Why Sober Companion Is The Job Title That Makes The Most Sense
Sober Companion? Recovery Coach? Sober Coach? Recovery Companion? Why So Many Titles For A Job Needing Only One?
From the outset, ONE80CENTER has believed in sober companions. The ONE80CENTER Clinical Staff have promoted the value of sober companions for clients in early recovery as they transition back to their “normal” lives. When you investigate the marketing of such a position on the Internet, the titles are all over the place. Why are people searching on Google for many different variations of what is basically the same position? Why can’t we transition into a universal choice? ONE80CENTER wants to propose that sober companion becomes the normative title choice for the job.
After all, the word companion makes a lot more sense than coach. In contrast to a sober companion, a coach is almost the same as a counselor. The pertinent definition of the word coach is “an athletic instructor or trainer” while the pertinent definition of the word companion is “A person with whom one spends a lot of time or with whom one travels.”
Since the essence of a sober companion is being present beyond a treatment setting for a client to help prevent relapse, companion makes a lot more sense than coach. A coach sounds like a teacher and a superior as opposed to an equal offering help and being of service. This is why we prefer sober companion to sober coach or recovery coach.
In conjunction, the adjective sober makes a lot more sense than the adjective recovery. The pertinent definition of recovery is “a return to a normal state of health, mind, or strength.” In contrast, the pertinent definition of sober is “not affected by alcohol; not drunk.”
The role of a sober companion is not to return a client to a normal state of health, mind and strength. This is the client’s own journey of recovery that ONE80CENTER helps to initiate and support, but does not control. In contrast, the role of a sober companion is to provide the essential support needed on the outside in order to prevent a relapse on alcohol or drugs. Recovery is the long-term journey while being sober and maintaining sobriety is the day-to-day challenge in early recovery. This is why we prefer sober companion to recovery companion or recovery coach. The role of a sober companion is day-to-day support in challenging external situations, responsibilities and events. Often, presence is all that is really needed.
Sober companions provide the support a client needs simply by being supportive and available. A central principle of Alcoholics Anonymous is that it is a program of attraction and not promotion. In relation to this principle, sober companions do not promote an agenda, but help their client by providing a positive example and being a present resource. ONE80CENTER’s Sober Companion Program connects recovery and life.
Recovery is not a separate issue from life, but an essential ingredient that provides the freedom for a life to be fully realized. Through our Sober Companion Program, ONE80CENTER offers a bridge to sustainable recovery by helping our clients maintain their sobriety while making the transition back to the normative. More than any of the other terminology being used in the recovery community, sober companion makes the most sense by clearly connecting to what is actually needed. If you want to learn more about the ONE80CENTER Sober Companion Program, please call 888.593.2301 for help.
How is the “community-based” approach at ONE80CENTER conducive to the use of EMDR? – EMDR Discussion – Interview with Dr. Andrew M. Leeds Ph.D.
The community based program that you have at the ONE80CENTER is fantastic. I’ve been so impressed with everything I’ve learned through my conversations with you and Bernie and the other people on your staff. It’s not just the 28 day program. People often continue in residence in after care programs and sober living environments for months or weeks afterwards for as long as they need.
You have a number of innovative features that are a part of your entire treatment program here that I think make it possible to use EMDR, where other programs may not have the same facility as you do. For example, you have sober companions that are going to be monitoring people as often as needed.

Andrew M. Leeds, Ph.D. – Clinical Psychologist
You have an information management system where all members of your treatment team are in constant communication with each other. If someone is having family stress. If some has an adverse reaction to a group therapy session or a difficult response to an EMDR session everyone on the treatment team know immediately.
So you have intense containment strategies as a result of your entire treatment team being constantly aware of what everyone else is doing. This makes it possible for you to do intensive interventions like EMDR where I think other programs wouldn’t have the containment that would be needed to be able to do that as successfully as you are able to do it here.
I think that’s one of the factors is the structure of the program itself. You also have really experienced EMDR clinicians. The people who are offering EMDR here currently have years of experience and have consulted with other experts in the field of addiction treatment to help them learn how to approach these cases in the right way. I think those are the factors that make it possible for the ONE80CENTER to be successful in integrating EMDR into your comprehensive program in ways that other programs aren’t yet ready to do.
You’ve mentioned some of PTI and so I needed to say a couple of words about the Sonoma psychotherapy training institute that I founded three years ago, after my book came out in 2009. I think it’s a wonderful training model for a program like the ONE80CENTER. Sonoma PTI offers a four weekend training. Each weekend is two days long. And the consultation sessions are built into weekends two, three and four. This brings people from the local community together for a series of two day weekends. It builds cohesion.
