Addicted to Procrastination

If there is a way to put work off until the last moment, I know about it. I have been using various procrastination techniques for many years and some of the best are the most obvious, but there are many different ways to put something off and you can’t really go wrong with whatever you choose. Here are three of the techniques that I have used to successfully procrastinate my way through life.

  1. Video Games. Yes, this may seem like a cop out, but I don’t care what you think! Whether it is getting to the next level, beating the next boss or trying out the next race, there are many ways that video games have induced procrastination for me. I’ve never stopped to think about it before, but I never procrastinated on a video game… makes you think huh? Not really. One of the most procrastinating inducing games I have ever played is Gran Turismo. I am a big car guy and could spend hours testing out various cars, taking photos and seeing how my tuning affected the next race. I would much rather do this any day of the week than do school work.
  2. Television. This is probably the Granddaddy of all procrastination. I’m not sure how people procrastinated before the advent of the television to be honest. Did they just read one more article in the paper or another chapter of a book? I don’t know, but it sounds boring to me. With TV though, and especially if you have cable, you can find just about anything to grab your interest. Of personal interest when trying to get out of doing work was COPS. This show is an oldie but a goodie because you never know what sort of dumb crap is going to happen next. Will it be a drunk guy, or a prostitute? Who knows, let’s watch and find out.
  3. Stores. When I was in college I was always trying to find any reason to get out and go to the store. In the middle of a big term paper? “Let’s go to Target.” Studying for a final? “Anyone need anything at Wal-Mart? They’re open 24 hrs.” Taking an online quiz that has to be done in about 5 minutes? “I wonder if I could put a train horn on my car?” And so on and so forth.

Basically, if there is anything that can grab your attention for even a modicum of an ounce of a bit of a nanosecond, take it. That is how you truly and completely procrastinate and those are three of my favorites.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/addicted-to-procrastination-1504826.html

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Heroin Addiction – Five Reasons to Stop Using

Over 17 years ago, I was sitting inside a camper shell of an abandon truck, putting a piece of tar heroin inside a makeshift bottle cap cooker, squirting some water in it from my syringe, and getting ready to cook it. I tied myself off so that I could get a vein ready, and then it hit me! I’m an addict, and I have a heroin addiction. I don’t know how to stop using, and this is what I will be for the rest of my life! I had the sickest feeling in my gut about what had brought me to this situation, and what I had become. In that moment, without thinking anymore, I broke off a bigger piece of the opiate, dropped it in my cooker, cooked it, chewed up a piece of cigarette filter,dropped that in the cooker, drew up the brown liquid with my syringe, registered blood, and proceeded to push the plunger.

When I came to, I was slumped over on my side, and confused. I didn’t quite know what had happened to me. I tried getting up but I couldn’t lift my right arm. I turned my head and saw the syringe stuck in my arm, and still tied off. Then it hit me for the second time, what I had tried to do. I had made a feeble attempt to take my life, but in the process, I overdosed, and didn’t inject all the opiate into my arm. I yanked the syringe out of my arm, threw it, untied myself, and sat there in tears.

I think about my past heroin addiction from time to time when life throws me a curve ball, and I am feeling sorry for myself, or sitting on the pity pot. It wakes me up, reminds me how precious life has become for me, and how much I want to live. I have many good reasons why I had to stop my using. I normally don’t disclose to the public my past personal life with heroin addiction, and how difficult it was to stop using, but I felt that I needed to share a small portion of it, and where the path of addiction took me. There is much more to my story, and there is also another path that staying clean from drugs has taken me, and I prefer that path much better! Heroin addiction is not part of my life anymore, and I have been clean for 17 wonderful years!

If you search, you can find much material on heroin addiction, how to stop using. and treatment. My focus for the moment is about heroin addiction, and the reasons why you should stop. I found out through research, that most of the inmates in U.S. prisons are there for drug or drug related charges, and that is staggering! We are not winning the war on drugs in America, and the problem of drug use is growing at an alarming rate!

You don’t wake up one morning and decide that when you grow up, that you want to be an addict. It doesn’t work that way! There are many life factors that can lead to heroin addiction, and once involved, very difficult to stop using.

Heroin addiction is the shame of the addict’s family, and if you are an addict in a relationship, it becomes the frustration of your partner. Everyone who are directly or indirectly in contact with the addict are affected. A mother did not carry her baby in her womb for 9 months, and at birth, fed, clothed, and loved her baby so that her child would grow up to become an addict! If you have become a heroin addict in a relationship, your partner wouldn’t have stood at the alter, and say I do if your partner knew you would be an addict, and provide a life of misery for him or her, and you because it will become difficult to stop using.

I feel for the heroin addict, for the family, loved ones, children, and friends. From time to time, I hear addicts say, “I’m not hurting anyone, I’m just hurting myself”. If you were clean, you would cringe at what you said, because you would understand how everyone is affected by your heroin addiction! I want to provide you with five reasons what the heroin addict is up against if he or she can’t stop using, and it isn’t a pretty picture!

