Why Is ALCOHOLISM So Difficult To Treat?
Susan Adams
Sept. l5, 2009
Article Objective: The purpose of this article is to help
readers understand why alcoholism is so difficult to treat and
to offer some suggestions for aiding recovery.
Alcoholism can be very difficult to treat because the
pleasurable effects of alcohol precede the negative effects. In
addition, alcohol becomes a coping tool and alcoholics, because
of their marriage to the bottle, place themselves outside of the
family. Once sober, it becomes very difficult to get back in.
Chemical
Effects
Many people are more married to the bottle than to their
partner. The consistent use of alcohol creates an emotional as
well as a physical dependency. This is because the initial
response to drinking is pleasurable as the alcohol pushes the
brain to release the chemicals that cause one to feel pleasure.
The s Serotonin that the alcohol pushes the brain to release and
the Norepinephrine as well leave the drinker in a state of
well-being or euphoria that does not last past the hour or so
after that drink was consumed. Thus, the drinker takes another
drink and another, depleting his brain of all the "feel good"
chemicals.
The "hang over" is the response to what happens when the "feel
good" chemicals are gone. The drinker wakes up the next morning
feeling badly--shaky-depressed-anxious--has very often slept
poorly. He thinks he needs another drink. The cycle starts
again.
What is actually happening is that the brain has given up its
Serotonin and Norepinephrine and is now in a depleted state.
The body must now agitate itself to try to replenish the supply
of those chemicals. This is the agitation and irritability we
see with people who drink regularly and in quantity. In
addition, a mild depression gets started that would not be
noticed unless the drinker gave up the substance for at least a
month. Sleep patterns also get disrupted and anxiety sets in as
well which is part of the agitation.
So, the first issue is that drinkers feel GOOD before they feel
BAD and when they start to feel badly, they take another drink.
Coping Mechanism
It is well documented in the alcohol literature that people
generally stop maturing emotionally at the age where they began
to drink seriously. This is because the alcohol becomes a
crutch. When they are upset, sad, happy, or the dog pees on the
rug, they take a drink. Thus, they don't learn the skills of
asking for what they want or voicing objections. This puts them
in a state of frustration and they are apt to treat the
frustration with another drink.
Family Dynamics
Many alcoholics or problem drinkers, think that the cessation of
the drinking will stop the problems. It certainly enables the
problems to be addressed. However, just stopping the drinking
leaves the door to relapse wide open because new skills are not
learned.
People who drink excessively have taken themselves out of the
family. They are relating to the bottle but not to the people
with whom they live. So, when the problem drinker stops
drinking, they are out of things. The family is running without
them.
This means that the kids are using the other parent for issues
of permission and advice. They see the drinker as "incompetent"
and it is impossible to parent from an incompetent position.
The sober parent has been running things and resents the
intrusion of the drinker after all this time.
Believe it or not, the sober parent may actually try consciously
or unconsciously to push the drinker back to the bottle.
How to Help
First, exercise is key to any sobriety program. The Serotonin
has got to be replenished in the brain and this takes time.
Usually, for problem drinkers, it takes at least six months to
begin to feel really good. "Really good" means an absence of
anxiety, better sleep, and optimism.
AA meetings are very important. Someone who has problems with
alcohol needs to find new friends and new activities where there
is not alcohol.
Many people don't want to go to AA. They find it embarrassing.
However, by the third or Fourth meeting it usually begins to be
rewarding as they meet people who have conquered the problems
they are experiencing or are at least working on it as they are.
Family Counseling is an important part of recovery. It is hard
on the spouse as the drinker gets more functional and wants to
participate in ways that they have not done before or not for a
long time. The drinker needs to go slowly and make amends in
the family and accept inclusion slowly. This is a prime time
when there may be a relapse.
The children need to come to understand how the parent who
drank sees things and make attempts to be inclusive of that
parent. The children are often fearful of relapses or repeat
rages which might have accompanied the old drinking..
Children from such families experience disappointments in unkept
promises--the drinker "forgot" or was drinking---they experience
unpredictability. Someone who has a history of drinking
excessively needs to go out of their way to make amends to those
that he or she hurt.
The rewards for the healing of drinking problems are enormous.
They signal in families, that bad things can be survived. It
takes work, courage, and commitment. It can happen!