You have a mixture of participants in the ONE80CENTER training who are active members of your treatment team as well as clinicians in the outlying community interested in referring cases to the ONE80CENTER and it’s building a community in the greater Los Angeles area of people aware of how EMDR can be used in complex cases and aware of how you’re using EMDR here in a very innovative way as part of the ONE80CENTER’s comprehensive program for addiction recovery.
So I think it’s a wonderful opportunity with the program that we’re offering here in southern California to bring a larger community together to make them aware of innovative ways that EMDR is being used and to give them a more comprehensive training than the traditional two weekend model. So it’s really wonderful to be associated with the ONE80CENTER and to be offering this program to your staff and other people in the community.
The Dog’s Days of Treatment: Dog Friendly Rehab works.
THE DOG’S DAYS OF TREATMENT – PT. I
YOU’VE AGREED to go to a treatment facility. Whether you feel you’ve chosen help or it’s been chosen for you (“a nudge from the judge”), this first step and the responsibilities that come with it can be overwhelming. There’s a whole slew of things you might worry about, such as: What’ll happen to your job (if you still have one)? Your home? Your friends? Your personal stuff? What about traveling to a new place and getting along with other clients? Will you have a roommate? What about the staff? Will you like anybody? What are people back home going to say? And ultimately, will treatment really work?
IN THE MIDST of this emotional upheaval you may also have to decide the fate of your dog(s). For many alcoholics and addicts, their pet is a sole source of comfort; a breathing example of unconditional love. Though in your addiction you may fail to walk them, feed them, bathe them, or get them proper medical care they keep coming back. That dogged face of loyalty can be a guilt bomb in itself. In some cases people will even elect not to go to treatment rather than risk losing their companion. Questions like these loom: Is there a treatment center that’ll let you bring your pal? If you leave him behind who’ll take care of him? Your friends may not be very reliable and your family may be fed up. If she comes with you, then who will care for her? Your days are going to be full; meetings, groups, therapy, classes, family days, etc. If you could find a facility that welcomed dogs, what would he do once he got there? Any of these questions left unanswered could be deal breakers. Before you get to that point please know there is a place for you and your faithful friend.
THE ONE80CENTER in Beverly Hills understands that your dog is family, not like family. He/she is an integral part of your life and vital to your recovery. That’s why they’ve partnered with Matt Beisner, owner of THE ZEN DOG, a dog behavioral rehabilitation practice that specializes in caring for dogs whose owners are in recovery. You can have the peace of mind that comes with knowing your loved one’s needs are being met, while you (re) learn how to meet your own. Daily hikes, walks, playtime, and ‘pack naps’ are some of the services offered. Matt has also created THE RUFF PROJECT, a private owner-dog training method designed to supplement the individual’s recovery program.
KNOWING YOUR companion will be with you on this personal journey can ease the “dark days” of early sobriety. Many have said that focusing on their dog’s well-being was what “got them through the day”. Meeting one’s basic needs like eating and getting enough rest had new purpose knowing their buddy was depending on them. To be sure, staying sober will require a new relationship with yourself but it may be the one you already have with your faithful friend that’ll help you trudge that road. You may come to discover that your selfless acts of caring for him/her become the very foundation upon which your sobriety is built. Commitment, consistency, and accountability are all trademarks of a healthy recovery; dogs offer an easy entry way back into the world of discipline and responsibility. As you enter into treatment you may not see much light at the end of the tunnel, but here at THE ONE80CENTER we invite and encourage you to take these new steps with an old friend.
Next: Pt. II – How living like a dog changed my sobriety…
4 Logical Reasons Why Alcoholism & Addiction Recovery In Beverly Hills With ONE80CENTER Sober Companions Works (Part 2)
ONE80CENTER in Beverly Hills at the heart of Los Angeles offers our clients the use of sober companions because it simply makes sense, both from a clinical perspective and a personal perspective. In fact, the arguments for sober companions make so much sense Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame could have proposed them. Let us present four logical reasons to you why working with sober companions during alcoholism and addiction recovery with ONE80CENTER in makes so much sense.
By employing well-trained and experienced sober companions, the founders of and clinical staff at ONE80CENTER have been able to transform this vision of achieving sustainable sobriety without the threat of additional life damage into a viable reality. In Part 1 of this presentation, the first two reasons were: 1) Sober Companions Do No More Damage Credo and 2) Sober Companions Entertainment Community Support. Here are the second two of four logical reasons why sober companion work so well during treatment in early recovery:
3) Sober Companions Professional Support:
Employing Sober Companions in Treatment to ensure job integrity & protect careers makes sense.
