Posts Tagged 'alcohol problem'

C.A.G.E – a short test for alcohol problems.

The Cage Test is a short screening test for alcohol problems.

This test asks questions about the problems associated with excessive use of alcohol.  Two “YES” answers indicate that a more extensive evaluation may be needed to determine the nature and extent of your problems with alcohol.
 

C – Have you ever felt you should cut down on your drinking?

A – Have people annoyed you by criticizing your drinking?

G – Have your ever felt bad or guilty about your drinking?

E – Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning, and eye opener, to steady your nerves or to get rid of a hangover?

 
If you answered “yes” to two or more of these items, please consider making a decision to empty your glass and fill your life with new purpose.  Contact a substance abuse program or counselor, or a qualified psychotherapist who is skilled in working with substance use concerns.  
Yes, you can.

Happy Independence Day

As we celebrate Independence Day for our country,

take a step toward personal celebration…

and ending your own dependence on alcohol or drugs!

Much is made of the capacity to manage one’s life independently, but so many people find themselves struggling with their dependence on alcohol or drugs and sometimes lose confidence in their own inner strength.   

At its most extreme consequence, alcohol and drug dependence can rob one of friends, family, purpose and promise, until the person ceases to understand or accept the terrible price others may have paid for caring about them and trying to be loving and supportive even when the addiction turned cruel.

If you are questioning your own use of alcohol or drugs, and think that just maybe the people who have suggested it’s a significant problem are right, why not seek a professional opinion?  Call a qualified therapist today, and begin the process of exploring and illuminating your lifestyle choices and their impact on you and on the people in your life. 

Climb out of the depth of your addiction and reclaim your life.  Your therapist and the people who still care about you will believe in you until you can believe in yourself.

YES YOU CAN. 

 

 

 

 

Out with the old?

  Every year I see several new clients just before – or after – the New Year holiday. Usually there is a complex mixture of hope and regret in the initial meetings. 

Several years ago a young woman came in for her first session several days after the parties were all over, and revealed her betrayal of her lover by enticing him into a menage a trois then pointedly rejecting only him when things progressed to nakedness.  She’d completed the act with her lover’s friend while taunting her partner, revelling in hurting him.  Later she realized how very hateful it had been and now wanted to talk about her unforgivable behavior. 

Similarly a male client requested an appointment before the New Year’s Eve celebration, wanting help in avoiding the repetition of his indiscrete behavior at an office party the year before.  He had drunkenly danced as if at a night club, seriously damaging his promotional opportunities.

In both cases, the over-use of alcohol had been a prominent feature the loss of judgement.  Both clients wanted to talk about how to change their behavior in these kinds of circumstances so that they could maintain their self-control and be more cognizant of their behavior as well as their impact on others. 

First we needed to do a thorough assessment of each client’s alcohol abuse, and to develop and try some strategies for abstinence (for her) and harm reduction (for him).  Then with each client I began to address the memories, hopes, fears, and intentions that emerged in our many conversations.  More than a year later each client felt more aware of and in control of their impulses.  The young woman even thought she might be ready to apologize to her former lover for her betrayal.

If you or someone you love is in need of support and encouragement to make meaningful personal changes, it could be that a few simple New Year’s resolutions won’t go far enough.  Consider contacting a therapist, and engaging in the process of achieving meaningful and lasting change that could help you to build and maintain relationships in both your personal and your professional life.

And may you have a happier new year, all through the year, in 2011. 

Poor Me!

Poor me.

                   POUR ME!

Alcohol addiction, if you are struggling for sobriety,  is a formidable adversary.  Something that will make your battle more difficult is to have an attitude of entitlement.  Yes, you may have experienced some serious losses due to your drinking, and you deserve empathy and warm wishes as you confront your painful and even damaging behavior.  It is not helpful to your recovery however, or to your rebuilding of relationships, if you keep the perspective of having been “deprived” of your rightful privileges and possessions.  In fact, if you have lost people dear to you and possessions you worked hard for, it may be more helpful to accept that you traded them away in return for “that feeling.”  The loss of meaning and positive self-regard, through neglect, distraction and deceit is painful to accept.  Only through acceptance of our own frailty can we hope to re-build a whole and wholesome self.  All else is simply a flight into health; and short-lived at that.

