Hi people. I haven’t posted anything in the last couple of months. My last post went up in mid-July, then there was a guest post, and then…the silence of the tomb.
But I’m still here.
It has been a challenging and chaotic summer. Our planned (temporary) move to Toronto got rescheduled and rescheduled due to a death in the family and our wish to support the person left behind. Which meant a few trips back and forth to Europe for Isabel (my wife) and one extra trip for the kids and me. It wasn’t all bleak. We spent two weeks in the south of France, and there aren’t many places more beautiful than that. But it was surely disorienting.
Now back in Toronto, finally to roost, for at least four more months. But we had to shift from one rental to another. We’re still trying to get settled. And four days before the start of school, we found that our boys (12-year-old twins) weren’t allowed to attend the public school we’d planned for them. Frantic search for a new school — which now seems to have panned out well. Discovered a great ping-pong spot. Life goes on.
Now, with a little peace, I’m tempted to start blogging again. But I ask myself: do I have much more to offer in the domain of addiction and “recovery” or have I covered what I’ve got to say? I’m not sure. I’ve become a little less interested in the neurobiology of addiction for a very simple reason. Short of neurosurgery (and a very few available pharmaceuticals, which were already in use decades ago), there’s not much to do about the neural basis of addiction except to understand it better and then get to work on changing behaviour. So why not go straight to the behaviour? Which of course means the thoughts, feelings, internal voices and psychological background (emotional difficulties at younger ages) leading to the behaviour. I’m more interested in that right now.
This interest is fed by my growing psychotherapy practice with people in addiction (or struggling at the border of it). I am learning a lot. And I hope I’m helping my clients. At the same time, I’m pretty tuned into the gradual evolution of the treatment field, the growing strength of the harm reduction ethos, increasing frustration with the dominion of AA and its offshoots, and gradual changes in the policy/legal/medical/political issues that swirl around the enormous problem of opioid addiction in the US. Not to mention the social and societal factors that make it so hard for many people to quit or cut down. I get what residential rehabs sometimes do right and what they so often do wrong. I get the power of mindfulness/meditation and the various psychotherapeutic approaches (e.g., ACT, mindfulness-based relapse prevention, dialectical behaviour therapy) that incorporate it, along with the best (hopefully) from clinical psychology. So maybe there is more to talk about.
By the way, I still give talks on addiction all over the place and write occasional articles for scientific journals as well as the popular press. And I’m still working on that novel.
I also wonder if I should get more personal. I haven’t done anything illegal in a long time (except when it comes to parking and such). But am I a completely different person than when I was using opiates and coke (and acid and a few other things) and breaking the law almost daily? Of course not. I sometimes still feel incomplete and empty in ways I’ve felt since age 18. I still attach a particular meaning to substances, though my substances these days are pretty benign — and occasional. But I don’t talk about myself much, and maybe I should. You guys share a lot. Maybe I should share more.
That’s it for now. Just wanted to indulge in some speculation, thinking aloud. And I have an excellent guest post coming up in a few more days.
I hope you, my readers, are doing as well as you can. Warm wishes to all.
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