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TygrBright

(20,755 posts)
10. Because people are different, and addiction is a very complex disease.
Wed Sep 26, 2018, 02:09 PM
Sep 2018

Addiction is complicated in so many ways- there are genetic vulnerabilities, brain changes related to trauma, exposure levels, cultural expectations, life experience, cultural differences that control behavior patterns, now we're even learning more about physiological factors related to various medication exposures, nutrition and more.

The substances and behavior patterns that form a person's 'active' disease phase vary widely as well. Alcohol is not opiates is not cocaine is not compulsion-satisfaction-released endorphins, and every person who struggles with addictive disease will have a different mix of substances and patterns to learn about and develop and practice recovery strategies for.

We're now also recognizing that addictive disease often co-occurs with other chronic brain disorders such as depression, anxiety, bipolar, various types of trauma, personality disorders, etc. And that the physiological and metabolic effects of long-term addictive disease can contribute to, appear as, and/or increase vulnerability to a whole raft of other chronic diseases including cardiovascular disease, cancer, etc., and those will change how the disease and recovery process plays out in an individual.

The extent of each individual's commitment to learning about their disease, the quality of information and treatment resources available to them, the opportunities to build knowledge and tools for the lifelong behavioral changes that recovery requires will also vary.

And finally, the ongoing support available, presence of relapse triggers, challenges to recovery, etc. will vary for each individual.

It's impossible to identify any ONE factor that controls why one individual achieves long-term stable recovery at a particular point, and another person has to keep trying, dealing with relapse, etc.

informatively,
Bright

I think part of it is the personality of the person themselves that seem to contribute ... SWBTATTReg Sep 2018 #1
I don't know, but it is the subject of quite a bit of research... TreasonousBastard Sep 2018 #2
Sober 24+ years now-cold turkey. Boxerfan Sep 2018 #3
Good job! shanti Jan 2019 #20
My experience is based on the fact Dyedinthewoolliberal Sep 2018 #4
Appologies in advance... Boxerfan Sep 2018 #5
No apology needed, or expected. Dyedinthewoolliberal Sep 2018 #11
Thanks for sharing... ADX Sep 2018 #8
This is exactly what my husband says. MuseRider Sep 2018 #9
The answer is deceptively simple... ADX Sep 2018 #6
Yes, living life in 24 hour increments Dyedinthewoolliberal Sep 2018 #12
Yes, but for me, to be totally honest..sometimes it is one minute at a time. Stuart G Sep 2018 #14
Believe me, I understand... ADX Sep 2018 #16
One minute stevil Feb 2019 #21
I think it is a combo of persistence plus family and friend heartaches caused by the addiction elfin Sep 2018 #7
yes, quoting from the Big Book Dyedinthewoolliberal Sep 2018 #13
Because people are different, and addiction is a very complex disease. TygrBright Sep 2018 #10
Thank You for your above post. Great information..k and r your post... Stuart G Sep 2018 #15
Thread winner. smirkymonkey Jun 2019 #22
Sober is a well known term, commonly no alcohol. Clean' is more complex I think irisblue Sep 2018 #17
I'm AA clean and sober 24 years (no mind altering, central nervouys system drugs) on 11/11/18 stuffmatters Nov 2018 #18
Message auto-removed Name removed Nov 2018 #19
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