DR.
VIRGINIA EADES, PH.D. - Individual, Marital and Family Therapy
www.DrVEades.com Emotional Wellness Matters Newsletter
Ph: (636) 527-3500
Addictive
Behavior
"To
thine own self be true."
- William Shakespeare
We
are all pleasure seekers. There are pleasure centers located within the
human brain, which, when activated, are associated with feelings of euphoria.
This is part of the daily cycle we all experience. During the day we go
through naturally occurring periods when we feel comfortable, secure,
happy, and fulfilled - and this is followed by periods when more negative
feelings are aroused (anxiety, insecurity, discomfort). We humans are
highly reinforced by positive feelings of pleasure. We want to experience
euphoria again and again. Fortunately, that's not all there is to life.
Addictive behavior can be seen as an attempt to control our daily cycles
by maximizing pleasurable feelings and decreasing the frequency of negative
feelings. At first we may even succeed for a while in doing this, but
our basic natures have a way of catching up with us. We probably need
our down phases of the daily cycle as much as we need the more positive
ones - if for no other reason than that the negative parts of the cycle
help us appreciate the positive ones even more. Our negative experiences
strengthen us and help us to become survivors. They assist us in learning
wisdom and integrity. There are few things in nature which are not cyclical.
Attempts to find constant pleasure through addictive behavior are always
futile. The negative phase always revisits us and brings balance back
into our lives. There is no escaping our basic nature. And there is no
escaping the escalating and debilitating results of the addictive process.
Addiction is an uncontrolled search for gratification through a relationship
with an substance or activity to the exclusion of other more diverse life
experiences. The substance or activity with which the addict forms a relationship
varies with each person. Common sources of addiction are alcohol, tobacco,
illegal drugs, prescription medication, sex, love, food, shopping (and
shoplifting), gambling, television, computers, and work.
The
addictive quest for pleasure has some defining characteristics. Many addictions
aim to increase arousal. This is the all-powerful feeling
that might come from cocaine, amphetamines, the first few drinks of alcohol,
shoplifting, sexual acting out or gambling. This omnipotent feeling, however,
is eventually undermined when the addict realizes that a dependency has
been formed. A feeling of fear replaces the feeling of being all powerful
- fear of losing the source of addiction and fear that others will find
out how powerless the person actually is. Negative experiences always
accompany the positive feelings the addict is seeking.
Other
addictions aim to increase satiation. This is the feeling
of happiness and fulfillment that might be achieved through the use of
heroin, marijuana, tranquilizers, pain medication, watching TV, or overeating.
The feeling of satiation serves to camouflage a person's underlying pain.
Again, however, negative feelings always show themselves. The person who
strives for satiation not only re-experiences the underlying pain when
the feeling of satiation wears off, but also experiences the grief accompanied
by the loss of the satiation high. Satiation addicts must increase the
dosage of the drug or the frequency of the addictive acting out behavior
to cover up their original pain. The quest for a satiation high takes
over the person's life until, ultimately, the pain returns in the form
of despair.
Note
that satiation reflects our quest for pleasure while arousal exemplifies
our quest for power. Pleasure and power are two of our most primitive
behaviors and are experienced by children in the earliest years of life
when the range of experiences is focused largely on forming one's sense
of self. Adulthood brings us beyond these simple levels of experience
into a more complex, diverse and meaningful way of relating to the world.
When we move past pleasure and power, we are able to form intimate relationships
with other adults, to contribute to society, to understand our responsibilities
to others, and to incorporate moral convictions into our actions. Addictive
behavior prevents us from achieving these more complex levels of behavior
found in adulthood.
Addictive
behavior usually contains the following components:
Acting
Out Behavior:
Addicts create a mood through a change in their behavior that sets the
stage to go into the addictive high. Thus, sex addicts will purchase pornographic
material. Drug addicts will make the call to the drug dealer. These "acting
out" behaviors are a preliminary part of the addictive process and serve
to shift the addict's mood. During the acting out stage, the addict feels
the illusion of being powerful and in control.
The
Illusion of Nurturance:
Most of us seek ways to achieve nurturance in times of stress, but for
the addict, the nurturing is temporary and does not allow the person to
find ways to solve problems in a realistic way. Addiction is a lifestyle
in which life's problems are avoided in favor of the search for the next
high. Although the addict may understand rationally that addictive behavior
will not solve the problem, they develop their own logic which rationalizes
the continuation of the addiction.
The
Addictive Object Becomes the Person's Primary Relationship: Addicts
seek to meet their emotional and intimacy needs through achieving a high
until, eventually, this becomes their most important relationship. They
experience a mood change and come to believe that their emotional needs
have been met. This is the tragedy of addiction because the addict shuts
out other people, the community and the search for spiritual answers -
the real way to deal with life's issues in a healthy manner. Other people
are used, not for true relationship, but merely as props in pursuit of
the addiction.
The
Addict Withdraws from the world:
The normal way to achieve intimacy is to reach out to other people. For
the addict, where the primary relationship is with the addictive substance,
the illusion of intimacy means pursuing the addictive high and excluding
other people. The high gives the feeling of warmth, control, and well-being
- and the feeling that the need for intimacy has been met. Unfortunately,
the longer the addict engages in this process, the more lonely and isolated
he or she becomes. When the pain of isolation becomes intense, the stage
is set for the addict to engage in more acting out behavior. The pattern
becomes entrenched, and escaping it is difficult.