Recovery can be an arduous process if properly done.  Try not to run before you can walk.

If you want to fly, take the time to grow wings.

 

Yes.  You can.

Do you have a drinking problem? Use this quick test to find out.

This post is being republished due to recent conversations I’ve had both in and outside of my office.

Do you drink alcohol?  If so, do you manage it easily and safely, or do you have a drinking problem? Social drinking (no more than 2 drinks a day for men and 1 drink a day for women) is widely practiced and accepted, and according to some researchers even may reduce the risk of coronary disease.  A “drink” should be considered as 12 ounces of beer, 5 ounces of wine or 1.5 ounces (one shot) of liquor. Many people however have a problem with alcohol that threatens their health, relationships and employment, and may endanger or distress other people.  Counting drinks on a daily basis may not give you a clear understanding of the impact of alcohol in your life or on others around you, so along with counting drinks a broader view is necessary.  Some signs of problems drinking include: Becoming moody or argumentative after drinking; Drinking more for the same effect; Drinking alone; Drinking to cope with issues such as loneliness, or discontent with ones partner or job; Drinking to ward  off depression or anxiety; Mishandling daily affairs or relationships; Forgetting events that occur while drinking; Discovering that former friends are staying away from you because of your drinking.

The Alcohol Use Disorders Indentification Test (AUDIT) was developed by the World Health Organiztion of provide a simple screening tool.  It can be used by anyone to help decide if you or someone you know might need a more thorough assessment for problem drinking.

To take the AUDIT  just answer each question with the honest number of 1, 2, 3 or 4 (**questions #9 and #10 can be scored only with a zero, a two or a four).  Remember, not being honest with yourself as you answer the questions may be a sign that you have a drinking problem you are afraid to face.

1.  How often do you have a drink containing alcohol? 0 (never)/1 (monthly or less)/2 (two to three times per month)/3 (two to three times per week)/ 4 (four or more times per week) 

2. How many drinks do you have on a typical day when you are drinking? 0 (none)/ 1 (one or two)/ 2 (three or four)/ 3 (five or six)/ 4 (seven to nine) ** Score 5 points if your response is ten or more drinks on a typical day.

3.How often do you have more than three drinks (women) or more than five drinks (men) on one occasion.  0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

4. How often during the last year have you found that you were unable to stop drinking once you had started? 0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

5. How often during the last year have you failed to do what was expected from you [not going to work or school, ignoring relationship, medical or legal expectations] because of drinking? 0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

6. How often during the last year have you needed a first drink in the morning to get yourself going after a heavy drinking session? 0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

7. How often during the last year have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse [for your behavior or for drinking itself) after drinking? 0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

8. How often during the last year have you been unable to remember what happened the night before because you had been drinking? 0 (never)/ 1 (less than monthly)/ 2 (monthly)/ 3 (weekly)/ 4 (daily or almost daily)

9. Have you or someone else been injured [intentional or not, self-inflicted or from another] as a result of your drinking [and/or while drinking]?  0 (never)/ (no score of “1″ -skip to score two)/2 (yes, but not in the last year)/ (no score of “3″- skip to score 4)/ 4 (yes, during the last year)

10. Has a relative, doctor or other health worker been concerned about your drinking or suggested you cut down? 0 (never)/ (no score of “1″ -skip to score two)/2 (yes, but not in the last year)/ (no score of “3″- skip to score 4)/ 4 (yes, during the last year)

Add up the numbers for the ten questions to get your score.  A score of 8 or more indicates possible problem drinking and the need for a more thorough assessment.  If your score indicates the need for an assessment, you should consult a qualified health provider to discuss your drinking and the possible treatments that are available to you.   If your total score is less than eight but more than four, it would be advisable to consider how you are using alcohol, and ask someone close to you if they believe you are a problem drinker.  If your score is less than four, you are probably using alcohol responsibly, and can simply be mindful of any changes in your use or in the results of your drinking.

Drunk? And starving yourself too?