If you are a professional and you need treatment, you most likely have already hurt your career with your drinking and using. Hoe can you not do more damage when you need treatment but you have to attend that corporate meeting that has been on the schedule for two months? If you own a business and you need to send an executive for treatment, you don’t want them to ignore that one key client that cannot afford to be ignored. What if her absence leads to the loss of that client? If you are an entrepreneur, a meeting with your local banker to acquire a bridge loan for your company could be a necessity. If you miss it, will your start-up be able to stay on track? Then again, your need to get treatment for a drug or alcohol problem is just as big of a necessity. What should you do?
Every one of these points makes perfect sense, and these problems often become the deadly excuses that prevent someone from getting the treatment they truly need. This is what the ONE80CENTER Sober Companions Professional Support Program was designed to address. ONE80CENTER believes in smoothing out the transition process so our clients are able to return to, or continue, their essential work while receiving quality treatment services as they begin the path of sustainable recovery in a supportive community.
4) Sober Companions Family Support:
Employing Sober Companions in Treatment to avoid doing further family damage makes sense.
As human beings, we often save the best for last, and there is an argument to be made that Sober Companions Family Support falls squarely in that category. After all, in light of all the damage that drug and alcohol abuse can do to a family, making sure that such future damage is minimized is a beautiful endeavor.
If your mother needs to enter treatment for a prescription pill problem, should she have to wait until after your child’s birthday party? If your father is abusing alcohol and it’s endangering his health, should he then miss the 75th birthday party of his father and your grandfather to enter ONE80CENTER? If your son has been taking Adderall to keep up with class demands and realizes he can’t stop, should he miss his college graduation ceremony because he has chosen to get the help he needs?
All of these questions are hard to answer. ONE80CENTER wanted to ensure that our future clients were not stuck in between the need for immediate professional help and essential family commitments. This is why we designed the overall Sober Companion Program. The Sober Companions Family Support program is designed to address specific family issues. Our goal is to make sure recovery remains the number one priority while at the same time not doing any more real damage to families and loved ones. Yes, it is a difficult and challenging prospect, but a choice that the ONE80CENTER embrace with relish and trained expertise.
Recovery is not a separate issue from life, but an essential ingredient that provides the freedom for a life to be fully realized. Through our Sober Companion Program, ONE80CENTER offers a bridge to the healthy pallor and productive natures of the lives of our clients. If you want to know more about how the Sober Companion Program works, please contact the Clinical Experts at ONE80CENTER by calling 888.593.2301 today. Waiting around and doing nothing, after all, is no longer a viable option.
4 Logical Reasons Why Alcoholism & Addiction Recovery In Beverly Hills With ONE80CENTER Sober Companions Works (Part 1)
ONE80CENTER in Beverly Hills at the heart of Los Angeles offers our clients the use of sober companions because it simply makes sense, both from a clinical perspective and a personal perspective. In fact, the arguments for sober companions make so much sense Mr. Spock of Star Trek fame could have proposed them. Let us present four logical reasons to you why working with sober companions during alcoholism and addiction recovery with ONE80CENTER makes so much sense.
By employing well-trained and experienced sober companions, the founders of and clinical staff at ONE80CENTER have been able to transform their vision of achieving sustainable sobriety without the threat of additional life damage into a viable reality. But the logic can speak for itself… here are the first two of four logical reasons why sober companion work so well during treatment in early recovery:
1) Sober Companions Do No More Damage Credo:
With Sober Companions, ONE80CENTER allows for a client’s essential commitments to be kept. Beginning treatment should signify the end of damage being done by the disease of addiction.
Life does not stop when a client enters treatment. Through the Sober Companion Program, ONE80CENTER provides a bridge to sustainable recovery that prevents further damage from being done. How many successful people have been derailed by addiction and alcoholism? How many have left a trail of damage and regrets behind them? ONE80CENTER believes that starting treatment should be the end of this negative legacy. Whether it is family or work related events, ONE80CENTER Sober Companions are trained to discreetly accompany and support our clients so they can attend.
2) Sober Companions Entertainment Community Support:
Designed to allow existing set, tour and event commitments to be safely maintained in treatment.
Designed for performing arts professionals, Sober Companions Entertainment Community Support allows high profile clients to attend important events in the Los Angeles community, like Beverly Hills fundraisers or Awards Shows at the Director’s Guild in West Hollywood, and not be missed. As we have all seen in this media drenched era, often not showing up can lead to horrible rumors and tabloid talk. Since ONE80CENTER is located in Los Angeles, the backbone of the entertainment industry, we help our clients who have careers in the performing arts to maintain their privacy and anonymity while addressing the demands placed on them by prior commitments.
