Drug Rehab Offenders Navigation


Drug Rehab Offenders

|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Free Drug Rehab Nc |
Drug Treatment Roanoke Va |
Alcohol Treatment Essex |
Bournemouth Drug Alcohol Treatment |
Drug Rehabs Florida |
Charlotte Drug Alcohol Treatment |
Drug Rehab Owensboro Ky |
Alcohol Treatment Riverside Ca |
Hialeah Drug Alcohol Treatment |
Alcohol Treatment Vallejo |
Drug Treatment Brochure |
Drug Treatment Slides |
Drug Rehab George |
Drug Rehab Lynchburg |
Alcohol Treatment Finances |

List of Drug-Alcohol-Treatment Articles

Drug Rehab Offenders Best Seller



Best Drug Rehab Offenders Products

Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Drug Rehab Offenders Sponsors


Drug Rehab Offenders

 

Latest Drug Rehab Offenders Link Added

Top 5 Drug and Alcohol Treatment Pages

1. Drug Rehab
2. Drug Alcohol
3. Drug Treatment
4. Drug Addiction
5. Alcohol Treatment




Submit your link on Drug Rehab Offenders!


Welcome to Drug and Alcohol Treatment


 

Drug Rehab Offenders Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Drug Rehab Offenders. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

from: Alcohol Recovery




Alcohol Recovery
By Patrick Mclemore




Common questions among alcoholics are: What is sobriety? What is recovery? What is the difference between sobriety and recovery? What can I expect from either of them? These are normal questions that nearly every recovering alcoholic has asked at one time or another. Let's start with the first question.



What is sobriety? Technically speaking, you are sober if you don't have any chemicals in your system like alcohol or drugs. But for the alcoholic, just being sober is not enough. The reason is, and you may have experienced this yourself, being sober is not a solution to the problem. Most of us alcoholics have been able to stay sober for brief periods of time. We were, at times, able to fend off the urge to drink for days, months, and in some very rare cases, years.



But for the true alcoholic, the time will come when they drink again. So just being "sober" is not enough to give us the happy and free life that we used to feel before the drinking got too bad. The term "white-knuckling" or "dry" comes into play here. It's like holding on for dear life, our knuckles white from the hard grip and our bodies feeling empty, hollow and dry. It is truly no way to live.



People who are just "sober" are sometimes worse to be around than when they were drinking; irritable, angry, hateful, and full of rage. They are absolutely miserable. They know they can't drink because it's caused too much damage in the past or maybe their spouse has given them an ultimatum: "Quit drinking or I'm leaving you". Maybe the law is on top of them to stop. So they quit and boy do they make everyone pay for it! Maybe the miserable one will throw in the martyr card for good measure: "I gave up drinking and this is how you repay me"? Just being soberly dry is not enough to keep an alcoholic away from the booze. There has to be something better to keep him/her sober...and happy.



What is Recovery? Recovery is where the sober alcoholic will find happiness, contentment and freedom. It involves a support group and being with other people who are staying sober and living happy, purpose-filled lives. Recovery is a "one day a time" process. It seems a bit cliché but there is good reason behind it. An alcoholic who drinks almost everyday will find it impossible to imagine quitting for the "rest of their lives". It's an overwhelming, self-defeating thought. "I can't stay sober forever. No way. I might as well get drunk". In comes the "24 hours a day" thought. We know you can't stay sober forever, but can you stay sober just for the next 24 hours? The alcoholic, still alone and not accepting help will know they can't do it. But the ones who do accept help will find they can do it, one day at a time, for the rest of their lives. It is a proven method that works and has worked for millions of alcoholics for over seventy years now.



Most sober alcoholics accept the fact that booze was just a symptom of their problem. The problem is ourselves and the malady inside of us. So, we need something to fill in that huge hole inside that alcohol once filled. The solution to that has to have meaning and can't be superficial or shallow. That solution is recovery. But recovery can't be done alone. It is done with people who were once just like us, hopelessly alcoholic and miserable, but have found a solution to their problem. They no longer drink and are happy. To an alcoholic who is still drinking, this seems impossible but it's true. If you are an alcoholic looking for a solution to your problem, what do you have to lose?




Patrick McLemore is a recovering alcoholic and addict. Patrick has worked with the Manor House Recovery Center for the last two years providing guidance to numerous recovering alcoholics and addicts.



If you would like more information on alcohol and drug addiction, you can find it here: Alcohol Rehab.



Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Patrick_Mclemore
http://EzineArticles.com/?Alcohol-Recovery&id=892011









Drug Rehab Offenders Specific links

Drug Rehab Offenders News

Two counties cleared by N.J. Assembly committee to begin drug rehab program for nonviolent offenders

The bill advanced by the Assembly Judiciary Committee would create a pilot program in two counties, rather than implementing mandatory drug court statewide, as Christie wants

Read more...


Diversion program announced for Kane drug offenders

Certain low-level drug offenders will get a chance to trade a potential felony conviction for education and treatment under a new diversion program announced Tuesday in Kane County.

Read more...


EDITORIAL: Reform marijuana laws on two fronts - drug courts and decriminalization

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is adamant about getting low-level, nonviolent drug offenders out of the criminal courts and into s pecial drug courts — a move that would save the state millions and get people into rehab programs, while avoiding lengthy criminal records.

Read more...


Former Gov. Jim McGreevey urges drug rehab graduates to 'do the right thing'

Reginald McGhee, who graduated after more than three years in the program, said: "It saved my damn life."

Read more...


Stopping heroin use before it’s too late

Cheap, user-friendly, apparently benign, diabolically seductive, heroin has reinvented itself and entered the mainstream. And since our mainstream drug users are young, it's hitting our kids.

Read more...


From the screen to the street, TV actor shares real-life drug struggles with Essex County addicts

Michael K. Williams speaks candidly about his battles with substance abuse, hoping his ultimate success will motivate dozens of recovering addicts in Essex County's Drug Court program

Read more...


Obama's Drug Czar Stumps for 'Third Way' Policy

To hear President Obama’s drug czar tell it, the leading voices on drug policy are kind of crazy. “Over the past few years, this public debate on drug policy lurches between two extreme views,” White House Office of National Drug Control Policy Director Gil Kerlikowske...

Read more...


Govt unveils prisoner rehab plans

The Government has found $65 million in its Corrections budget to fund a new rehabilitation programme to cut the rate of reoffending and cull prisoner numbers.

Read more...


Doc agrees to license suspension

A Fort Wayne doctor accused of leading police on a high speed chase down I-69 while he was on drugs won't be able to practice medicine for at least two years, according to an agreement with the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana filed Thursday.

Read more...


U.S. Paying Needlessly High Cost for Crime, Expert Says

States are spending $52 billion a year on corrections, with one U.S. adult in 31 either incarcerated, on probation, or on parole, according to the Pew Foundation.

Read more...