Tuesday, September 7, 2010
What's Shameful About Alcohol Addiction?
Or, does it matter? These folks have decided that anonymity is primary, despite the fact that you'll "know" your fellow alcoholics quite personally over time, should you decide to keep coming back. Of course, you also need to come to grips with your own reality, in a sense, to enter such a meeting, because you have to identify yourself as an alcoholic. In this sense, your primary identity is obfuscated not by anonymity but by alcoholism; that, in essence, the drink is bigger than you. You have to realize this to get to another plateau: that you are powerless against alcohol, so that you may, in turn, supplant your powerlessness against alcohol with subservience to a higher power. Mary Karr did it in Lit, and she did so persuasively (at least to me). Others can do it too, but you have to swallow your own inability to be conceptually flexible about your identity. Not an easy task.
The identity concerns are troubling, but what to me is even more disturbing about AA is that I have not seen any reliable data as to how effective their 12-step actually is. It seems to me that the effectiveness of AA is treated as dogma: everyone simply assumes it's effective, and no one treats it as something that needs empirical verification.
ReplyDeleteYes, it leaves one to wonder about the level that shame plays in this equations.
ReplyDeleteIf you or someone you love is an alcoholic, don't wait another day to get the help you need. The benefits far outweigh the initial discomfort of easing your body off of its dependence upon alcohol. Get help at an alcohol rehab.
ReplyDeletealcoholism if one big problem http://www.aventadoor.blogspot.com/2012/08/guy-that-doesnt-drink-smoke-or-do-drugs.html
ReplyDeleteTreatment of alcoholism takes several steps.Because of the medical problems that can be caused by withdrawal, alcohol detoxification is carefully controlled.family intervention for addiction florida
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