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Archive for the ‘Alcohol Abuse’ Category
Monday, February 11th, 2008
So you’re looking for a private alcohol rehab center in Los Angeles. And you don’t know where to turn. Don’t worry, you’re not alone. The sheer number of alcohol rehab centers in California overwhelms many prospective alcohol rehab patients, and leads some to assume that one alcohol rehab program must be more or less the same as the next one. But that’s simply not the case. The truth is that one alcohol rehab center can vary very greatly from the next, and that only by finding a rehab facility that’s right for you can you expect to get sober for good. In fact, there’s really no other way for healing to happen.
Alcohol abuse is a personal problem. Luxury alcohol rehabilitation in Malibu or anywhere else has to pose a personal solution to it. Alcohol rehab is invariably an intimate process. To that end, the alcohol rehab center that’s right for you is the one that feels most like home. You really can beat alcoholism, provided you get support from caregivers you can trust. For your own sake, let today be the day you finally make the right choice.
Posted in Alcohol Rehab Center, Alcohol Rehabilitation, Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Rehab |
Thursday, January 31st, 2008
Private alcohol rehabs don’t work miracles. Even the most exclusive alcohol rehabilitation facility in Los Angeles can’t heal patients who won’t walk through the front door. And that’s why interventions are so important in the alcohol rehab process. A successful intervention can give an alcoholic the strength and courage he or she needs to enroll in a California alcohol rehab program. In the end, nothing could ever be more important than that. All journeys start with a first step. Luxury alcohol rehabilitation is no exception. Only those alcohol abusers who entrust their care to alcohol rehabs can ever realistically hope to get sober for good.
The bottom line here is that there’s no excuse not to act if someone you care about is a victim of alcohol dependency. The right Malibu alcohol rehab facility can make a world of difference…provided it’s given an opportunity to do so. Again, alcohol rehabs can only help those patients who are willing to be helped. The intervention process can create that will, first and foremost by showing alcoholics the extent of their problems. Remember, alcohol recovery has to start with honesty. For your own sake, for the sake of the alcoholic you care about…it’s well past time you started telling the truth.
Posted in Alcohol Rehabilitation, Sober, Alcohol Abuse, Alcoholism, Alcohol Rehab, Intervention |
Tuesday, January 15th, 2008
Private alcohol rehab never works by accident. On the contrary, alcohol rehabilitation is a delicate art form, and the only successful California alcohol rehabs are those which bring a genuine measure of expertise to the craft. There are to, say the least, a great many “exclusive” alcohol rehab facilities in Los Angeles. But they aren’t all capable of helping their patients get sober. Remember, there is no substitute for personal attention in the alcohol rehab process. If you’re going to get better, it’s going to be because you find an alcohol rehabilitation program that serves each and every one of your individual needs. Anything less than that simply won’t get the job done.
There are no guarantees in alcohol rehab. Unfortunately, many prospective patients let themselves be awed by the promises of “luxury” alcohol rehabilitation facilities. For your own sake, don’t take advertisements at face value. Do your homework. Learn what you need to learn to make an informed, intelligent decision. Nothing you do will ever be more important.
Posted in Alcohol Rehab Center, Alcohol Rehabilitation, Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Rehab |
Saturday, September 15th, 2007
Alcohol rehab is no walk in the park. Some private alcohol rehab programs in California would have you believe otherwise, but that doesn’t change the truth. No alcohol rehab program is ever easy…not even at the most exclusive alcohol rehab facility in Los Angeles. Yes, context matters, and it’s important that you find an alcohol rehab center that’s “right” for you. But remember: You’re the one in charge, in the end. You can only beat alcoholism if you’re willing to stand and fight it. If alcohol rehab is going to work for you, in other words, you’re going to have to work for alcohol rehab.
At Cliffside Malibu, alcohol rehab is all about empowerment. Yes, our luxury alcohol rehabilitation facilities offer the best care money can buy, but we’re more concerned with helping our patients learn to help themselves. Alcohol rehab that works, after all, is alcohol rehab that promotes healing from the inside-out. Ultimately, the only one who controls your fate is you. Your alcohol rehab program needs to help you do just that.