1. Heroin addiction is escalating

It has been reported that the use of opiates in the United States has increased approximately 20%. Approximately 1 in 3 heroin addicts will experience overdose, and approximately 1% of those heroin overdoses will lead to death.

2. Disease is on the increase

Approximately a third of intravenous addicts will contract HIV, Hepatitis B or C, due to risk factors such as sharing needles, and unsafe sex practice among users.

3. Pregnant female opiate addicts

The use of opiates during pregnancy has also increased the chance of premature delivery, and the risk of SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome).

4. Prison Incarceration rate is increasing

It has been reported that approximately 70% of prison inmates across the U.S. are in prison for drug or drug related charges. It has also been estimated that approximately 80% of prison inmates in the U.S. have had a history of substance abuse in the past.

5. Prison recidivism rate among drug users

It has been reported that approximately 40% will return back to prison due to drug or drug related violations.

This is just the tip of the iceberg if you are a heroin addict, and you can’t stop. How about your family, the children, your spouse or mate? Did you think your heroin addiction wasn’t going to affect them? Think about it, you already know what the end of the road looks like if you don’t stop using opiates. Now is the time to give it some real thought, and figure out what kind of treatment can work for you!

I was in your shoes at one time, and I know how difficult it is to follow through with treatment for heroin addiction, and trying to stay clean. It isn’t easy, but it can be done. I am living proof along with many thousands that you can stop using heroin. You can be helped, and your life can change. No one can make the decision for treatment for you. It has to come from you. Do you want to stop? Don’t just exist from day to day, live it!

Don’t lose hope! There is help for you to recover from heroin addiction! Don’t second guess yourself! You know you need help fast! Click the link below, and don’t hesitate!
http://hubpages.com/hub/Addicted-to-Heroin-Cant-Stop-Using

My name is Jesus Uman, and I have worked in the Human Services field over nine years as a Certified Substance Abuse Counselor. I have counseled and worked with hundreds of individuals who suffered the wreckage of drug and alcohol addiction. I have seen countless lives change through treatment. If you are suffering from addiction, don’t lose hope! Go to the link below and click it to save your life!
http://hubpages.com/hub/Addicted-to-Heroin-Cant-Stop-Using

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/heroin-addiction-five-reasons-to-stop-using-1471312.html

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Addictions Awareness

November 16, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

True addiction to anything is a very serious state of mind. The mind of an addict has at one point been reprogrammed to focus one one thing, and that’s whatever they are addicted to. In pretty much every case of addiction, the process started out with something that seemed innocently entertaining or experimenting with something that provided the thrill of instant gratification of one sort or another.

Addictions come in many forms. From cigarettes to gambling, to the more appalling addictions of a criminal mind, including rape and murder, to the death defying acts of a thrill seeker. A person can become addicted to basically anything, and on a positive note, people can even become addicted to doing good, positive and productive things as well. It’s the addictions people have that create some type of negative effect that can change them forever and ruin their lives.

Drugs, alcohol and tobacco products seem to be be the big 3 items that people can easily become addicted to. These are things are readily available in our society today, and if taken properly or in moderation, the harm is limited. It’s the overdoing of these things that can change personalities, tear apart families, cause cancer and other irreversible physical damage, destroy ones finances and seriously effect job retention.

And it all starts from the mind of a person thinking, that if a little makes you feel good, a lot will make you feel even better. It’s the “Snowball Effect” in literally every case.

People that live a clean, healthy life, that have no addictions can never know or understand what an addict goes through. Reprogramming the brain is the only way to break an addiction, and sometimes that requires a long stay in a rehabilitation setting before that can be achieved. Don’t do things that can become addictive in the first place is the best policy. Breaking addictions is not an easy thing to do, but with prayer and the understanding and support of one’s family and friends, it can be done.

Breaking an addiction problem often requires interaction with others that share your problems. There is help at the authors blog page http://selfintervention.blogspot.com/.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/addictions-awareness-1462849.html

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Gambling addiction

November 15, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

Gambling addiction is sometimes referred to as the “hidden illness” because there are no obvious physical signs or symptoms like there are in drug or alcohol addiction. Problem gamblers typically deny or minimize the problem. They also go to great lengths to hide their gambling. For example, problem gamblers often withdraw from their loved ones, sneak around, and lie about where they’ve been and what they’ve been up to.

Gambling is big business in America earning the gaming industry billions of dollars in net revenue annually. Americans spend more money each year on legal gambling than they do on movie tickets, recorded music, theme parks, spectator sports, and video games combined (Christiansen, 2000). Gambling is very attractive, particularly to people who need money. http://apuestamaniatico.com/ did a study to see who gambles, and found people who made less than ten thousand dollars a year gamble six times more often than those who earn over fifty thousand dollars a year. People know they can win millions by risking a dollar. A recent program on the Discovery Channel stated that gambling is so attractive, that when the powerball is high, ninety percent of eligible adults buy a ticket. There is no other commodity where the percentages are this high. The real odds of winning a state lottery are approximately fourteen million to one, the same odds as being hit by lightening seven times while waiting in the lottery line.

