They do say, “The Earlier the Diagnosis, the Better the Prognosis”.
This medical principle applies to addiction, and the importance of
recognizing early warning signs cannot be overstated. Addiction is a progressive disorder that, if
left to run its course, gets worse, not better. When someone has lost their personality, along
with family, friends, and a job, they have lost many of life’s most important
incentives for getting better.
The best-known symptoms of addiction are late-stage physical
symptoms: the red face of an alcoholic,
the emaciation of someone who is addicted to crack, the facial sores of meth
users. The earliest warning signs,
however, are changes in behaviour that family members, friends, and colleagues can
identify.
Rationalisation and Projection
“I always had a convincing reason to drink,” remembers a
45-year-old patient in long-term recovery from an uncontrollable craving for
alcohol. “First I drank to be social,
then to relax after work. Next I drank
to sleep, and then to forget. None of
these explanations seemed like rationalizations. I had real needs and believed only alcohol
could meet them.”
As craving deepens, addicted individuals begin organizing their
lives, often in rigid ways, around the need for uninterrupted access to alcohol
and other drugs. They may become
increasingly irritated by schedule changes and blame their odd behaviour on
others, like parents, partners, their children, or an unfair employer. Family members are especially vulnerable
targets and will often change their own behaviour to placate addicted loved
ones.
Mood Swings and Personality Changes
While addicted individuals can be highly critical of other people,
their own behaviour may be unpredictable and can quickly change from jubilant
euphoria to angry suspicion. When an
addicted individual is “on the wagon” or trying to cut back, mood swings become
more pronounced.
At the extreme end is the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde syndrome. For reasons not yet known, some people
experience a personality change when they are drinking or using other drugs. At its worst, this transformation resembles
the presence of two different personalities in one body. A loved one disappears, and an out-of-control
stranger takes their place.
There is a story about a father and husband who drank heavily. He spent one European holiday roaming the
streets in his underwear, knocking on doors and challenging people to fight. His children and wife barricaded themselves
behind a door, terrified that he would make good on his promise to kill them.
When they returned home, his wife demanded that he had an
intervention and got treatment. It was
successful in part because her husband was shocked to hear about his behaviour,
of which he had no memory. He willingly
went to a treatment program, but it took many years before he was able to
restore a relationship of trust with his family members.
“When I could control my drinking, I could still charm a crowd and
make new friends. But when I partied, I
often became a raging lunatic. One
night, I taunted some university guys who were in mourning for a friend killed
in a car wreck. They jumped me in an
alley, breaking my nose and leaving me with a deep gash above my eye. Except for a stranger’s intervention, they
might have stomped me to death:
James B., co-author with Dr. Spickard of “The Craving Brain”.
Many people, like James B., begin their journey into addiction as
the life of the party. As their craving
deepens and their behaviour deteriorates, their social circle narrows to other
users or addicted individuals, feeding the delusion that heavy drinking and
drug use is normal behaviour. In the
end, even these friends may disappear, leaving them isolated and alone.
“As an addicted person, I was a consumer of relationships and
people,” says James. “When I wasn’t
drinking, I was lots of fun and could easily land a good job, win people over,
and make new friends. Then I would get loaded, and all my anger came pouring
out. People walked away from me, or I from them. For years, I went from one circle to the
next, not connecting my broken relationships to my behaviour and drug use. It was always everyone else’s fault: their loss, not mine.”
The family life of addicted individuals is often marred by sudden
or unexplained changes, including separation and divorce. Children may run away, go to live with
relatives, or otherwise prematurely separate themselves from home.
Starts to affect your career
Most addicted individuals take great pains to keep their jobs, in
part to pay for their drugs. Sooner or
later, however, their work performance deteriorates. They find it harder to concentrate and make
simple mistakes. They may become moody
or aggressive toward fellow workers and show up late for work, or not at all, especially
on Mondays or after holidays.
For most addicted individuals, job-related problems are the
beginning of the end. They experience a
snowballing decline in physical, emotional, and intellectual function that
plunges them into ever deepening levels of chaos. For many, the endgame will be a long period of
suffering and disability, and a premature, addiction-related death.
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