A new medical and behavioral condition has been identified by The Eating Disorder Center of Denver.  They call it

DRUNKOREXIA          Seriously.

Drunkorexia, is mostly experienced by  young women and is characterized by their uncontrollable habit of starving themselves all day to save the calories that they will then take in through the alcohol they drink later.  Food is typically shunned all day and drinking starts in the afternoon and continues into the night.   If these young women do eat (usually only nominal amounts), then they also will purge either through intentional vomiting or more often through the involuntary vomiting associated with severe intoxication.   They continuously lose weight while they habitually drink until intoxicated.

Many of these women are also suffering from the influence and emotional intimidation both of general society as well as their husbands or partners.  They tragically try to conform to the distorted “photoshopped” images of waif-like girls that dominate female images in our social media, often because a male partner taunts them with jibes about being overweight.

And while men report drinking similar amounts of alcohol to women, the frequency of “binge” drinking is higher among women.  The National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders reports that 72% of women who are addicted to alcohol also have an eating disorder!

If you can take a clear look at your life, and at your drinking behavior, and if you can see that you too are continuously starving yourself — losing weight to “look good” for someone – while you drink your life away in loneliness and despair, then it’s time for you to make an appointment with a qualified therapist.  Begin today to re-claim both your natural beauty and your independence from alcohol.  

Re-claim your life.                                                                      

For more information on this critical issue, and on the Eating Disorders Center of Denver, visit this link:  http://tiny.cc/EgMMR.

 

T-ACE: Test your drinking behavior

Happy New Year???

Have you resolved to reduce your drinking?

Many people have a holiday season filled with a little (or a lot) too much alcohol.  Perhaps there was a round of parties, each more “wet” than the next.  Or maybe it was a quiet holiday season, with time at home – maybe with just a few family or friends – and plenty of time to sip your way through the week.

But it’s happened before, and each time you ask yourself if it’s time to seriously cut back.

Here’s a quick and easy screening test to see if you may have a problem with alcohol.

The T-ACE Test is composed of only 4 questions, but has proved useful in diagnosing alcohol problems in both men and women.

T - Does it TAKE more than 3 drinks to make you feel high?

A - Have you ever been ANNOYED by people’s criticism of your drinking?

C - Are you trying to CUT DOWN on drinking?

E - Have you ever used alcohol as an EYE OPENER in the morning?

A “yes” answer to any two of these four questions is an indication of possible alcohol abuse or alcohol dependence.

** Remember:  as with all screening tests, a more in-depth evaluation is needed if there is an indication you may have a problem.  If you answered even one question with a “yes” it may be time for you to consider talking to a professional therapist about what’s going on in your life and to get support in deciding whether you need more focused help with reducing or eliminating your alcohol use.

Make your Happy New Year a decision, not a question.                                


Falling Off of the Wagon…

… is easy.  Remember, it’s moving!! 

So you have to hold on.  And that can be hard.

How many times have you promised yourself that you would cut back your drinking after a particularly dramatic event that was embarrassing or humiliating for you?  Or perhaps for someone who you say you care about?  Have you left someone emotionally wounded with hateful words or actions?   Perhaps you don’t even know… can’t remember, but have a vague sense that you have hurt someone beyond measure by saying or doing the meanest thing you could think of at the time.  

Or maybe you have wounded yourself with injuries self-inflicted accidentally or purposely while intoxicated beyond control?  Because Life is not static, not fixed in a moment in time or in memory, it’s important to remain resilient and determined to meet each day’s challenges with an intentional and positive attitude, including when your personal challenge is alcohol addiction.  Many clients have told me the old not-so funny joke – with a wry yet sad smile on their faces:  “Yes, I’ve stopped drinking.  Many times!” 

If this is true for you, then start work to realize the truth of your addiction and your destruction of your own life and the lives of those you claim to hold dear.  Seek help to accept this truth, confront it and ultimately to overcome it so that you can transform it into another more enlightened, joyous, productive and loving truth. 

You will see the change in the eyes and hear it in the voices of the people you know and meet.

And, you will see it in your own eyes when you look into the mirror.

Reclaim your life, and also the love of those around you.

 Yes You Can.



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