7 “SLOGAN-FREE” Tips
“Tough love” and “let them hit bottom” DID NOT make the list. As our country fights through the “opioid crisis” we see the limitations of an addiction treatment system that came of age in the 1970’s. Today families need as much help as we can give them. Here are a few tips for families dealing with addiction.
(Note: in reality it is addiction crisis not an “opioid crisis”-but the opioid narrative works better for the press. The narrative being that evil pharmaceutical companies got middle class white kids addicted. Addicted and everyone started to die etc…)
These limitations are most evident in the strange phenomenon of recovery slogans that seem to guide healthcare/addiction treatment policy.
Slogans such as “wait until they hit bottom” or “he is in denial” or “these addicts have to want recovery ”.
One Size Fits All
Generated out of mutual support recovery groups, these sayings guide everything from insurance reimbursement to one-size fits all treatment models.
Some slogans are probably grounded and based in fact.
All slogans are generated from a place of wanting to help. But they should not be applied universally and they are not adequate in terms of guiding healthcare policy.
The lack of evidence supporting many abstinence only treatment models is stunning.
The lack of accountability in the industry is baffling.
The unwillingness of some programs to adopt evidence-based models is probably illegal. Certainly unethical.
M.A.T. Resistant
The most glaring example is the lack of acceptance, as well as those being resistance to medication assisted treatment (M.A.T.).
I’m not one of the M.A.T. zealots. I do not promote M.A.T. as the only acceptable treatment for opioid use disorder (that mentality is just as problematic as the current abstinence only model).
However, M.A.T. is an option that is systematically suppressed and ignored by many treatment providers. The only logical conclusion: slogans are taken more seriously than research.
Slogan Driven
Families are also subject to slogan driven “professional” help.
Unfortunately, the slogan-based model has been extended into professional work with family members. Family members looking for information related to addiction are met with their own version of one size fits all treatment.
Family members are labeled enablers and co-dependents.
They are told “you are loving your child to death”. They are told “let them hit bottom”.
OF COURSE THEY ARE TOLD “YOU NEED TO START PRACTICING TOUGH LOVE”.
90% Never Get Help
Most family members, like most people in addiction, run from professional advice and recoil from this approach.
We know that 90% of those in need of addiction treatment never get help.
I would argue even more than 90% of families in need never get help.
They vote with their feet. Also, they don’t come back.
They can’t tolerate the professional judgement. They can’t tolerate being chastised for their “enabling behavior”.
What Does Work
The concept of “working on yourself” is also difficult for families to grasp. In our Family Recovery Groups at FAVOR Greenville we spend a lot of time on this issue.
- We know there is validity to the idea of family members focusing on themselves.
- Too often, family members are automatically told: “you’re sick too” and “you need to detach”.
- These ideas have a place in the family recovery process, however, they should not be mechanically applied to every situation.
- Furthermore, there is a matter of timing to the conversation.
- You want the family to stay engaged in the process. Don’t chase them away with this type of label.
- When someone comes to realize the seriousness of their loved one’s substance use, they are confused and terrified. They are looking for expert advice. That advice should be grounded in sound theory, research and compassion.
- We also need to over-emphasize the importance of individualized family interventions.
- We need to understand how the structure of each individual family influences the approach we take with that particular family.
Opioid Use Disorder
For example, there is a big difference between talking to the wife of a 40 year old struggling with alcohol and the mother of a 20 year old with opioid use disorder.
Say it again for the people in the back of the room:
There is a big difference between talking to the wife of a 40 year old struggling with alcohol and the mother of a 20 year old with opioid use disorder.
Cultural Context
Detachment and tough love were developed in the 1950’s to help wives deal with alcoholic husbands.
These ideas made sense in that cultural context. They made sense in the context of a married couple.
Wives should not over protect and rescue husbands. It is not healthy. It is not natural.
Natural For Parents
However, parents are certainly going to react in a protective manner. It is natural for parents to try to rescue kids. Especially young adults.
The impulse to control and fix is natural. It’s not pathological to want to rescue your child. It is biologically hardwired into you as a mother or father.
You are compelled at an instinctual level to “save your child”.
When people dismiss you out of hand and scoff at your desire to help they are being short-sighted. They are demonstrating a fundamental lack of understanding.
When people tell you to detach and “kick the bum out” they are being cruel and engaging in classic “do as I say not as I do” behavior. These good people would not follow their own knee-jerk advice. If we were to reverse the roles.
What About Rescuing
Rescuing can, however, become counter-productive. Rescuing and ignoring bad behavior can enable the addicted individual to engage in ongoing self-destructive behaviors. In addition, you are going to personally self-destruct.
You can only handle so many sleepless nights and anxiety filled days.
I know what it is like to find yourself in the worry cycle.
That endless path of chasing scenario after scenario. All the “what ifs”.
Impact of Stress
The negative impacts of stress on the physical health is documented very well.
Up to 70 serious health conditions are directly caused or exacerbated by chronic stress. The addiction will take you out as quick as it will take out your loved one.
This is why people say: “work on yourself”.
The added bonus is, as you work on yourself, you increase the likelihood of change in your loved one.
Family Systems Theory
The family is a system; changing one part of a system influences all other parts of the system.
Family systems theory holds that individual family members fall into predictable roles and serve particular functions within the larger family system.
In addition, the family system (indeed any system) exists to preserve itself.
Unless acted upon by a strong internal or external force the system will proceed down the path of collective destruction. Given this reality, it is self-evident then that any individual part of that system could impact the system as a whole. This means the addicted individual will need to adjust to changes in any other part of the system.
Therefore, when in doubt. Work on yourself. It seems to me that all family recovery addresses three interrelated issues: Anxiety, Worry, and Chronic Stress. Focus on positive actions that reduce anxiety, worry and stress.
Helpful and Healthy Suggestions:
Become part of a group. We are social creatures.
You don’t even need to enjoy the content of the group. Just being around people with similar struggles will prove uplifting.
The benefits of group are clear:
- Universality — you realize you are not alone
- Altruism — you get to help others
- Imitative Behavior — you hear from others who have gone through the same thing and
- Develop Coping Skills — more adaptive responses.
- Instillation of Hope — Perhaps the most powerful factor
The “FREE THREE”
Practice the “FREE THREE”. Easily accessible activities which have proven to reduce stress:
- Go outside, take a walk
- Listen to your favorite music
- Smile and laugh
Do something fun for yourself. Something meant for entertainment.
All for fun and not work related.
Prayer and meditation. Regardless of your personal beliefs we know that prayer and meditation have positive impact on neurobiological pathways.
The Confidant
Find a confidant. One to one. Sometimes you can’t share at group level and having a one to one relationship can be invaluable.
This could be a therapist, a sponsor, or a coach.
Eliminate toxic people from your life. You have no time for people who drag you down.
Eliminate judgmental people.
And Most Important. –
RESIST THE TEMPTATION TO ISOLATE. ISOLATION FEEDS DEPRESSION.
Isolation makes everything worse.
Some people think it is the main cause of depression, not serotonin.
Get outside, go visit someone. Try to do your life despite your despair.
Give it try… trust me.