Clarion wrote:
If you are still having fun drinking you might have trouble stopping.
Since I've been trying to stop for many years, I agree. I didn't think it would be easy.
Clarion wrote:
In the book the Doctor discusses at length how drinking is no longer fun for alcoholics (it wasn't for me, except for the occasional hour of bliss when I was exactly in the right "zone"), and so taking the pill to effect a cure is a rational act. This in response to the comment argument against TSM: why would an alcoholic take a pill when he/she loves to drink?
I do love to drink, but the arrests, broken bones, hospitalizations, lost jobs, lost relationships and financial ruin make it seem obvious to me that continuing to drink heavily is not at all rational either.
Maybe I'm not an alcoholic. Perhaps I'm just a hedonist who values getting drunk more than she values her family, friends, safety, liberty and happiness, but I think that's splitting hairs a bit.
For what it's worth, I think the good doctor is wrong. It's as if he's saying that noncompliance is only an issue if someone is not really addicted.
Clarion wrote:
... if you are still having fun drinking, then taking Nal may not be so rational for you...
I've tried AA, rehab, therapy, antabuse, Campral, baclofen, SOS, RR, hypnotherapy and - embarrassingly enough - megadoses of niacin (don't ask). So, if naltrexone is irrational, I'm out of ideas, since I don't have easy access to a Mexican ibogaine clinic.