Here are a few suggestions...
- Ask him to read this site. The book's sensational title ("...Cure...") is a turn-off to some. This site has real world proof that TSM does work. No one here is selling anything. You get the straight-scoop here - warts and all
- Ask him to read a little about Naltrexone. Google Naltrexone or read WikiPedia and he'll quickly see that Nal is a powerful drug, and not some herb a homeopath would suggest (not that there's anything wrong with that).
Quote:
Naltrexone is an opioid receptor antagonist used primarily in the management of alcohol dependence and opioid dependence.
- Tell him you'll continue to go to AA, and go. Why not?
I'd would
not recommend going to see a substance abuse counselor together. I see one and it's good for
me (and might be good for you, alone). But mine literally laughed out loud at TSM. Then when I showed him the first two weeks of data, he stopped laughing (watching him squirm was a hoot!), but then insisted that while this might work for
me, it wouldn't work broadly speaking. I think he's full of ****, but in short, a substance abuse counselor may not, in fact, help your husband to accept TSM.
Last, my own personal opinion is that we alcoholics are very much on our own. That we have found TSM is fortunate, because very few people seem to know about it, and very few doctors seem willing to support it. My feeling is that you may not be able to convince your husband (or anyone else) that TSM works. But if you do it, and stick to it,
when it works for you, they
will notice, and eventually come to accept it because it
does, in fact, work.
Also know that even if no one you know will support you, you will have this board which is full of people just like you who
will support you. Pretty much all of us have had to try to convince
someone that TSM was worth a shot.
Good luck.
-TK