Recognizing the necessity of performers not hurting their reputations when they are in need of treatment, ONE80CENTER has developed an effective way to address this all-too-familiar problem. Our solution begins with a focus on privacy and anonymity while still fostering access. Career commitments do not go away just because a performer needs treatment. If an actor or a musician is in need of treatment and must fulfill contractual obligations, our sober companion program offers a balance that will allow both objectives to be realized.
Recovery is not a separate issue from life, but an essential ingredient that provides the freedom for a life to be fully realized. Through our Sober Companion Program, ONE80CENTER offers a bridge to the healthy pallor and productive natures of the lives of our clients. If you want to know more about how the Sober Companion Program works, please contact the Clinical Experts at ONE80CENTER by calling 888.593.2301 today. Waiting around and doing nothing, after all, is no longer a viable option.
Baseball Star Josh Hamilton Admits Alcohol Relapse, Revealing The Challenges Of Battling Alcoholism In The Spotlight
A talented baseball player and the 2010 American League MVP, Josh Hamilton has been plagued throughout his career by problems with alcoholism and drug addiction. With a laser-sharp media focus on his daily battles against alcoholism, Hamilton admitted in the beginning of 2012 his second relapse with alcohol in three years. ONE80CENTER believes that the difficulties Hamilton has been facing are directly connected to the challenge of maintaining sobriety and battling alcoholism in the glare brought forth by the spotlight of celebrity. From our experience with past clients, ONE80CENTER has learned that within such a glare, a person trying to maintain long-term sobriety must make the path of recovery their number one focus.
Challenge Of Battling Alcoholism In A Media Spotlight
At the end of January, Hamilton acknowledged in a press conference that he had a “moment of weakness” at two Dallas bar/restaurants because of a “personal reason with a family member.” Speaking without a script and not taking any questions, Hamilton apologized to his family, fans and the team during a 12-minute news conference at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, Texas. “You guys all know how hard I play on the field and I give it everything I absolutely have,” said Hamilton, “When I don’t do that off the field, I leave myself open for a weak moment… It was just wrong. That’s all it comes down to. I needed to be at a different place. I needed to be responsible. I was not responsible.”
Although Hamilton’s forthright honesty is refreshing, it does not address the main problem at hand – how does he handle his alcoholism and avoid future relapse? The No. 1 overall pick in 1999, Hamilton’s major league debut was delayed until 2007 because of his drug and alcohol addiction. His career as been severely curtailed by his substance abuse struggles, and he has only played one full season without injury or trouble. Rangers General Manager Jon Daniels made it clear that the main issue was not baseball. Daniels said in clear support of Hamilton: ‘But I just want to be clear on something from our perspective. This is not a baseball story how we view it, how I view it. This is real. This is something that Josh deals with, an addiction, an issue that he has that affects him and the people around him that care about him. He’s a husband, he’s a father, first and foremost, and that’s where our head is, to make sure he has the support he needs and his family needs going forward.”
Although Hamilton was out with teammates when he relapsed, he hid it from them, drinking behind their backs. This is typical behavior of an alcoholic and a sign of alcoholism As Hamilton himself once expressed: “Any time I drink, there’s a point that comes where a switch flips and you never know when that point’s going to be reached, whether it’s the first three or four, or the 15th. And that’s what’s so dangerous about it.”
Is A Sober Companion The Answer Or Is More Needed?
Although the Rangers have used a sober companion in the past for Hamilton and are considering hiring one to keep watch over him again, ONE80CENTER knows from experience that such an approach is only a Band-Aid that temporarily stops the bleeding caused by alcoholism. Employing sober companions in treatment and offering the service to our clients whenever needed, ONE80CENTER knows alcoholism can only be treated by maintaining a healthy program of sustainable sobriety.
Hamilton understands this truth and expressed it in his press conference: “I cannot take a break from my recovery… My recovery is an everyday process. When I take that one day off, it leaves me open for a moment of weakness and it’s always been that way… For everybody that I’ve hurt, for fans, kids, people that have addictions that look up to me, I apologize to you. When you’re doing this, you don’t mean to hurt anybody, but you’re only thinking it hurts yourself, but I know it hurt a lot of people… I just ask everybody who’s watching and listening to pray for me and pray for my family as we go through this difficult time. Pray for me and pray for my family, because it never gets easy. It never gets easy.”
From our extensive experience and expertise, ONE80CENTER knows that it never gets easy when it comes to the battle with alcoholism and addiction. Hamilton is on target when he expresses that the road of recovery is a long one. But it does not have to be hard if you develop the tools to deal with triggers and avoid temptations. Whether you are a celebrity in the spotlight or a regular guy with a problem, ONE80CENTER has a successful track record in helping you find your path to recovery that will keep you sober and ultimately help make you comfortable in your own skin. To find out more, please contact ONE80CENTER by calling.
