Hi Guys and thanks for the posts,
Chrissie wrote:
Now I'M the "curious one": you're considering trying drinking w/o Nal because...you'd just as soon not take whatever drugs you can avoid, or is it more than that?
Hi Chrissie,
I'm not worried about taking Naltrexone at the levels I am at the moment (3X12.5mg/week) which is less than 50mg/week. I'm more interested in finding out if I can really return to healthy drinking unaided by Naltrexone. I want to know if this myth that "an alcoholic can never moderate" is true or not. This is AA dogma, and so far, everything I have experienced with AA has been harmful to me.
That was the last "truth" I was clinging to, helped by Dr. Sinclair's warning never to drink without Naltrexone. I don't doubt the chemistry of TSM for a second, I am questioning my own beliefs, I was brainwashed to believe that I could never drink responsibly, I want to know if it's true. I want to know if Stanton Peele is right.
Hesster wrote:
I found this statement very interesting, as I also feel that the "confidence" aspect is important. Truth be told, there are times when I feel like I'm not sure if the Nal itself is the most effective mechanism by which TSM'ers gain/sustain control over their drinking. I think a lot of it has to do with finally admitting that something needs to change, and by deciding to participate in TSM, a patient is actively doing something to make that change. Making this admission, participating in this community, ultimately seeing results - all of things can do wonders for one's confidence, and sometimes I wonder if it's possible to sustain moderate drinking levels without the Nal once this shift in confidence has occurred.
-H
Hi Hester,
Yes, that's kind of how I see it too, there is the very real bio-chemical help from Naltrexone and TSM, I believe we do produce less endorphins when we drink with Nal and I think that help and the fact that Dr. Sinclair says that we CAN take control of our drinking, are huge confidence builders, once we start doing it and seeing the results, I think our confidence grows, mine certainly did.
Stanton Peele takes it that one step further and says that we were always capable of taking control of our addictive behaviour unaided. I wonder if it's just that we didn't believe we could, so it became a self-fulfilling prophecy. SP advocates Behavioural intervention, especially CBT as does Dr. Sinclair in his Contral Clinics in Finland, actually, they're both pretty much saying the same thing:
It is possible to control addictive behaviour.
ellpee wrote:
I wasn't abstinent as long as you, only five months
Hi Ellpee,
I think that period of abstinence will be very helpful to you, in that time you had already extinguished your addiction by not drinking, the problem of course, is Alcohol Deprivation Effect (ADE) when we start drinking again without Naltrexone. The fact that you are going straight from abstinence to TSM means you avoid that nightmare and can benefit fully from your previous abstinence.
Best of luck!