For Immediate Help Call 866-826-9158 NOW

Booklet Introduction

What is Addiction

Is Addiction a Disease

An Alternative School of Thought

First Barrier to Recovery

Drugs Stores in the Body

Cravings

Depression

The Addict and Depression

Addicted Lifestyle

Guilt

Turning the Corner to Recovery

Solving Addiction

The Narconon Program

Withdrawal

Therapeutic Training Routines

New Lief Detoxification

Learning Improvement

Communication and Perception

Ups and Downs in Life

Personal Values and Integrity

Changing Conditions in Life

The Way to Happiness

Graduate Successes

The Narconon Program Evolution

How You Can Help An Addict



The Addict’s Lifestyle Itself Creates More Depression

The final piece of the puzzle of depression comes from addiction’s destructive effects on an addict’s life. There are broken relationships and often, problems with the law or finances. The individual starts to distance himself from the people he loves and becomes more and more detached. He may lose his job or start experiencing serious health prob­lems. Ordinarily, addicts lose everything they care about: their homes, their families, cars, possessions, jobs and friends. Addiction is destroying the addict’s life. No one would be happy about this happening.

Depression is an appropriate emotional response, con­sidering the misery that the addict is faced with. Some psychiatrists and medical doctors will diagnose this depressed state as a mental illness and prescribe psycho­tropic medications. These medications will never do anything more than mask the depression temporarily. On the other hand, so will the addict’s preferred drug or brand of alcohol.

Psychotropic drugs do not help a recovering addict restore their relationships or build a sane, drug-free life. They do nothing to help the person rebuild his or her health, in fact, they add more toxins to the person’s system since all drugs have some toxic effect, even if minor.

Medical personnel in the addiction treatment field treating this depression as a “mental illness or disease” expect that somehow their prescribed medications will “fix” the person. Then once “fixed,” the person could then fix these situations in their life. This is an irrational assumption, if you think about it.