minneapolisnick wrote:
While I don't like the word "cure", I don't want to quibble over this fact: TSM works!
Great work, Ben!
My best,
Nick
Thanks Nick! We agree on the most salient point, that TSM works. I used to wonder what it must be like simply not to be an alcoholic, to be as indifferent to alcohol as I have always been to sports, say, or candy bars. Now I do things that were impossible for me before as a matter of course. Living alone with money in my pocket was impossible for me. At one point, when I was on probation for multiple counts of shoplifting alcohol, I actually asked the judge to sentence me to a full year of electronic home detention with a Martha Stewart type ankle bracelet! Even that couldn't stop me from getting drunk again and coming an inch away from jail.
Part of the reason I use the word "cured" is that I was told over and over again, for twenty-three years, that "alcoholism is progressive, fatal and incurable". That false claim was used to manipulate me into accepting A.A.'s claims about god and prayer, which turned out to be the same old Bronze Age superstitions hawked in fundamentalist churches, only dressed up to look like treatment for alcoholism.It turns out that alcoholism is reversible and, as a bonus, that that reversal has nothing whatsoever to do with supernatural beliefs about god or prayer and nothing to do with enforced socializing with people who generally thought I was an arrogant idiot because I think Richard Dawkins is a more reliable and interesting writer than Bill Wilson.
Getting TSM accepted in the mainstream is going to be very tough and take years. One of the things we have to accomplish, I think, is to change the way people think about alcoholism. It isn't an "incurable mental, physical, and spiritual disease", but an endorphin-reinforced learned behavior that can be unlearned by drinking on naltrexone. Calling it a cure that uses medical technology is accurate, and it also shocks people used to hearing the same old "recovery not cure" nonsense that has been repeated so often that it doesn't occur to people to question or challenge it. A.A. claims that everyone, especially the alcoholic, is incompetent to run his or her own life without supernatural control and total immersion in the theistic and anti-intellectual society of Alcoholics Anonymous. That has to change, now that this medical technology exists and is being not only ignored but suppressed.
I don't think we actually disagree about anything of any substance, Nick. And even if we do, so what? We're not in AA, where one of us has to be right, and the one who is wrong ends up in "jails, institutions, or dead of alcoholism". That's why I prefer science and humanism to religion and groupthink!
Best,
Ben