I was just going over some reading of Dr Roy Eskapa's comments. I know we should all strive for AF days and being much more mindful drinking but if it was that was as easy like some have been telling us then we would not be here and with an alcohol problem. Sometimes it makes me feel even more discouraged and like a failure that I cannot do as others are telling me with more AF days, etc but maybe that is just me? As he says below " However, the crux of the addiction is that there is a loss of control over the drinking and the Sinclair Method is all about restoring control - by correcting 'learned' physiology through blocking reinforcement to the opioid system"
Here is what he says regarding "How much effort at Moderation ... ?"
Extinction will occur if you drink while an opioid antagonist (naltrexone or nalmefene) has been absrobed into your blood-stream and you drink. Drinking + naltrexone sessions add together gradually until you notice the change - and this takes time. Naltrexone itself is merely a tool unlike say a painkiller or blood pressure medication which act all by themselves - without you having to make a behavior you notice the difference rather quickly. Use 'willpower' to moderate - IF you can by all means. However, the crux of the addiction is that there is a loss of control over the drinking and the Sinclair Method is all about restoring control - by correcting 'learned' physiology through blocking reinforcement to the opioid system ...
PS --- think billions of receptors and trillions of networked connections which have become super-highways as a result of getetic predisposition and learned drinking - extinction cuts back the super-highwaya, as Sincalir calls them, so that they are restored or corrected to a state of normal pathways...
|