Quitting Drinking On Your Own Is Dangerous, Leading To Intensified Anxiety And Increased Self-Medication
Alcohol is a coping agent, and it is often connected to the anxiety experienced by an individual. Anxiety is an everyday companion for tons of people in our fast-paced, information-driven world of technology, static and noise. Women in particular exhibit higher rates of anxiety according to hospital admissions for panic attack. More than twice as many women are admitted to hospitals for anxiety disorders when compared to the admission rates of men. What is incredible is how many of these patients turn out to be cross-addicted, abusing both alcohol and anxiety drugs in the form of benzodiazepines like Valium and Xanax. At ONE80CENTER, our clinical staff’s goal is to address the underlying co-occurring anxiety disorder of the client while giving them freedom from self-medication and the abuse of alcohol.
Quitting Drinking On Your Own Can Increase Anxiety
If you live in a constant state of anxiety, ONE80CENTER understands how difficult your daily life can be when the panic hits. Did you know that alcohol withdrawal could turn an everyday experience of anxiety into a full-blown panic attack? If you have problem with alcohol and you are worried about your drinking, you should definitely do everything you can to stop. We want you to discover the freedom of recovery, but we want to ensure your health as well. We don’t want an attempt to give up alcohol to lead to greater self-medication, addiction, and even possible overdose. We want you to be safe and your health to be protected.
Being caught between dual problems of alcohol abuse and prescription pill self-medication to deal with an underlying anxiety condition is like being caught in a vise. The more you try to deal with one problem, the worse the other problem gets. It seems like there is no way to find the comfort and piece you experienced in the good old days. Luckily, this dark feeling is not correct, and it is a result of your disease of perception. With help, you can find the peace you desire.
Self-Medication Is Not The Answer To Increased Anxiety Problems
Yes, it is true that giving up alcohol and prescription medications after you have become dependent on them, both physically and psychologically, can be extremely difficult. But it can be done, and the clinical team at ONE80CENTER are experts at helping our clients comfortably manage the process of detox in a safe and supportive environment. Not only do we want you to get back on your feet, feeling rested and secure. Through our supportive community and positive groups and therapeutic tools, we will help build the inner strength to avoid going back into the shivering darkness when you leave our treatment center. In addition, once you become part of our community, you know that the talented staff at and alumni of ONE80CENTER will always be available to help you handle any speed bumps on the road of recovery.
Co-Occurring Disorders In The New York Times: After Drugs and The Dark Times, Antonio Lambert Helps Others to Stand Back Up
Below is a powerful excerpted article about co-occurring disorders that appeared at the end of December in the New York Times and is written by Benedict Carey. Focusing on how the co-occurring disorders of substance abuse and mental problems can ravage the life of a human being, leaving almost nothing but prison and a trail of damage behind. What’s incredible in the tale of Antonio Lambert is how he manages through faith, medication and companionship to come back and create a positive and constructive life, learning the same “peer specialist” skills he teaches. Antonio Lambert’s story is an inspiration for us all in this holiday season.
At ONE80CENTER, our experienced staff and clinical team believe that co-occurring disorders do not have to be a life sentence of disaster, destruction and death. Instead, we believe wholeheartedly during this holiday season that the road of recovery is open to everyone who is willing and ready to make that change. Remember: You don’t have to do it alone! We can help lead you not only through detoxification and onto the path of initial sobriety, but down the long-term road that leads to true recovery and the freedom, happiness and serenity you deserve.
The Dark Legacy Of Co-Occurring Disorders
SMYRNA, Del. — The taste of cocaine and the slow-motion sensation of breaking the law were all too familiar, but the thrill was long gone. Antonio Lambert was not a young hoodlum anymore but a family man with a career, and here he was last fall, high as any street user, sneaking into his workplace at 9 o’clock at night, looking for — what, exactly? He didn’t really know.
He left the building with a few cellphones (which he threw away) and a feeling that he was slipping, falling back down into a hole. He walked in the darkness, walked with no place to go, and then he began to do what he has taught others in similar circumstances to do: turn, face the problem, and stand back up. “I started talking to myself, out loud; that’s one of my coping strategies, and one reason I relapsed is I had forgotten to use those,” said Mr. Lambert, 41, a mental health educator who has a combined diagnosis — mood disorder with drug addiction — that is among the scariest in psychiatry. Mr. Lambert, a self-taught ex-convict who is becoming a prominent peer trainer, gives classes in Delaware and across the country. He is one of a small number of people who have chosen to describe publicly how difficult it is to manage such a severe dual diagnosis, including the sudden setbacks that often come with it.
