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Dual Diagnosed Bipolar Alcoholic--Recovery Tools



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08/01/2007 03:47
JR1
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Dual Diagnosed Bipolar--Recovery Tools

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Hey Y'all!

With my addiction, and more so it seems with my bipolar disease, relapse can occur and probably will. I know that doesn't sound very hopeful, but the truth is the truth. I have had relapses with both diseases. The important thing for me to remember is that, after a relapse and during recovery time, I must get busy and use the tools of recovery not only to repair and control damage but also to fortify or strengthen my weakest defenses.

The weaknesses which tend to push me toward relapse are faulty reasoning and judgment; discomfort with and inability to deal with my emotions; negative thinking; critical comparisons between myself and others; fatigue and stress (I use the acronym "HALT"--Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired--to identify the onset of relapse); chaos and confusion; and unhealthy or unsound reactions to people, places, or events. I have other areas of thinking and behavior, such as a compelling need for self-gratification, which weaken my defense; but the ones I have mentioned are the major day-to-day problems that I must practice to overcome.

Some of the tools I try to use in practicing to defend myself against relapse are communication with others in recovery (number ONE in importance); restraint (pausing before I react to people, places, or things); counsel with someone who has experience or authority before I make major decisions; prayer; effort or willingness to help others; praise and gratitude instead of complaints; silence instead of demeaning criticism or damaging advice and opinions; good listening skills; willingness to follow the advice and direction of my advisors and doctors; and an open mind. I also go to recovery meetings, participate in ongoing therapy, have regular visits with my doctors, and I try to practice unselfish attitudes toward my friends and loved ones.

From time to time I do experience setbacks in my recovery effort, but I have practiced not to dwell on failure, but rather to learn from it. I understand that "failure isn't forever." Most of all I have come to understand that the tools for recovery are not merely "one-shot deals." Those tools are "GUARANTEED FOR LIFE."

If I happen to relapse or have serious setback on the road to recovery, I don't have to be afraid to start again--to re-apply my "tools" as before and to find my way back to the road.

I have to remember that relapse, when it happens, is another learning experience, and, as such, relapse may actually contribute to my getting better. With that reasoning, I can remove the stigma of relapse and return to my meetings, my friends, and my recovery without suffering the burden of guilt (guilt is natural after failure). That reasoning tends to take the fear out of "coming back", doesn't it?

Thanks for being a part of my recovery!

Your friend,

Jim

James A Rist

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03/21/2008 08:21
allyn
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I just read JR1's article on using recovery tools and agree 100%. This morning I woke up feeling more like my old self or maybe I should say like my healthier self. Talking with you all in this forum is going to be one of my lifelines because recently I found out I can be triggered by personalities in my home group AA meetings. I try to go to meetings when I have something to give because on bad days I don't want to be a stumbling block to anyone else and I know my bad days are related to my bipolar and not a need to drink, Thank God. On my bad days my depressive side wants to re-establish my old behavior patterns and so the war is on. I find it best if I limit my contact with other people on those days. Less damage done! If I'm writing in the wrong section, please let me know and maybe give me the link to the right section. Thanks

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03/24/2008 08:31
JR1
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Dear Allyn,

I've been offline for a couple of days, and it was nice to log in this AM to see your uplifting post!

Yes the tools DO work, don't they?

I am so glad I had the patience to learn about those tools, and to practice using them!

I believe that ANYONE can experience recovery, as I have, if he/she has the patience and willingness to learn and to practice making and maintaining changes--attitudes, beliefs, reactions.

Thanks, Allyn!

Jim

Post edited by: JR1, at: 06/30/2008 23:30

James A Rist



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