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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 Third Barrier to Successful Recovery: Guilt

The third and final barrier to recovery is guilt. Guilt acts as another strap in the harness that keeps the addict trapped in his addiction.

The addict feels guilty because he has committed dis­honest deeds against the people he cares about. This is an integral part of the life cycle of addiction.

A person who becomes addicted to drugs or alcohol doesn’t just wake up one day and say, “Gee, I think I’ll start using drugs until I destroy my family, my relationships and my life in general.”

As discussed in this booklet, addiction starts with a problem. Drugs or alcohol are chosen as a solution to relieve the discomfort one is experiencing by not being able to solve the problem. Physical and mental compli­cations then follow. It all adds up to a serious decline in the person’s quality of life.

To be successful, a rehabilitation program must help an addict face his transgressions (violations of rules, laws or agreements) and enable him to clean up the wreckage of his current life that has resulted from the addiction and dishonesty.

Before addiction, most addicts are basically good people with a sense of right and wrong and with no intention or desire to hurt others. As the cycle of addiction progresses and the cravings and other mechanics of addiction begin to dissolve the individual’s self-control, they get into situa­tions where they are doing and saying things they know deep down aren’t true or right. All these dishonest or damaging things are done to cover up and continue their drug use.

If the pattern of abuse continues, the addict eventually becomes trapped in a vicious cycle of using drugs, hiding the fact, lying about drug use and even stealing to support more drug use. At each turn, the addict is committing more dishonest acts and, with each act, is creating more damage in his life and relationships. None of these acts are truly overlooked by the addict; every misdeed is commit­ted to memory.

The memory of each misdeed includes all the surround­ing circumstances in place the moment the deed was done: who was involved, the time, the place and what the end result of the dishonest deed was. The addict knows these misdeeds are wrong and because the basic person himself (not the addicted personality) is good, he will feel bad or guilty after the dishonest act is committed.

Over time, these memories of guilt accumulate. When the addict sees people or places involved in his trans­gressions, these sights can trigger the guilt surrounding the misdeeds.

More and more transgressions are committed. And more and more, people and things related to the transgres­sions become triggers that remind the addict of the dis­honest acts. For example, perhaps a young man steals cash from his father’s wallet and uses the money for drugs. Thereafter, whenever he sees his father, it triggers the memory of that stolen money. It can be enough just to see a person or an object to trigger the guilt! Sometimes no words even need to be said.

Guilt is an uncomfortable feeling and so can prompt the addict to use more drugs to temporarily relieve this unwanted sensation. In this way, guilt helps maintain the trap of addiction.

The addict will also begin to withdraw more and more from friends and family as the transgressions committed by the addict increase in number. He will eventually pull away from the family, seclude himself, even become antag­onistic towards those he loves. Remember, the basic per­sonality of an addict is good and the reason they end up withdrawing from those they love is because they know they are doing the wrong things. The act of withdrawing from those places and people that the addict has harmed is the addict’s attempt to restrain himself from committing any further transgressions toward those people and places he cares about.

In the early 1960s, L. Ron Hubbard’s research resulted in a heightened understanding of man’s basic goodness and the way his behavior and attitudes change after the com­mission of transgressions. He then developed techniques that would enable a person to obtain relief from past misdeeds and a fresh, new viewpoint toward life. When applied in the context of addiction treatment, these princi­ples have been shown to help addicts recover fully from their addictions.