Handling Co-Occurring Disorders Through Passion And Commitment
“He is an extreme example of how much difference passion and commitment can make, given where he’s come from,” said Steve Harrington, the chief executive of the National Association of Peer Specialists, a group devoted to promoting peer support in mental health care. Mr. Lambert, who has climbed out of a deep hole with the help of religious faith, medication and his own forms of self-expression, puts it this way: “There are a lot of people dealing with mental illness, drugs, abandonment, abuse, and they don’t think there’s a way out. I didn’t. I didn’t.”
Bean Bean in Spider City
His grandmother was the first person to call him Bean Bean, and the boy was so skinny that he couldn’t shake it. He couldn’t avoid the older toughs in the Brighton section of Portsmouth, Va., either, and he spent some of his school-age years taking beatings. That was Brighton back in the day, and at least those fights taught survival skills. Not everything did: He remembers being sexually abused at age 6, by an older boy in the neighborhood — brutally.
Later, he began to stand his ground on the street, earning a name as an up-and-coming gangster by age 12, a regular presence at Palmer’s Corner, home base for the heavies, the alpha males of Brighton — Spider City, as they called it. He was soon into drugs, first as a courier and then as local muscle, armed and very dangerous. He began using more and more cocaine, crack usually. The skinny boy grew big, strong and crazy enough that he would ride around on his bike with a sawed-off shotgun on the handlebars, pull up to a group of dealers and throw an empty bag on the ground in front of them, with these instructions: Fill it up. Now.
“I would shoot the gun off in the air to show I was serious, then just take the drugs and move on to the next pack of dealers, and lay them all down,” he said. He was a junior in high school. It couldn’t last, and it didn’t. He survived several gunfights, taking a bullet behind the ear in one (it is still lodged there), and in another being ambushed from behind and hit in the legs, arms and pelvis; those bullets were all removed without lasting damage, except for prominent scars. But the police were onto him now, and by 1991, at the age of 21, he was in prison, sentenced to 22 years for malicious wounding with a firearm and other charges, according to Portsmouth court records.
He was not a model prisoner at first. He incited a protest at one institution, after which guards confined him to a “segregation” cell, away from other prisoners, for nearly two years. He began to read in there, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, then Robert Ludlum, James Clavell, Sun Tzu, anything he could find. That curiosity nourished a deepening ambition that one day in 2002 turned to conviction. “This young thug I knew from the neighborhood comes in, first day of a life sentence, and he puts his hands up and says, ‘Hey, man, I’m here!’ — like he’s coming into a house party,” Mr. Lambert said. “That did it. I knew I had to get out and find a life, something. I didn’t know what, or how.”
Later, Antonio Lambert got a lifeline, is how, and it came just in time and from an unexpected source. Feeling lost, moody and desperate for his medication of choice, he was in trouble. The gunmetal taste of cocaine was irresistible, and at least it broke the fall. But his mood would return darker, and he would have to get high again. That is how it almost always goes with a dual diagnosis of addiction and a mood disorder, doctors say: Each problem inflames the other, in a cycle that is extremely difficult to break.
He found himself drifting toward the George Washington Highway, feeling in some ways more hopeless than he had behind bars — when his cellphone buzzed. It was his mother now living in California, and she had just seen something on late-night television: an advertisement for Teen Challenge USA, a Christian-based recovery program.
She gave him a phone number. He wrote it down, sat on the stoop of a boarded-up house and thought about it for a long time, and then dialed. The man on the other end listened and offered to waive the fee if the young man pledged himself to God. He completed the program, in Greensboro, N.C., and soon found a job. He was living clean, the family was intact and according to his medical records, a local therapist put him on lithium, a standard treatment for severe mood swings.
In 2007, he attended a training talk by Mr. Harrington, the chief executive and founder of the national peer association. “He was asking all these questions that reflected a lot of thought,” Dr. Harrington, now a postdoctoral fellow at Boston University, said in an interview. “When I heard more of his story, I told him, ‘Look, you can do what I do.’ ” They stayed in touch, and soon Mr. Harrington called to say he had scheduled Mr. Lambert to give a keynote speech at an event in Michigan. He boarded a plane in Greensboro, unsure of what he was getting into. “I didn’t even know what ‘keynote’ meant,” he said. “I thought I might have to sing.”
The story told itself, and people in the audience who feared for a loved one with similar problems wanted to hear more. Parents from all walks of life, doctors, clergy members and co-workers have pulled him aside to see if he could talk to a wayward son, or a daughter into drugs. He joined Dr. Harrington to form a company, Recover Resources, which sells peer support manuals, DVDs and other educational materials. A training session in June, hosted by the Delaware Psychiatric Center and run by Mr. Lambert, was life-changing for at least one attendee.