Addicts
Trust the High More than Other People:
Addicts begin to trust the mood change that comes from engaging in addictive
behavior. They feel isolated from other people and find that others might
not always come through for them. The high, on the other hand, is consistent
and always available. They trust the high more than they trust others.
Unfortunately, because addicts have not engaged in the normal interactions
that occur between people, they lack the experience of working through
the nuances of relationships in order to find ways of getting their needs
met through others. This entrenches them in the belief that their addiction
is their only friend. It works every time, while friends are not always
there.
Recovering
from Addiction
Coming
to terms with addiction may be the most important journey of a person's
life. Because the addict's primary relationship is with the addictive
substance and everything else is secondary, only used to pursue the addictive
high, the addict's safety, security and life dreams may suffer. The tragedy
of addiction is that people can lose their families, friends, money, homes,
jobs and way of life. The single-mindedness of the addictive pursuit prevents
the addict from dealing with life in a more mature, complex, and responsible
way.
One
way of coming to terms with addiction is to work with a trained therapist.
Because addiction is such an entrenched pattern in one's life and essentially
an emotional issue, individual talk therapy may not provide all the support
one needs to come to terms with the problem, but it can serve as a good
starting point. The therapist may refer the addicted person to a twelve-step
program or other recovery resources as an adjunct to therapy. AA, NA,
and other groups, such as Rational Recovery, are free and can be essential
to the process of recovery.
The
first phase of recovery is to admit the addiction - and this is very difficult
for many people. Some people may need to experience the loss of their
life dreams and expectations before they can admit that they are addicted
to an substance or activity. The addict must then make the commitment
not to engage in the addictive behavior in the future. They must move
from the primitive quest for power and pleasure to more meaningful, responsible
adult behaviors. Part of this process is making amends to those who have
been hurt by the person's addiction. Another part is to learn to draw
from the nurturance and pleasure provided by other people - friends, family
and the larger community. Another is to get in touch with one's spiritual
self and the normal human desire to connect with things larger than oneself.
The
addict must search for his or her healthy self and try to stay there always.
Life becomes a series of daily choices - to choose the behaviors of the
healthy self and not those of the addictive self. Coming to terms with
addiction, finally, means exploring the beauty, joy and excitement of
the full and complete person that all of us have the capacity to become.
"Not
I, nor anyone else, can travel that road for you. You must travel it yourself"
- Walt Whitman
Factors
That Place A Person At Risk for Addiction
As
a child, having addicted parents (or other adults).
As a child, having too much, too little or uncertain love, discipline
or safety.
A tendency to find others who are also addictive.
Feelings of insecurity, loneliness or being different.
Difficulty using positive emotions such as love, joy or intimacy
in times of trouble.
An inability to self-reflect and self-soothe.
For
Further Reading on Addictive Behavior
"The
Addictive Personality: Understanding the Addictive Process and Compulsive
Behavior" (second edition), by Craig Nakken, 1996. Center City,
Minnesota: Hazelden Foundation; ISBN 1- 56838-129-8; 1-800-257-7800. 132
pages, $13.00.
Working
Through Life's Challenges...
We
all faces problems, stressors and anxieties in our everyday lives. This
is a fundamental part of the human condition and there is no escaping
this basic truth. Indeed, challenges help us to grow. The normal process
is to perceive a problem and then bring our emotional and thinking abilities
into play in order to solve the problem. We can draw on our own legacy
of experiences and we can find support from our life partners, friends,
the community, society's body of knowledge, and spiritual sources. Faced
with a problem, we experience some anxiety - and this uncomfortable feeling
motivates us to solve the problem in order to find our balance again.
In the process, we become more flexible and more adept at dealing with
problems in the future. As we mature, we discover that problems are not
insurmountable - and we get better at problem-solving.
The
addict, too, faces life's challenges. Rather than easing the anxieties
associated with a problem by drawing on a diversity of healthy resources
for a solution, the addict knows that at the end of the day there is always
the alcohol, the drug, the food, the gambling, the sexual outlet, the
work, any addictive substance or activity which will ease the anxiety.
Thus, the problems are never solved in the real world and the addict develops
the illusion that the problem has been solved. The pain is gone and there
is no perceived need to work on solving real problems. Unfortunately,
it is the children, the partner, the family and friends of the addict
who suffer. Their needs for comfort, nurturance and safety are compromised,
since the addict's primary relationship is not with them, but with the
addictive substance. Instead of finding true meaning in life, the addict
pursues an illusory and primitive quest for the feeling of pleasure and
power over life's challenges - and it is those who truly matter in the
addict's life who suffer greatly.
This
newsletter is intended to offer general information only and recognizes
that individual issues may differ from these broad guidelines. Personal
issues should be addressed within a therapeutic context with a professional
familiar with the details of the problems. ©2001 Simmonds Publications:
5580 La Jolla Blvd., #306, La Jolla, CA 92037
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