Posted in Rehab Center, Alcohol Rehabilitation, Alcohol Abuse |
Monday, July 30th, 2007
At Cliffside Malibu, we use yoga as an important tool in reshaping the body, mind and soul of our residents. It is used both as a physical exercise and as a spiritual exercise in mediation, thus enhancing the body and the spirit. Many clients find that yoga is an effective technique for coping with stresses that might otherwise lead to drugs or alcohol. Our yoga instructor stretches your muscles and your soul, resulting in a healthier body, more focused thinking, and less stress.
We encourage residents to maintain a yoga regiment when their time at Cliffside is done. Regular yoga exercises and meditation offer lower blood pressure and permanent stress reduction - two very important considerations for the newly recovered.
Posted in Anxiety, Depression, Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Rehab, Drug Treatment |
Saturday, July 28th, 2007
Some things are worth every penny. Luxury alcohol rehab is certainly one of them. Luxury alohol rehab saved my life, if you really want to know: helped me succeed where I’d failed so many times before. Luxury alcohol rehab worked for me after it had long since seemed like nothing ever would. If you give it a chance, it’ll do the same thing for you.
Luxury alcohol treatment is different than normal alcohol treatment. It just is. The plain truth is that we live in a world where money buys excellence…and the difference between luxury rehab and normal rehab is one of degree as much as of kind. Luxury rehab, like I said, saved my life: saved me from Myself, gave me the tools and support I needed to quit drinking for good. Normal rehab didn’t do it for me, not in any of the three times I tried to make it work. Finally, after I tried and tried and I tried, I gave luxury alcohol treatment a chance. And it was the best decision I ever made.
Luxury alcohol recovery isn’t cheap; I won’t try to mislead you about that. Again, though, some things are worth every penny. Luxury rehab that works gives you your life back, and helps you rediscover the world as you used to know it. In the end, it’s hard to imagine how anyone could ever put a price tag on that.
Posted in Alcohol Abuse, Alcohol Rehab, Alcohol Treatment |
Thursday, July 26th, 2007
With the creation of injectable drugs such as morphine and it’s refined
version, heroin abuse became widespread during the later part of
the 19th century, and the beginning of the 20th century. Prescribed by
doctors and pharmacists for a variety of ailments, and hawked as a
cure-all by traveling salesman and con men, the use of heroin, and other
narcotics grew rapidly.
Little was really known at the time about the dangers of heroin
abuse, as at the time it was considered a “safer, non-addictive” form of
morphine. With a large part of the population using heroin, abuse
and addiction were beginning to spread across the nation in epidemic
proportions. By 1903, there were thousands addicted and heroin
abuse was now considered a national problem.
In 1920, Congress made the sale of heroin and other like narcotics
illegal, and placed stricter control on their distribution. And by 1923,
The U.S. Treasury Department’s newly formed Narcotics Division, had
officially began the war on drugs by banning all legal narcotics sales.
With the closure of these shops the street dealer was born. In 1924, The
Heroin Act was signed into law, making the manufacture, and possession
of heroin illegal. It would be too little, too late, as by 1925, there
were an estimated 200,000 people addicted just to heroin. Heroin abuse was
here to stay.
Today, in the 21st century, heroin abuse is still
prevalent, and the “war on drugs” continues. As long as there’s
addictive narcotics like heroin, abuse and addiction will always be
right behind.
Posted in Alcohol Abuse, Substance Abuse, Drug Abuse |
Thursday, July 26th, 2007
Group therapy is an opportunity to explore and learn a variety of things about oneself that are otherwise difficult to access. In a group setting a person can learn more about how they react in relationships, personal boundaries and limit-setting tools, developing empathy for self and others, and building self-esteem. Group therapy is also an opportunity for individuals to hear other people’s struggles with alcohol/drugs, which can help with feeling of isolation and loneliness.
Posted in Alcohol Abuse, Group Therapy, Substance Abuse |
Thursday, July 26th, 2007
The problem of drug use and abuse is not a new one, society has dealt
with drug use and abuse for centuries. From the early Egyptians use of
wine, to the Chinese’s use of marijuana for medicinal purposes dating
back to 2737 B.C., drug use has a long history. During the 19th century
scientists and chemists began to extract the active ingredients in drugs
and refine them, resulting in the creation of substances such as
morphine, laudanum, and cocaine. These newly created substances were
unregulated and widely available to the public. Drug use and abuse was
especially prevalent during and after the Civil War, as morphine was
widely was used to treat wounded soldiers. Many soldiers even had their
own kits of morphine and hypodermic needles, which they brought home
with them after the war. Away from the war, opium dens flourished. It is
estimated that during this period there were approximately 250,000
addicts in the US alone.
