You may have read Dr. Sinclair's response to SpringerRider, by way of Dr. Eskapa, to SR's question. Springer asked, paraphrased, whether it is helpful to intensify craving by creating alcohol deprivation effect and then drinking to extinguish that. Here's part of Sinclair's response:
Quote:
Now to your question of whether you should intentionally deprive yourself of alcohol. The way you are doing it sounds good. It is a good idea to extinguish all of the various forms of drinking you had learned to do. You should drink alcohol (with naltrexone) in the same locations where you previously learned to drink, with the same people, and with the same moods.
I read the response to be not simply that we all should "starve" ourselves a few days, then drink through it; I read Sinclair as saying that we should identify our own triggers and drink through them to promote extinction. We used to talk about this in the early days at MWO, and I feel a bit sorry we have neglected it here.
The Sinclair Method is not suitable for several weeks' inpatient treatment in large part because the patients would be drinking through very few real-world triggers. Eskapa does not devote a great deal of attention to it in the book, but this is what he means when he says to drink as you normally do. It's not so much about the amount as it is the trigger.
For binge drinkers, alcohol deprivation must be a powerful trigger. For many of us, having not had an alcohol-free day since God knows when, we are strangers to deprivation so it's not a trigger. I suspect I'm like many daily drinkers in that I have many mild triggers through the day. Five o'clock? Trigger. Five o'clock somewhere? Trigger. Surprise phone call from old friend? Must grab a glass of wine. Surprise phone call from irate ex-husband? Trigger. Favorite tv show? Trigger. Beer ad on tv? Trigger (although I'm a wine drinker). Deadline approaching? Trigger. Project complete? Major trigger. Golf on a beautiful day? Four-Star Trigger. You get the idea.
If we avoid these triggers rather than drink through them as we normally do, we miss opportunities for extinction. So maybe you binge drinkers are lucky in a way; you actually can ramp up a powerful trigger by "teasing" (as SR would say) and heightening the extinction effect. From what Dr. Sinclair said, I'm not clear this would work for us daily drinkers who haven't learned that as a trigger.
And you bingers thought we daily drinkers had all the luck!