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WELCOME to March, 2007 - 'NEWS OF HOPE'

We all want to be happy and have those around us be happy as well. However, as Lorraine E. Fox states, “Being ‘happy’ does not imply that we are without pain, or displeasure. Emotions are not either-or events. We can be both happy and sad: happy about some things, sad about others. It is an unreasonable expectation that our life be rid of pain and discomfort in order to be happy.” In other words, it is our reactions to the situations which life presents to us that will make us happy or sad.

Dwelling on the “bad” things and/or using substances to help us dull and deny our feelings of pain and sadness and/or turning a blind eye to events taking place amongst ourselves and our family and friends in order to protect ourselves from feeling more pain, disappointment and stress, is not the answer.

We can not deny ourselves the experiences which cause nor the feelings of pain, disappointment, angst, etc. Nor can we deny ourselves the right to happiness by accepting our situation and taking healthy steps to help heal ourselves and those we love. And most importantly, in many cases, we cannot deny ourselves the right to reach out and ask for help and guidance from others.

We hope that this month’s issue of LEGACY News of Hope will broaden your understanding of denial; what causes it, the things which we are denying, and how to push through the denial into an area of acceptance and remedy.

In this month's issue:
- The facts about denial
- New Study Finds that Rich Kids Use Drugs More than Poor Kids
- Denial: A Symptom of Alcoholism
- Learn more about Al-Anon and Alateen
- Addiction as a Disease, Not a Choice
- Learn more about Alcoholics Annonymous
- It's Not Too Late to Reverse the Damages of Addiction

Great insights from Past Newsletters

                       

The facts about DENIAL

Denial is the psychological process by which human beings protect themselves from things which threaten them by blocking knowledge of those things from their awareness. It is a defense which distorts reality; it keeps us from feeling the pain and uncomfortable truth about things we do not want to face. If we cannot feel or see the consequences of our actions, then everything is fine and we can continue to live without making any changes.

Denial comes in many forms. It is not just for chemical dependents either. If you are human, you have denial about something--your relationships, your behavior, your health, your family, etc. We all want everything to "be fine." We have denial to keep us from pain.

For persons who are chemically dependent, to keep their denial is to die. In the process, they create pain for those around them, and they have denial about that, too. To recover, they need to see their denial and see how it works so that they can loosen the grip of their addictions. Denial is replaced by the truth and acceptance. To be in denial feels like anger, fear, shame, and isolation. Instead of being cold and cut off from themselves and others, they can be warm and begin to grow again.

Defenses are the specific way we ward off attacks on our denial. Some defenses are conscious and we are aware of them. Others are subconscious. We use both to keep our denial intact. Listed below are common defenses, or forms of denial. We use all forms of denial, although there are some that become our favorites.

1. SIMPLE DENIAL: Simply denying being chemically dependent. Example: "You're an alcoholic." "No, I'm not."

2. MINIMIZING: Minimizing is admitting the alcohol-related problem to some degree but in such a way that it appears to be much less serious or significant than it actually is. "I wasn't that bad at the party," "Yes, I drink, but not that much," "I had a couple but I was OK to drive," "I only drink beer, not the hard stuff so it's not that bad."

3. RATIONALIZING: Rationalizing is making excuses or giving reasons to justify your behavior about your drinking or using. Examples: "I can't sleep, so I drink or use pills." "I had a hard day and was upset.” The behavior is not denied but an inaccurate explanation of its cause is given.

4. INTELLECTUALIZING or GENERALIZING: Intellectualizing is avoiding emotional, personal awareness of an alcohol-related problem by using theories about your chemical dependency, keeping it general and vague. "Are those breath machines really reliable? Just the other day I was reading about problems with them." "Lots of people have wine with meals, are they alcoholics

5. BLAMING: Blaming is maintaining that the responsibility for the behavior lies somewhere else, not with us. "You would drink too, if you were married to her!", "The cop was out to get me," or "I lost my job, that's what made me drink" are examples of blaming. The behavior is not denied, but its cause is placed 'out there', not within the person doing it.

6. DIVERSION: Diversion is changing the subject to avoid a subject that is felt to be threatening. A common example is responding with a joke, "You wouldn't expect me to walk in that condition, would you?" Other examples of diversion: "Yeah, I got drunk last night, so what's for dinner?"

7. BARGAINING: Bargaining is cutting deals or setting conditions for when things will be right to deal with the problem. Examples: "I'll quit drinking if you quit smoking." PASSIVITY: Passivity is ignoring the situation, or being it's victim. "I've tried to quit before, but it's stronger than me." "There's nothing I can do."

8. HOSTILITY: Hostility occurs when the person becomes angry or unpleasantly irritable when the subject of his drinking or using is mentioned, scaring or threatening people away from discussing it. A classic example is the situation where the drinker asserts that his wife does not mention that he drinks too much. In fact she used to mention it, but hasn't for years because every time she mentioned it in the past he got angry and they had a fight - so, she doesn't mention it any more.

