Drug Addiction Newsweek: Men and Depression
According to a Newsweek, February 26, 2007 article, six million American men will be diagnosed with depression this year; and this is just the tip of the iceberg, because millions more suffer in silence.
American psychologists have been slow to recognize how men’s emotions affect their behaviors, perhaps this is because long ago their predecessor’s decided that having a uterus was the main risk factor in mental illness. Depression was viewed as a female problem, and primarily as a result of fluctuating hormones and overly emotional natures.
Some symptoms of depression can be so severe (such as drug, sex or gambling addictions or alcoholism) that they are frequently misdiagnosed and mistaken for the symptom (i.e., the addiction issue) rather than the true cause which caused the depression in the first place.
Depression has been linked to heart disease and attacks, strokes and high blood pressure all of which affect men at a much higher rate and an earlier age than women. During the past 50 years, American men of all ages have killed themselves at a rate that is at least 4 times more common than women. And yet, with all these statistics facing us, men are still frequently told and definitely still believe that they must be the strong ones, the macho male figure and that depression is for the weak, certainly not for a real man.
What a bunch of bull is that!
The truth is that if you can imagine or visualize your life as a journey and a road that you travel, then you can also visualize that the road from point A (birth) to point B (death) is not always straight. Sometimes, there are mountains or lakes that we must or want to circumnavigate. There are side roads and trips that we might want or need to see. There are detours that we must take. We find that we must adapt to the demands of our environment. During the course of this journey and these detours, we sometimes find that we encounter “trigger points”. These “trigger points” are wounds that have not healed with time. Sometimes they are wounds that we carry around with us almost like a protective shield, but they are not protective nor are they a shield and they can cause you to experience anger, hurt, fear, guilt and depression.
When this occurs, subconsciously we might withdraw into ourselves in interpersonal relationships, or we might become oversensitive and react in a hurt manner without apparent reason, sometimes we become particularly hurtful, without actually wanting or meaning to. When this occurs, you have been given the opportunity, the ability and capability to bring the painful experiences (or trigger points) into the light. With the aid of hypnosis, you can look at these experiences under the soothing blanket of hypnosis and in this way you can begin much more quickly, the healing process.
The first step in this healing process is releasing and forgiving. Forgiveness is necessary to free your spirit. Releasing is the first step in the process of forgiveness and moving forward. When you release the hurt, bitterness, resentment, fear or anger that you are experiencing, you take back control of your own life. You feed your spirit and you increase your capacity for joy, love and happiness beyond measure.
This is not easy. As Dr. Edward M. Hallowell, a Harvard psychiatrist and author of “Dare to Forgive” states, “Forgiveness… has to be cultivated; it goes against a natural human tendency to seek revenge.” It is for this reason that he recommends getting help to accomplish this.
Trying to accomplish this by yourself, without help, using your conscious mind only can be a slow and uncomfortable process. By using the relaxation techniques utilized in hypnosis and your subconscious power, it is possible to increase the effectiveness of the releasing process. Working from the inside out, releasing negative thoughts that have been harmful and freeing the spirit so that the healing process and take place. “Repeat a positive statement often enough and it will become ingrained in your subconscious” says Adrian Calabrese, Ph.D., Woman’s World, October 18, 2005. This is why I frequently recommend that you listen to a recording or CD, allowing the recorded suggestions to flow over and through you, talking to your subconscious and insuring that your subconscious receives the positive suggestions that you seek to release the negative, start the forgiveness process and change your life forever.
Remember, anytime is the right time for a New Beginning.
Linda Simmon, C.Ht.
http://www.newhypnotherapy.com
Linda Simmon is a highly sought after consultant, hypnotherapist, life coach, and speaker. After over 25 years of being a paralegal, Linda Simmon decided it was time to take a new direction with her life. She is a graduate of The Hypnosis Motivation Institute, the first nationally accredited school for hypnotherapy in the United States and is now dedicated to helping people get new beginnings. Helping people break through barriers that may have held them back in the past and transforming their lives in the present. For more information on Linda, her CDÂ?s, downloadable sessions, workshops and radio show, visit http://www.newhypnotherapy.com
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Nicolas Sheff – Nicolas Sheff was drunk for the first time at age eleven. In the years that followed, he would smoke pot regularly, do cocaine and ecstasy, and develop addictions to methamphetamines and heroin. Even so, he felt like he would always be able to quit and put his life together whenever he needed to. It took a violent relapse one summer in California to convince him otherwise. Now in his early 20s, Sheff is a recovering drug addict and alcoholic who has written a memoir, Tweak, about his experience. He has also been published in Newsweek, Nerve, and the San Francisco Chronicle. In a voice that is raw and honest, he spares no detail in telling the compelling, heartbreaking, and true story of his relapse and the road to recovery. He plunges into the mental and physical depths of drug addiction, painting a picture of a person at odds with his past, with his family, with his substances, and with himself. Its a harrowing portrait—but not one without hope. In an extraordinary turn of events his father, David Sheff, has also simultaneously written a New York Times best-selling memoir about their experience, Beautiful Boy: A Father’s Journey through His Son’s Meth Addiction.
Sunday Talk: Thanks for the memories
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Eagle Rants April 28, 2012
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