Alcohol
Treatment Center Info
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for yourself or a loved one's chronic alcoholism.
Chronic
Alcoholism Horrors
Alcoholism
Begins
There
are three stages of alcoholism.
The first begins when a person is drinking more alcohol and more
frequently for reasons other than he or she started drinking for
in the first place. The drinking may have started out socially
or as a result of peer pressure or for any number of reasons,
but now he or she is drinking for the effect that the alcohol
produces.
They
may drink for a mood adjustment if they are sad or depressed over
something or they may have a few extra drinks for stress relief
if he or she has had a rough day at work. At this stage the drinker,
his friends and family are usually unaware of any of these reasons
for his increased drinking or that his drinking has even increased.
More
and More
By the time a drinker enters into the second stage of alcoholism
he is usually drinking more for any reason he can manufacture
between his ears. He is probably exceeding socially acceptable
limits on a daily basis and may be losing control of his physical
and mental capabilities at all the wrong times. He may have even
been incarcerated for a DUI.
By
now, friends and family are all too aware that a problem has developed,
though our drunken friend remains oblivious to the fact, or surely
he'd do something about his drinking.
Not!
Chronic
Stage of Alcoholism
This
stage of the alcoholics life finds the family and any friend that
may be left in the excessive drinkers life horrified at what has
taken place right in front of them. The alcoholic has become sloppy
drunk most of the time, his thinking is completely irrational
nearly all of the time and now he's likely been arrested for drunk
in public, but he tells everyone his only real problem is that
they keep telling him he has a drinking problem. If they'd just
get off his back, he'd be fine.
In
reality our alcoholic friend's mind and body are slipping away
due to irreversible damage to his vital organs. Damage that will
likely lead to serious life-threatening medical conditions such
as hepatitis, heart failure, cirrhosis of the liver, etc.
Is
It Too Late?
In
this, the chronic stage of alcoholism it usually takes a very
traumatic or near death experience to get the alcoholic's attention
to the extent that he actually seeks out help and by now, without
help it may be too late. The family may enlist the help of a professional
interventionist. Interventions can be very effective if done
properly. Loved ones can practice "tough-love" and not
participate in his life at all, which has brought many alcoholics
to treatment when there was no one left in their life to blame
their condition on but them self. They may even get lucky and
simply talk some sense into him, though this is very rare, as
alcoholics are usually of the most stubborn people on the planet.
One
thing you can rest assured of, is that by the time a person reaches
the chronic stages of alcoholism, he or she is going to require
a lot of long-term professional help to have even a slight chance
of recovery.
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