Addiction

The first stepAddiction is a hard thing to face and to deal with, but the first step to handling your addiction or helping someone handle their own, is admitting to yourself that you have one. If you are in denial about the fact that you are addicted to something, any effort anyone makes to help you no matter how huge, will not help or even work. So taking a good look into your life and the choices you make are the best way to see if an addiction is what you actually have. And if you decide from these looks into your life that you actually do have one, you have a few choices. You can ignore the fact that you may drive your life into a hole with you bad habits. You can try to fix it yourself without telling anyone, living in the darkness so no one sees what is going on. Or you can admit to someone you have a problem and from there seek professional help. Here are a few facts and tips on how to handle an addiction.Addiction was at first thought to be purely related to drugs, alcohol and tobacco. However this has changed in the past years to include a multitude of other things as well. Some of the other things people have been known to be addicted to pornography, sex, food, gambling, video games, work, exercise, cutting, shoplifting, etc. These different addictions are accompanied by feelings of guilt, fear, failure, rejection, humiliation, anxiety, shame, hopelessness and all around depression.Trying to help someone with an addiction is hard. Especially when they are not in tune with what they are doing wrong and they think you are just being mean. This is referred to as denial. This is always a hard stage to work around, because they will keep finding some way to weasel out of the truth in their mind. This is also a very immature way of dealing with a problem. If you have a friend who is in denial, just bare with it and know that you cannot make them see what they do not want to see. Hopefully they will come around I the end.If you are not the one who has the addiction, but someone has come forth to you admitting their problem, the first thing you can tell them is that everything is going to be ok and that you will be there with them through the entire process of ending it. Also, give them a few looks into what their life is going to be like without that addiction dragging them down all the time. At this point, what you need to do is get them to a counselor or if needed, into a rehabilitation center.There are quite a few different rehab centers in the world. Each one comes with their own specific set of rules and guidelines. You will want to find one that fits that persons needs. For instance, if your friend has a tendency to run from their problems, then an in/out center is probably not a good idea. These allow their patients to leave unattended whenever they want. If they just need some counseling, then finding a temporary center or a daytime group might be the best way to go. If you go to www.usdrugrehabcenters.com you will be able to find a center that meets and succeeds the qualifications you are looking for.If you notice that their problem has gotten the better of them and denial has gotten so bad that they see what they are doing as the right thing then maybe it is time for you to take the extra step. This can be a really hard thing to do, but it has to be done in some cases. You may have to get the law involved and get them admitted to a rehab clinic without their say. This can cause a problem between you and whoever this is happening to, but in the long run they will thank you.

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