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The Four Stages of Adolescent
and Young Adult Drug Use
Experimentation: Experimentation is defined as a "one
time event." Once intoxication is experienced, the experiment
is over. It is not a phase at all
Misuse: Misuse is
characterized as infrequent use for the purpose of intoxication.
The misusers are those who do not have a pattern of weekend or
weekday use, but use on social occasions such as dances, work
functions, "Spring Break," weddings, Super Bowl Sunday,
"420," Halloween, Graduation, New Year's, Etc. If consequences
occur for these individuals because of their drug use, they quit.
They don't try to manipulate drug tests, or lie to cover up their
use, they just simply quit. These individuals do not yet have
an emotional relationship to intoxication, though they still
might experience consequences, such as DUI's, sexual promiscuity,
fights, or even death.
Substance Abuse: Substance Abuse is characterized
by a pattern of use, such as weekends or during the week. It
is defined as using drugs despite negative consequences. Using
despite negative consequences is the result of a destructive
relationship with intoxication. Moreover, substance abuse is
an emotional illness.
The emotional illness of
substance abuse has many components:
1. The drug use circumvents the user from developing their own
internal skills to identify, express and cope with emotions.
This leads to an over reliance on the chemicals to cope with
emotions, i.e., boredom, anxiety, stress, depression, etc.
This is a part of the reason that so many early in sobriety experience
moodiness and report having a hard time dealing with boredom
and other emotions.
2. The drug use distorts
the user's emotions. We feel pain when we touch a hot stove so
that we don't burn ourselves to death. Pain is a built-in biological
safe guard for physical survival. We also have a safe guard for
our emotional, psychological, and spiritual survival. If we go
out to rob someone, we feel anxiety, guilt and shame. Those feelings
are our barometers letting us know that what we are about to
do is not healthy for us. However, in the stage of substance
abuse and addiction, the user loses that barometer and starts
to engage in lying, conning, manipulating, and even stealing
with an increasingly carefree attitude.
3. Values change: As the
relationship to intoxication increases, it becomes more important
than work, family, school, straight friends, sports or other
activities. And during this process, the user sees the change
not because of the use, but because of everyone else i.e., "My
wife overreacts" or "my parents are tripping
"
4. An emotionally trusting
relationship with the drug occurs as a result of 1 -3. The user
then protects their relationship to intoxication from any person
or system that tries to intervene. They also develop the "I
don't care" attitude.
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(contd.)
The final stage of use
is Addiction
The terms addiction, chemical dependency and alcoholism can all
be used interchangeably. The terms simply describe a person's
relationship (biological, psychological, and social) to intoxication.
If a person is addicted to one drug, then they are addicted to
drugs and alcohol altogether. The name of the chemical they are
using is only an illusion at this point. They use chemicals,
period. Whether it is marijuana, alcohol, or heroin that they
used last week, it is all the same. It is important to not minimize
and say "it is only alcohol." If a person has addiction
they need to be abstinent from all chemicals that create intoxication.
The symptoms of addiction
are: preoccupation, using despite negative consequences and loss
of control.
Preoccupation occurs when
the user is preoccupied with getting drugs, paying for drugs,
and protecting their relationship to drugs.
Using despite negative
consequences occurs when a person experiences a consequence from
their chemical use and they continue to use.
Finally, loss of control
occurs when a person sets limits on the amount of chemicals they
are going to use, and then they find themselves going beyond
that limit. For example, the user might buy a bag of marijuana
with the goal of making it last all week, but then find that
they have used it all in two days.
The user might go to parties
with the goal that they are only going to have 2 beers, but after
two beers they are still drinking. That is loss of control.
Primarily, addiction occurs
because of biology. Genetics and using at an early age when the
brain is still developing are the two biggest predictors for
addiction.
Genetics is the number
one predictor to determine if a person is going to have addiction.
This simply means that if a person comes from a biological family
history of alcoholism/addiction, then it is possible that they
have inherited that gene.
The age of first intoxication
is the second most reliable predictor to determine if a person
is going to have addiction. Drug use during brain growth and
development prior to age 18 significantly changes neurotransmission
in the brain, which can lead to dependency on drugs.
Finally, in 1956 the American
Medical Association classified addiction as a primary disease.
They stated that it has symptoms. It is progressive which means
that it only gets worse over time, and that it is can be fatal
if left untreated.
How is Your Recovery from
Enabling?
You have learned in the parent education class that sometimes
family member engage in enabling behaviors which detract from
allowing the user to experience the natural consequences of their
use.
Do you "rescue"
by:
Making excuses to your child's school for missed days
Finding yourself taking on more than your share of the household
responsibilities
Lying to family members to cover up for his/her drinking
Are you Stuffing Feelings
by:
Not showing or expressing your hurt or disappointment
Not letting him/her see how angry you are
Misdirecting your feeling about him/her at other family members
Do you still Tolerate intolerable
behaviors:
Not calling when he/she will be late
Not coming home all night
Ignoring growing levels of verbal and emotional abuse

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