@LifeCutShort
That is a very profound insight and question.
Bessel van der Kolk, one of my personal heroes in researching trauma, describes the automatic recourse to drugs as "a post alcoholic culture" - the idea that you have to stick something in your mouth to change your view of the world.
He contrasts that with yoga, mindfulness, tai chi etc and of course with psychotherapy, which achieve the same and better results in the short term, and far better results in the long term, by teaching us actual coping skills, and helping us get to the point where we can change our circumstances.
One thing which came up in a big post here a few days back, was a woman saying that she had self medicated with alcohol and illegal drugs, but was now "clean"
a drug is a drug, regardless of what some poxy little politician or bureautwat writes on a piece of paper. van der Kolk points out that alcoholics and addicts are self medicating, and that alcohol works pretty well, until it doesn't! To my way of thinking, the woman was never "unclean".
I've seen friends suffer all of the symptoms described by William Burroughs, for coming off morphine, when they've tried to come off SSRIs too fast, but SSRI's are not supposed to be addictive or to give cold turkey - they're given other newspeak names instead.
The drugs (of any sort) do not teach coping skills and do not change our life circumstances.
That is a very profound insight and question.
Bessel van der Kolk, one of my personal heroes in researching trauma, describes the automatic recourse to drugs as "a post alcoholic culture" - the idea that you have to stick something in your mouth to change your view of the world.
He contrasts that with yoga, mindfulness, tai chi etc and of course with psychotherapy, which achieve the same and better results in the short term, and far better results in the long term, by teaching us actual coping skills, and helping us get to the point where we can change our circumstances.
One thing which came up in a big post here a few days back, was a woman saying that she had self medicated with alcohol and illegal drugs, but was now "clean"
a drug is a drug, regardless of what some poxy little politician or bureautwat writes on a piece of paper. van der Kolk points out that alcoholics and addicts are self medicating, and that alcohol works pretty well, until it doesn't! To my way of thinking, the woman was never "unclean".
I've seen friends suffer all of the symptoms described by William Burroughs, for coming off morphine, when they've tried to come off SSRIs too fast, but SSRI's are not supposed to be addictive or to give cold turkey - they're given other newspeak names instead.
The drugs (of any sort) do not teach coping skills and do not change our life circumstances.
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