Here is my e-mail to the gentleman. I hope he seriously considers what I said and does a bit more homework before continuing to undermine this so far very successful approach:
Hello Mr. xxxxxxxx,
I was made aware of your recent conversation with Dr. Roy Eskapa about his book, The Cure for Alcoholism. My being told of the conversation was part of a larger discussion and neither Dr. Eskapa nor Dr. Sinclair asked me to contact you. Indeed, neither of them knew I would contact you, but I'm copying Dr. Eskapa on this e-mail as a courtesy.
My impression is that you are dismissing this method of treatment out of hand without even having read the book. Have you read the book?
I am an alcoholic. Or more properly, I was an alcoholic. Now I was never a sleeping-in-the-gutter hopeless drunk, but I certainly drank far too much for my own good and must have been damaging my health. Despite numerous attempts, I found it unbearable to abstain from drinking, usually fairly heavily, on a daily basis. In November I picked up a copy of Dr. Eskapa's book, read through it and got myself on Naltrexone which, contrary to your statement, is not an opioid but a cheap generic opioid antagonist.
Since then my drinking, with virtually no effort on my part other than to remember to take the naltrexone, has dropped from about 60
[typo: I was more like 50] units per week to 15 with the ability to abstain at will - well within what the World Health Organization considers a safe drinking level. When I was interviewed for an article about my emerging success, the reporter even said "Well gosh, I drink more than that..." I am only three months into the treatment but can say with no reservation that it has quite literally saved my health, perhaps my life and certainly my marriage.
There are a couple of things I'd like to point out in response to your position. The first is that alcoholics are going to drink. That's what they do. They might abstain here and there and a minority even have some long-term success. But the vast majority will drink again because unless they can extinguish the craving, it's a daily struggle to remain abstinent. Drinking while on naltrexone for a few more months isn't going to kill anyone who wasn't nearly dead anyway. I consider this a non-issue because the vast majority of alcoholics aren't in such dire straits and the eventual craving relief The Sinclair Method brings is well worth an extra few months' drinking. Additionally, Drs. Eskapa and Sinclair are adamant that an abstinent alcoholic should NEVER begin drinking again in order to follow this method.
The other thing is your assertion that AA is "generally accepted as the most successful..." Without putting too fine a point on it: AA is an abject failure. The vast majority of AA members don't make it past their first month and the retention rate at one year is around five percent. That's not even considering that for many patients, myself included, the Kumbaya-singing-in-a-circle touchy-feely nonsense is absolutely revolting and we never make it in the door. I am NOT helpless and refuse to associate with people whose primary objective is to indoctrinate me into their culture of helplessness and hopelessness.
For some, alcoholism is a complex and deep-seated condition that is accompanied by various psychiatric conditions that must also be dealt with. For others like myself, it's a very simple thing: We are addicted to alcohol much like some become addicted to nicotine. It isn't helpful to make the problem more complex than it is but unfortunately, that is exactly what AA and rehab treatment clinics invariably attempt to do. Dr. Eskapa's book offers a method of treatment that offers a lot of hope to people like me who may never have sought treatment otherwise.
If you would like to discuss further with others who are actually doing this, you are welcome to come to our message board at
www.thesinclairmethod.com. I set up this board myself after seeing the success I was having. While Dr. Eskapa drops by to answer questions, it is otherwise unconnected with him, Dr. Sinclair and the publisher of the book. I am known as "N101CS" on the boards.
Whether you care to discuss further or not I would encourage you to really research this, rather than shooting from the hip, before getting too enthusiastic about bashing it. If because of someone like you my local bookstore had withdrawn the book before I found it, you might very well have cost me my health or marriage, albeit indirectly.
[Minor changes to correct typos were made. I was at work and in an extreme hurry to answer him and actually get some work done!]