The Navy veteran had also struggled with substance abuse and a psychiatric diagnosis. “I knew from the first smoke break that this was someone important for me,” said the veteran, Justin Thompson, 28, who has since completed his peer certification under Mr. Lambert and now works as a peer specialist. The two have become close friends. “I just related to him right away, his passion, his story, the positive energy he brings — all of it.”
“You got to understand, for me, right now, what I been through, it’s sometimes hard to believe it’s all real,” Mr. Lambert said. “But I know my own mental illness and my addiction are real; I feel like they’re out there right now, doing push-ups, getting ready to take me down again. That’s why I got to have my own system for staying strong.”
When Mr. Lambert feels his mind capsizing fast, he feels he needs a peer himself, someone with a history who knows what it looks like — from the inside — to be struggling mentally, deep in trouble, and feeling dead out of options. Someone who can be an advocate, a companion, who can share his or her own story: who can simply be there, if that’s what it takes.
On a recent Saturday morning, Mr. Lambert was home alone, watching college football, when he felt a pulse of that same darkness and exhaustion that led to his last relapse. “I call it the monster,” he said. “I was lying there on the couch, and after a while, the college football was watching me.” He called Mr. Thompson, who hurried over with a pair of fishing poles. The two of them fished that afternoon. They fished and had a smoke and talked about nothing much, and neither could say exactly when it happened but it did. The monster was gone.
And the monster can be gone for you as well. ONE80CENTER understands that the road to long-term recovery is difficult and filled with potential pitfalls and problems. As a result, we have created a long-term community and support system for our clients that continues after treatment and never truly ends. We know how tough it is to deal with co-occurring disorders, and we are there to help you find recovery.
A New York Times Investigation: Why Do Some People Become Addicted To Drugs While Others Do Not?
Is there anything worse than when a family member or loved one becomes addicted to drugs? Illegal drug use is rampant and frightening. According to the 2008 National Survey of Drug Use and Health, 46 percent of Americans have tried an illicit drug at some point in their lives. But only 8 percent have used an illicit drug in the past month and fewer become addicted to drugs. Most people who experiment with drugs do not become addicted. So why do some people become addicted when the vast majority do not? The New York Times asked this question after the death of Amy Winehouse and the account below is adapted from the original article about why some people become addicted to drugs that was written by Richard A. Friedman, M.D.
Doctors have long been aware that people who suffer from mood, anxiety and personality disorders are more likely to become addicted to drugs. According to the National Institute of Mental Health’s Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study, patients with mental health problems are nearly three times as likely to have an addictive disorder as those without. In addition, 60 percent of people with addiction problems are dual-diagnosed, meaning they have both a substance abuse disorder as well as a mental health issue.
Addicted To Drugs Through Self-Medication
The conventional wisdom is the link between mental illness and addiction represents a form of “self-medication” where people start using drugs to medicate their other mental problems. Alcohol and drugs affect mood and behavior by activating the same brain circuits that are disrupted in major psychiatric disorders. No surprise, then, that depressed and anxious patients turn to alcohol and sedatives to help treat their conditions. What is so disturbing is that beyond being illegal, these substances are terrible antidepressants and only worsen the problems the potential addict is facing. This leads to a downward spiral of depression and leads directly to these people becoming addicted to drugs.
Although mental health is a major factor, emerging evidence suggests that drug abuse is linked to a developmental brain disorder. Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, has shown in several brain-imaging studies that most people addicted to such drugs as cocaine, heroin and alcohol have fewer dopamine receptors in the brain’s reward pathways than the vast majority of people. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter critical to the experience of pleasure and desire. It sends a positive signal to the brain that raises self-esteem and fosters the ability to pay attention and focus.
When Dr. Volkow compared the responses of addicts and a control group of non-addicts after being given a stimulant, she discovered that the non-addicts with high numbers of D2 receptors, a subtype of dopamine receptors, found it aversive, while addicts with low receptor levels found it pleasurable. This finding suggests that drug addicts may have blunted reward systems in the brain. For the addict, everyday pleasures don’t come close to the powerful reward of getting high, thus they become addicted to drugs.
Ending the Spiral of Addiction
At the same time, drug use also changes the brain and can turn anyone into an addict. Primates that aren’t predisposed to addiction will become compulsive users of cocaine as the number of D2 receptors declines in their brains. One way to produce such a decline is to be placed in a stressful social situation. Without question, addiction and addictive disorders are a deadly disease of the brain that lead directly to destruction and death. Once exposed to the demon of addiction, there is no easy way out, but there is a solution. Still, almost anyone, regardless of baseline genetic risk, can become an addict under the right circumstances. If you do heroin or cocaine for an extended period of time, you will become addicted, regardless of your genetic predispositions. ONE80CENTER offers help and a way out for those caught in the spiral of addiction. Even if you or loved one are addicted to drugs, there is a way out and there is an answer.