The “official” beginning of the war against drug use and abuse, now
popularly called “the War On Drugs” by the government and media, was
1880, when the United States, and China signed legislation banning the
import of opium into the US. In San Francisco opium dens were banned
outright. By 1875 the problem of drug use and abuse was beginning to be
recognized as a serious threat, but it wasn’t until 1906 that serious
legislation to curb drug use and abuse was introduced. The Pure Food and
Drug Act of 1906 required exact labeling of all patented drug items
containing opium and other similar narcotics. The Harrison Act of 1914
further expanded the regulation of narcotics by limiting the sale of
large amounts or “doses” of opiates and cocaine, except by a licensed
doctor or pharmacy. Soon after heroin was banned and the Supreme Court
banned the prescription of any narcotic, even by a doctor. By the 1920’s
the issue of drug use and abuse took a backseat to a newer threat:
Alcohol. The 18th amendment to the Constitution, prohibiting the sale,
use, or possession of alcohol, was ratified in 1919. Use of all
narcotics and alcohol declined sharply. Drug use and abuse education in
schools also began around this time, but was abandoned shortly
thereafter. Soon after, marijuana, also considered a narcotic, was
demonized in the media to the point of satire in movies such as
“Reefer Madness” and became a target of criminalization, and was added to
the list of banned substances on August 2nd 1937 when the Marijuana Tax
Act was signed into law, making marijuana illegal on a federal level.
Drug use and abuse became prevalent, even socially acceptable to a
degree, during the social turbulence of the 1960’s. Newer narcotics like
LSD, Quaaludes, and speed, joined heroin, marijuana and cocaine as the
beast of drug use and abuse came back with a vengeance. Horror stories
of “bad trips” and fatal overdoses came to the nation’s attention as
America’s younger generation sought to free their bodies and minds. The
cycle of drug use and abuse continued into the 70’s, with a new
generation and an old drug: cocaine. The romanticization of cocaine, and
general drug use and abuse in the media, movies, and popular music, led
to a dramatic increase in the number of addicts and fatalities related
directly to it’s use.
It was during the 1980’s with the invention of the government’s new plan
to stamp out drug use and abuse, that the modern “War On Drugs” began.
Aggressive law enforcement tactics against the users and dealers of
drugs, particularly cocaine, were implemented, and heavy penalties
instituted. The use of cocaine, and other narcotics declined as a result
during the early 1980’s, but rose again sharply in the mid-80’s, and
into the 1990’s, with the invention of “crack”, an easy to make, more
powerful form of smokable cocaine. Due to the incredibly addictive
nature of this new concoction, “crack” or rock cocaine became an
epidemic rapidly, and the number of addicts or “crackheads” continued to
rise sharply. The epidemic of crack, and drug use and abuse in general
is still evident even today in 2006. The 1990’s also saw the rise of
another deadly narcotic, “meth”. Currently the “meth” epidemic is one of
the nation’s worst problems. Even with today’s drug use and abuse
education, rehab and treatment techniques, even the threat of
imprisonment, new addicts are born everyday, and the romanticizing of
drug use and abuse is still prevalent. It seems drug use and abuse and
the resulting destruction will be here for a couple thousand more years
until a way is found to cure the causes of addiction, and the need for
us to medicate ourselves from the stresses of everyday life.
Posted in Alcohol Abuse, Addiction, Drug Abuse |
Thursday, July 26th, 2007
Behavior Modification Therapy operates on the premise of learning theory; we repeat certain behaviors that have been reinforced over time. People who use alcohol/drugs as a way of coping in their lives develop very specific responses to situations. As a result the alcohol/drugs become a conditioned response as an attempt to adapt to the same situations. To modify these dysfunctional behaviors the therapist and individual develop a detailed understanding of what transpires leading up to problem and create alternatives that will condition healthier responses.
Posted in Alcohol Abuse, Drug Abuse |
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