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Addiction Treatment Center Pensacola FL

An addict may become an addict by first having a physical injury of some sort. The doctor prescribes pain medication, and before long the addict is hooked. Aside from the pain-killing effects of the drug on the physical body, the addict also recieves an emotional/mental relief, which contributes to the addiction.

Lakeview Center Inc
(850) 453-7722
6425 North Pensacola Boulevard
Pensacola, FL
Cordova Counseling Center
(850) 474-9882
4400 Bayou Boulevard
Pensacola, FL
Lakeview Center Inc
(850) 469-3584
7450 Pine Forest Road
Pensacola, FL
Susan W Lightfoot, NCC
(850) 474-8360 
Pensacola, FL
Substance Abuse Rehabilitation Program
(850) 452-6776x126
NTTC Corey Station
Pensacola, FL
Besch, Peggy Ann
(850) 912-4492
3300 North Pace Blvd Suite 306
Pensacola, FL
Lakeview Center Inc
(850) 595-1147x247
1800 West Saint Mary Avenue
Pensacola, FL
Richard Weaver NCC, CCMHC, MAC
(850) 478-0008 
Pensacola, FL
Metro Treatment of Florida LP
(850) 941-4776
6990 Pine Forest Road
Pensacola, FL
Sharon Patterson Hill NCC
(850) 492-3683 
Pensacola, FL
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Addiction Begins with Pain

Addiction Begins with Pain

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Friday, September 14, 2007 Addiction begins with pain, sometimes physical, other times mental or emotional.

Almost all use or abuse of alcohol or drugs is related to escapism- a need to deaden feelings of hurt, sorrow, loss or pain.

An addict may become an addict by first having a physical injury of some sort. The doctor prescribes pain medication, and before long the addict is hooked. Aside from the pain-killing effects of the drug on the physical body, the addict also recieves an emotional/mental relief, which contributes to the addiction.

A person who uses illegal, or street drugs, most often is searching for an escape. Many psychiatrists and therapists now refer to illegal drug use, or alcohol abuse as "self-medicating".

People are searching for a way to feel better, to forget something, or to just escape the difficulties of their lives. The use of drugs may be only a temporary fix, but to an addict, any relief is better than none at all.

In order to really help an addicted person there must be some way to address the underlying source of the self-medicating. Like a medical doctor, the therapist must attempt to find out "what hurts" and why it hurts, before the addiction can be addressed. Likewise the patient must be willing to face the pain of the injury, and experience their sense of loss, grief or sadness, rather than trying again and again to supress it or escape from it.

Recovery from addiction is not about self-control or will power. When an addict begins to use substances they never believe that they can become "addicts." It is the old "It couldn't happen to me" trick, that gets them to start using the drug. Promises of how the drugs "will make you feel good" or "make you feel better" and even "make you feel no pain" are an easy lure for people who feel bad, or are dealing with an intense emotional pain. If the drug actually does help "take a...

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