Denial is automatic; it is not usually a matter of deliberate lying or willful deception. Most dependent people do not know what is true or false concerning their drinking or drug use and its consequences. The denial system distorts their perception and impairs their judgment so they become self-deluded and incapable of accurate self-awareness.

Denial is progressive. The denial system becomes increasingly more pervasive and entrenched as the illness of chemical dependency progresses. In the very early stages it is minimal, and with encouragement, such people can usually view their problem fairly realistically. However, by the time a person's illness is sufficiently advanced that the problem appears serious in the eyes of others, an elaborate system of defenses shields him/her from seeing what is really happening.
LEGACY offers many helpful resources ...

___________________________________________________________
It's time to stop denying it...rich kids are more likely to use drugs than poor.

Rich kids from Alameda and Contra Costa counties in California were more likely to use alcohol and other drugs than their peers from poor communities, according to data from California's Healthy Kids Survey.

The Contra Costa Times reported Feb. 19 that disposable income, disconnected families, and pressure to succeed all contribute to drug use among upscale youth, adding that parents in these communities add to the problem by denying that it occurs. "Perfection is very, very valued in affluent communities," noted Madeline Levine, author of "The Price of Privilege."

More affluent kids also can afford to buy fake IDs and can drive to places where they can pay someone to buy alcohol for them, experts note.

Binge drinking and past-month alcohol use among high-school juniors were more prevalent in richer areas of the East Bay than in less-affluent areas, according to the survey, and more juniors from rich towns admitted to having gotten high on drugs. "You can make some general assessments that affluent areas have higher alcohol and marijuana use," said Sean Slade, regional manager for the California Healthy Kids Survey.

Kids in affluent areas have lower alcohol and other drug use rates in the lower grades, but often catch up or surpass drug-use rates among poorer youth when they reach high school.
Some upscale communities have turned to "social host" laws to counter permissive attitudes among parents, some of whom believe it is better to allow their children to drink at home with friends than to go out and do it.

DENIAL: A Symptom of Alcoholism

                                                  One of the most frustrating factors in dealing with alcoholism, as a relative, friend or professional, is it is almost always accompanied by a phenomenon known as "denial."

In the long path the alcoholic takes toward mental, physical and moral decline, usually the first thing to go is honesty. He simply lies about his drinking. Little lies at first.

I only had two... I haven't had a drink in a week... I don't drink as much as he does...

As the alcoholic begins to drink more, and more often, he begins to hide this fact from those around him. Depending upon his circumstances he may drink openly, but usually he will conceal the amount he drinks, by not drinking around those who are closest to him.
 
If someone tries to discuss his drinking with him, he simply refuses to talk about it, or dismisses it as not a real problem.

After all, he's a big boy now and he can drink if he wants to, it's nobody else's business.

But these simple acts of denial, lying about his drinking or refusing to discuss it, are clues that the alcoholic himself deep down inside knows that he has a problem. If it's not a problem, why lie about it to anyone? To protect them?

But the true alcoholic, the person that has the disease, covers up and denies his drinking out of his own feelings that there is something different or "wrong" about it. Somewhere inside he realizes that his drinking means more to him that he is willing to admit.

As the disease progresses and his drinking begins to cause real problems in his life, remarkably the denial likewise increases. Even though his sprees have gotten him into some real trouble, he denies it has anything to do with his drinking. Some say this is purely a defense mechanism.

How is this possible? Usually by the time the disease has gotten to the crisis point, he has developed a support system of family and friends who unwittingly enable him to continue in his denial.
Because they love the affable, clever and witty alcoholic, they act to protect him by covering for him, doing the work that he doesn't get done, paying the bills that he doesn't pay, rescuing him from his scrapes with the law, and generally taking up the responsibilities he has abandoned.

Protecting the Alcoholic

He can't come in to work today, he's got a, er, virus... We've got to get him out of jail, he'll lose his job! Then what will we do... It was my fault, officer, I said some things I should not have said...
By doing these things, they are protecting the alcoholic from the consequences of his own actions. He never has to feel the real pain caused by his drinking. They rush in to put "pillows" under him so he doesn't hurt himself in the fall. Consequently, the alcoholic never finds out how it feels to fall.

Although drinking has placed him in a helpless and dependent position, the alcoholic can continue to believe he is still independent because he has been rescued from his troubles by his well-meaning family, friends, co-workers, employers and sometimes clergymen and counselors.

The roles these enablers play to "help" the alcoholic can be just as obsessive and harmful as the alcoholic's drinking, but that is a story for another day.

With these enabling devices in place, the alcoholic is free to continue in the progression of his disease, with his denial intact, until he perhaps reaches the point of hitting bottom, at which point even the most dedicated drinker must finally admit there is a problem. But there is no way for him to ever hit bottom when it's always covered with pillows.

