Saturday, September 26, 2015

Resentment Prevention

Resentment is the number one offender- that’s what the AA Big Book tells us and as the text that spells out the original formula for the most successful program of recovery, we ought to give what it says some real consideration. Untended resentments are at the root of many, many relapses in the world of addiction and as (mostly) functioning and intelligent adults we ought to have a plan in place to deal with them before they have the chance to deal with us. This would be a proactive, preventative way of handling potential resentments before they have the opportunity to ferment into “the big nasty” itself.

In order to form an effective strategy for preventing resentments before they have the chance to fully form, we have to discover the roots. From what behaviors, events or circumstances do our resentments form? How do we recognize those things in time to act in a way that will keep them from boiling up and over into a full-blown resentment?

We also have to qualify that a bit; we must practice some accountability and acceptance around things in our life first in order to keep events and circumstances in the right perspective. The easiest way to avoid most resentments is to realize that you have to “accept the things you cannot change, have the courage to change the things you can’t, and the wisdom to know the difference.”

We must do all we can to not allow something we cannot change to eat away at us; this in some ways is the ol’ “Poor me, poor me, pour me another shot” mentality. If you can’t do anything about it, you kinda have to accept it. You can choose to be mad about it, but that won’t usually do anything positive. If you can do something to affect positive movement on the issue, then stand up and act or forfeit your right to feel the effects.

If something has happened and you feel wronged, (or that a loved one has been wronged) take a moment to consider your (or the loved one’s) role in the situation first. If after an honest evaluation you feel certain that you or your loved one are in the right and you’re in a position to advocate on your own behalf or the behalf of your loved one, you must do so in a calm but resolute way. You really can’t afford to let it fester long enough to become a sore spot, so you must speak up in the right way at the right moment.

If we allow a potential resentment to bubble up until it reaches the point of boiling over, we have done ourselves and our sobriety a great disservice. Our serenity and satisfaction are too valuable to sacrifice by a lack of willingness to speak up. This is often difficult, but when carefully measured and delivered it is powerful. We must guard against resentments with the same vigor with which we would defend our most treasured family or friends, because an unresolved resentment could result in a direct assault on our relationships, our joy and our sobriety.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Wellness

Most substance abuse/addiction rehabilitation plans focus almost entirely on the mental and spiritual well-being of the addict. While these are obviously foundational elements of recovery, the whole person needs rehabilitation. This means nutritionally and physically working to repair the myriad traumas to which we have subjected our bodies. In my experience it is all-too-common to find buckets full of cigarette butts outside every door of a treatment or regular meeting facility while inside gallon after gallon of coffee is consumed ravenously.

We addicts aren’t exactly awesome at moderation (how else did we end up here?!?) and we most often substitute one seemingly less-harmful addiction for that from which we are trying to recover. In the course of our active addiction we necessarily put our bodies through hell and that might not stop upon our earnest attempt to get clean and sober. While we work to change our “stinking thinking,” we don’t often work to make ourselves truly, wholly healthy.

There doesn’t seem to be a very typical occurrence of even the most basic of attempts within the recovery community to educate folks on the necessity of overall wellness; we will literally spend hours at a time talking through our “spiritual malady” and our diseased thinking but not often do we touch on taking care of the bodies that we have driven to terminal velocity for years. It is a very rare person who has the opportunity to carry the message forward when dealing with constantly ill health.

We must start to emphasize for ourselves a bit of physical health if we want to do all of the living that we haven’t done over the years or decades of addiction. Just like getting sober, sometimes we have to take it 10 minutes or one hour at a time. Start small and then progress towards a place of balanced, healthy living for our bodies, minds and spirits.

As humans we are that total package of mind, body and spirit and the neglect of any aspect of our heath is us doing ourselves a grave disservice. I am not advocating that everyone in recovery from an addiction or compulsion become an ultra-marathoner or Iron(wo)man triathlete; I do know that we must start slowly and being to take care of our bodies in the way in which we were intended. We must be as kind to our physical selves are we are to our spiritual. 

Monday, September 7, 2015

Don't Start

As an addict there are things that we aren’t equipped to stop doing once we have started. The first drink, snort, fried pie or video clip sends us down into an irreversible tailspin from which there is a very real threat of never recovering. The fact is that we don’t have to concern ourselves today with the 12th shot of whiskey or the last dust off the eightball because our primary issue is with the first ANYTHING. We’ll never reach a blackout if we don’t get started.

We have to realize that with anything we cannot stop, we must not start. The first is worse than the last because our last doesn’t exist without our first. The insanity of the first _____ is something that for years we couldn’t avoid, but now dodging it is the most necessary of all the things we do. We cannot reach the part of our recovery wherein we may repair our lives if we never fully stop the behavior. How can we hope to see the end of the tunnel otherwise?

How does one avoid the first ______ ? It starts with self-awareness. I know that my sobriety neither requires nor necessitate anyone elses’ and I don’t expect others to modify the way they live on my behalf- my sobriety is my responsibility and no one besides me can keep it or jeopardize it. I have to know when something doesn’t feel right and act accordingly.

At times it means “keeping gas in the car and air in your tires”- you have to know when a situation becomes one that you must leave immediately. Sobriety is the foundation for everything in the lives of recovering addicts and as such it must be carefully guarded.

For everyone in recovery the exact answer is different, but for many it involves speaking with or getting around our fellows. We must be so in-tune with our own thinking that we recognize when it is just time to pick up the phone or get our butts to a meeting or other recovery fellowship. You do what you must to get where you must be.

A relapse never sneaks up on anyone, although many or most don’t see it until they have the benefit of hindsight. When you aren’t “taking your medicine” you will get sick and it is your responsibility alone to be sure you do what you know you need to. There are certain elements that are absolutes when it comes to sobriety and while everyone has a different relapse prevention plan, it all will always involve avoiding “the first” by any means.