Could A Sober Companion Have Prevented The Tragic Death of Amy Winehouse?
They tried to make me go to rehab, I said, “No, no, no”
Yes, I’ve been black but when I come back you’ll know, know, know
I ain’t got the time and if my daddy thinks I’m fine
He’s tried to make me go to rehab, I won’t go, go, go
— Amy Winehouse, lyrics to her hit song, Rehab
The senseless and tragic death of singer Amy Winehouse at the age of 27 marks another example of how hard and terrible is the disease of addiction. At 3:54 pm BST on July 23, 2011, two ambulances were called to Winehouse’s home in Camden, London. Shortly afterwards, the Metropolitan Police confirmed her death. As of July 24, the investigation to determine the cause of death, which is described by police as unexplained, remains open. Given her extensive history of drug and alcohol abuse, multiple arrests on a variety of charges and her frightfully young age, there is a rising consensus among the media and addiction experts that the cause of death was a fatal drug overdose. If this is the case, could a sober companion have been the key to keeping Amy Winehouse alive long enough to receive the help she clearly needed?
With horrible impulse control and a rebellious attitude milked by the tabloid media, Amy Winehouse had a long history of drug problems and extreme signs of addiction. Her ex-husband Blake Fielder, who is currently in jail on drug charges, once told a paper that he had introduced Winehouse to crack cocaine and heroin. Quickly, they descended together into the depths of addiction, reportedly trying everything to quit, including the horrors of cutting to replace the pain of withdrawal. What Amy Winehouse refused to do, as expressed in her hit song, was go to a medically monitored drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility where she could have received the help that she truly needed.
Amy Winehouse Left Rehab
On May 25, 2011, Amy Winehouse entered the Priory Clinic in London to receive help with her addiction problems, but she was not willing to remain willing. In less than a week, she left and returned to her home alone where she died two months later. Karen Heller of The Philadelphia Inquirer described the popular culture’s perspective of the singer, writing that Winehouse was… “…crashing headfirst into success and despair, with a codependent husband in jail, exhibitionist parents with questionable judgment, and the paparazzi documenting her emotional and physical distress. Meanwhile, a haute designer Karl Lagerfeld appropriates her disheveled style and eating issues to market to the elite while proclaiming her the new Bardot.”
In other words, popular culture found the travails and insanity of Winehouse to be a form of entertainment, and she simply was allowed to self-destruct for the enjoyment and amusement of her adoring public. There was a human and artistic side to the young woman that few people ever saw or experienced. British singer Lily Allen described this side in a Scottish newspaper when she said, “I know Amy Winehouse very well. And she is very different to what people portray her as being. Yes, she does get out of her mind on drugs sometimes, but she is also a very clever, intelligent, witty, funny person who can hold it together. You just don’t see that side.”
What is so frightening is how common it is for addicts and alcoholics to be kind, creative human beings who are simply caught in the vise-like grips of a fatal disease. A question that has to be asked beyond the horrible reality: What possible could have been done to help Amy Winehouse? How might she have been saved?
Clients Like Amy Winehouse And Sober Companions
ONE80CENTER has an individualized program that is designed to meet the needs and specific background of each of our clients. Since we have many successful clients, we understand that they often are resistant to entering treatment because they still have the material wealth. In addition, they are unwilling at first to enter our treatment facility without first going through a private detox. As a result, we offer a remote detox with medical visits and the consistent presence of a sober companion.
By being able to detox in the comfort of their own homes or at a hotel, certain clients often become more willing to embrace the program. Without question, Amy Winehouse was a difficult case, highly resistant to treatment. The presence of a sober companion in her home, however, could have helped to prevent her death and facilitated a path to recovery.
People die from this disease, whether they are intimate loved ones or famous celebrities, there is nothing left behind in the vacuum beyond the tragedy and so many unanswered questions. The focus of the individualized program of ONE80CENTER is to meet you or your loved one where they need to be met in order to foster the beginnings of recovery. After all, as long as health is maintained and the gift of life is kept sacred, there is hope for recovery.
At ONE80CENTER, we only wish that Amy Winehouse had been able to walk this road to freedom before she was taken from this world. Could our individualized program, including remote detox and sober companions, have saved her? Sadly, probably not since you cannot help anyone who is not willing to try to help herself. We would have valued the opportunity to offer our very best in expertise, services and experience to such a talented young lady who will be sorely missed.














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