-- www.about.com

Let Susie help break through to the truth....

 
              

Is your life affected by someone's drinking?

For over 50 years, Al-Anon (which includes Alateen for younger members) has been offering hope and help to families and friends of alcoholics. It is estimated that each alcoholic affects the lives of at least four other people... alcoholism is truly a family disease. No matter what relationship you have with an alcoholic, whether they are still drinking or not, all who have been affected by someone else’s drinking can find solutions that lead to serenity in the Al-Anon/Alateen fellowship

Click here to learn more!


http://r.vresp.com/?LEGACY/4bc366311a/845701/TEST/TESThttp://r.vresp.com/?LEGACY/4bc366311a/845701/TEST/TESThttp://r.vresp.com/?LEGACY/4bc366311a/845701/TEST/TEST
AVAILABLE ONLY AT LEGACY...
LEGACY offers more support to parents and teens --
* "52 Ways to Protect Your Teen" - this book by Susie Vanderlip is filled with insights, conversations and down-to-earth suggestions that improve parent-teen relations and communication

* "LEGACY OF HOPE" DVD - an hour and a half of Susie's live theatrical program to share and discuss with your children or students in a classroom. Undeniably unique, emotionally moving, and thought-provoking

* NEW! "LEGACY OF YOUTH" Self-Nurturing Line of products from LEGACY. In response to many requests from audience members, Susie now shares the purest, high-potency and physician-quality skincare line that she herself uses - BENEV - with you! Learn more on her sight...
All LEGACY PRODUCTS available here
Drug and alcohol addiction is a disease, not a choice!

                       What is drug addiction?

                         Addiction is defined as a chronic, relapsing brain disease that is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences. It is considered a brain disease because drugs change the brain - they change its structure and how it works. These brain changes can be long lasting, and can lead to the harmful behaviors seen in people who abuse drugs.

Is continued drug abuse a voluntary behavior?

The initial decision to take drugs is mostly voluntary. However, when drug abuse takes over, a person's ability to exert self control can become seriously impaired. Brain imaging studies from drug-addicted individuals show physical changes in areas of the brain that are critical to judgment, decisionmaking, learning and memory, and behavior control. Scientists believe that these changes alter the way the brain works, and may help explain the compulsive and destructive behaviors of addiction.

Why do some people become addicted to drugs, while others do not?

As with any other disease, vulnerability to addiction differs from person to person. In general, the more risk factors an individual has, the greater the chance that taking drugs will lead to abuse and addiction. "Protective" factors reduce a person's risk of developing addiction.

What factors determine if a person will become addicted?

No single factor determines whether a person will become addicted to drugs. The overall risk for addiction is impacted by the biological makeup of the individual - it can even be influenced by gender or ethnicity, his or her developmental stage, and the surrounding social environment (e.g., conditions at home, at school, and in the neighborhood).

Which biological factors increase risk of addiction?

Scientists estimate that genetic factors account for between 40 and 60 percent of a person's vulnerability to addiction, including the effects of environment on gene expression and function. Adolescents and individuals with mental disorders are at greater risk of drug abuse and addiction than the general population.

--National Institute on Drug Abuse

For more information


Do you or somebody you know need help? Information on A.A.
Alcoholics Anonymous® is a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength and hope with each other that they may solve their common problem and help others to recover from alcoholism. The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking. There are no dues or fees for AA membership; we are self-supporting through our own contributions. AA is not allied with any sect, denomination, politics, organization or institution; does not wish to engage in any controversy, neither endorses nor opposes any causes. Our primary purpose is to stay sober and help other alcoholics to achieve sobriety.
http://www.alcoholics-anonymous.org
 
It's NOT TOO LATE to reverse the damages caused by addiction!

Abstinence from drinking allows the brains of chronic drinkers to regenerate, and the sooner problem drinkers quit the more brain function they are liable to recover, Reuters reported Dec. 17.

Research has shown that heavy drinking can damage brain cells and hinder the growth of new brain cells. But a new study finds that the brain can repair itself if alcohol consumption stops. "The core message from this study is that, for alcoholics, abstinence pays off and enables the brain to regain some substance and to perform better," said researcher Andreas Bartsch of the University of Wuerzburg, Germany.

The researchers used brain scans to measure the volume, form, and function of the brains of 15 alcoholics before and after they stopped drinking. The seven-week study found that brain volume increased an average of 2 percent within 38 days of quitting.

The study subjects also did better on concentration and attention tests. "The human brain, and particularly its white matter, seems to possess genuine capabilities for re-growth," Bartsch said. 

 
LEGACY OF HOPE PROGRAMS FOR SCHOOLS, COMMUNITIES, CONFERENCES AND CHURCHES

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Also, please forward this newsletter to friends, colleagues, parents, and others who might find this information useful. Help us carry our message of hope and healing.

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