that I’ve faced as I trudge the Road of Happy Destiny I no longer work primarily as an addictions counsellor. My co-workers today are not part of any fellowship and therefore have no insight into how an alcoholic/addict’s mind works – how my mind works. I know this but am so used to sharing things in my previous jobs that I often forget. The other day when someone was talking about a client’s dealings with a crack dealer I made a comment along the lines that my crack dealer wasn’t like that at all. At my old job this would have sparked a few chuckles but at my present one there were just some uncomfortable looks. It reminds of me of the time when I spoke at a meeting and my Dad (an earth person, God rest his sole, Chag Sameach) attended. I was only a few years into recovery and shared the amounts I used to consume on a daily basis. After the meeting I could tell my Dad was quite shocked. Fortunately it was an AA meeting and sticking to the Primary Purpose I did not mention the other substances I consumed regularly. I guess what I’m trying to say is if you are in recovery and work aside others who are also in recovery consider yourself fortunate. If you don’t – remember who your audience is.


Dave the Dude

Friday, February 24, 2017

Misconceptions of Acceptance

One of my favourite readings from the Basic Text of Alcoholics Anonymous (The Big Book) is from the personal stories in the back entitled Acceptance is the Answer. The following is an excerpt from that story (the part most often quoted):

And acceptance is the answer to all my problems today. When I am disturbed, it is because I find some person, place, thing, or situation—some fact of my life —unacceptable to me, and I can find no serenity until I accept that person, place, thing, or situation as being exactly the way it is supposed to be at this moment. Nothing, absolutely nothing, happens in God’s world by mistake. Until I could accept my alcoholism, I could not stay sober; unless I accept life completely on life’s terms, I cannot be happy. I need to concentrate not so much on what needs to be changed in the world as on what needs to be changed in me and in my attitudes.
Shakespeare said, “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players.” He forgot to mention that I was the chief critic. I was always able to see the flaw in every person, every situation. And I was always glad to point it out, because I knew you wanted perfection, just as I did. A.A. and acceptance have taught me that there is a bit of good in the worst of us and a bit of bad in the best of us; that we are all children of God and we each have a right to be here. When I complain about me or about you, I am complaining about God’s handiwork. I am saying that I know better than God. (From page 417 of The Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous)

One of the biggest misconceptions people have of this reading is that it promotes accepting abuse from another human being, I would beg to differ. It’s talking about acceptance but it doesn’t say we accept being treated badly, accept staying in toxic relationship or accept abuse of any kind. Part of the reading says, “accept…the situation as being exactly the way it is supposed to be at this moment”. If at that moment something bad is happening it doesn’t mean we have to accept that it is okay. What I would say is we have to accept that it has occurred and if it is something bad, accept that we need to change it. For example, early in my recovery I got into a relationship and we were both handling disagreements with one another in a very unhealthy manner. We both had to accept the status-quo was not healthy and make the decision to either change or break-up. We decided to work on ourselves (i.e. – work the 12 Step Program) and change our thinking and actions (Steps 3, 6, 7). I’m glad we went this route as we are still together today and continue to change for the better.
This reading also taught me an important lesson in resentments. I have to make sure my acceptance of situations is always higher than my expectations to avoid resentment. If the reverse happens I am returning to my character defect of trying to control everything which is part of the insanity of addiction. The only thing I can control is my reactions and actions towards people and situations.
When I completed the 12 Steps I finally accepted that I was an alcoholic/addict and could not take another mind-altering substance again. I accepted that my way of thinking and behaving was toxic and I had to change. The 12 Steps allowed me to discover that acceptance is, indeed, the answer.

Dave the Dude

The Opioid Crisis - let's get rid of the road blocks

Except for a brief foray into Percocet I am extremely grateful that my addiction never took me into opioids. Opioids are extremely addictive and are killing people on a regular basis across the nation. Just over a decade ago, when I first became an addictions counsellor, I began to see a lot of people addicted to OxyContin. Many of these people were prescribed the medication to deal with a pain-related injury and over time became addicted to the drug. The sad thing was this medication was originally advertised as non-addictive. Doctors were, and still are, prescribing OxyContin like Tic-Tacs. I also saw that dentists were prescribing it as well. It seems to me that it’s standard operating procedure for a dentist to hand out OxyContin for someone who has had dental surgery. To me – that’s crazy. I remember having four wisdom teeth taken out at once and the strongest thing the dentist gave me was codeine – that was enough. It seems irresponsible to prescribe opioid medication willy-nilly. Hip-hop artist Mackelmore came out with a song entitled Drug Dealer with the following lyrics:

My drug dealer was a doctor, doctor
Had the plug from the big pharma, pharma
He said that he would heal me, heal me
But he only gave me problems, problems
I think he trying to kill me, kill me
He tried to kill me for a dollar, dollar

I think those lyrics sum it up pretty nicely. I could also say the same for the whole methadone industry but that’s a whole different blog. What started with Percocet and OxyContin has now ballooned into Hydromorphone, Fentanyl and the deadly Carfentanil where just two grains of it (size of two grains of salt) can kill someone. For some reason Carfentanil, an elephant tranquilizer, is getting into the substances people use. It has even been found in marijuana.

Due to the death toll, from opioid overdoses, the Ontario Government was quickly able to put together a response to help prevent these deaths. Part of the response has been in the form of providing Naloxone Kits to anyone requiring them. Naloxone is a drug that helps prevent death in case of an opioid overdose. If someone has an OHIP (Ontario Health Insurance Plan) Card the kit is free. For those who don’t the price is approximately $30. This, of course, is great news. Unfortunately very few pharmacies are carrying these kits due to the requirements the province has attached to handing them out. When someone wants to get a kit they have to sit through a lengthy training session in order to receive it. The training sessions includes lessons on how to administer the drug, signs to look for in a person suffering from an overdose, basic CPR training, etc. The majority of pharmacies don’t have the manpower and/or time to spend this amount of time with one person which is why they chose not to carry the kits. In a perfect world this knowledge would be great but we don’t live in a perfect world. Most of the time the person injecting the Naloxone isn’t the one who got the kit, and therefore the training, to begin with. The training doesn’t do someone much good if they’re unconscious. This type of  illogical thinking is often the case with government programs. The intellectuals who come up with these plans often don’t understand the logistics and reality of a situation. Often times they don’t even understand something they are for or against. The perfect example is the non-government support of 12 Step programs due to the misbelief that 12 Steps is a religious program. I can assure you it is not. Religions tell you what their God is – 12 Step do not. Religion has certain requirements to join – 12 Step you only need a desire to stop what the Fellowship is designed to help with. That’s just a couple differences. But I digress.

For the Ontario Naloxone Kit Program to be even more effective this “training session” should be stopped. Better to have the kit with no training then not have it and someone overdoses. This along with more money for residential treatment centres (including 12 Steps) would go a long way in saving people’s lives.

Dave the Dude