The biggest step in treatment is realizing you have a problem with gambling. It takes tremendous strength and courage to own up to this, especially if you have lost a lot of money and strained or broken relationships along the way. Don’t despair, and don’t try to go it alone. Many others have been in your shoes and have been able to break the habit.  Overcoming a gambling addiction or problem is never easy. But recovery is possible if you stick with treatment and seek support.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/gambling-addiction-1459470.html

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Where to Find Information about Drug Addiction

November 11, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

If you suspect a loved one of having a drug problem, where do you go to find information?  Information on drug addiction can be found in a variety of places. Even if you are the one with the addiction – when you have as much information as possible about this disease, you will be better equipped to deal with it and overcome it.

First and foremost, start with the Internet.  There is so much information on the worldwide web; you can even get a little bit overwhelmed.  However, it’s usually better to have too much information rather than not enough.  Do a quick search on your favorite search engine for "drug addiction" and then spend some time reading through the websites you are given.

Look for books on the subject of drug addiction.  Books contain a lot of relevant information that can help when addiction is part of your life.  There are even some great downloadable e-books on the Internet that can give you instant information about the disease of drug addiction.

Go to your local library and see what resources they have available.  Libraries offer more than books these days.  They have access to documentaries, pamphlets, and magazines regarding drug addiction and recovery.  They also often can provide more extensive information regarding specific drug addictions like alcoholism or methamphetamine use.

Check with your local police department.  Most cities have police personnel who are specifically in charge of drug information in the schools such as the D.A.R.E. program.  They are always very eager to share information with you about drug addiction in hopes that spreading the word will help curb the problem.

Talk to a doctor about drug addiction whether it’s you who has the problem or someone you love.  Physicians have much of the latest information regarding drug addiction and dependence.  If, for some strange reason, they don’t, they will be able to direct you to someone or someplace who has the information you are looking for.

Many churches also have extensive information regarding drug addiction – especially if those churches host 12 step programs.  Talk to the clergy person who presides over the church and ask their advice.  Even though they are religious people, they are not blind to the problems of society and often have some very pertinent advice to offer regarding drug addiction and recovery.

When you are dealing with a drug addiction – yours or another person’s – having all the information you can get can make the difference between a successful recovery and one that is fraught with obstacles and blockages.

To read about benefits of papaya, chipped bone and other information, visit the Health And Nutrition Tips site.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/where-to-find-information-about-drug-addiction-1412634.html

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The changing debate over medical marijuana – Paging Dr. Gupta …

November 11, 2009 | By deflv In Alcohol, Drugs, Gambling, Object | Comments(0)

The drug itself isn’t a gateway; people are gateways. Certain personalities will always take things to extremes no matter what they start with–cigarettes, pills, alcohol , gambling , Facebook. It’s time to truly study marijuana and decide ……

Read more from the original source:
The changing debate over medical marijuana – Paging Dr. Gupta …

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The Treatment of Sex Addiction — A Psychoanalytic Approach

November 10, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

Treatment For Sexual Addiction — A Psychoanalytic Approach

by Dorothy C. Hayden, LCSW

It is well known among people in the 12-step sex programs that of all the addictions, sex is the most difficult to master. Far from the notion that sex addiction is the “fun” one, the suffering of dealing with this affliction is enormous. The compulsion is so compelling that it is common for members of the sex recovering groups to be unable to maintain any continuous time of sexual sobriety, giving way to despair and hopelessness. Before treatment, sexual enactment is the addict’s only source of safety, pleasure, soothing and acceptance. It vitalizes and connects. It relieves loneliness, emptiness and depression.

Sex addition has been called the athlete’s foot of the mind: it is an itch always waiting to be scratched. The scratching, however, causes wounds and never alleviates the itch. Furthermore, the percentage of people who go to therapy or a 12-step program is quite small. The majority of sexual compulsives live in isolation filled with feelings of shame. Almost 100% of the people who come to me for an initial consultation, whether it be for compulsive use of prostitutes, phone sex, a fetish, cross dressing, or masochistic encounters with dominatrixes, relay that beneath the shame they feel in telling me their story, they also experience a sense of freedom that comes from finally being able to share with another human being the hidden, shameful, sexually compulsive acts that imprison them. This is a condition that gradually bleeds away everything the person holds dear. The life of a sex addict gradually becomes very small. The freedom of self is impaired. Energies are consumed. The rapacious need for a particular kind of sexual experience drives the addict to spend untold hours in the world of his addiction. Inexorably, the compulsion begins to exact higher and higher costs. Whether it be on the internet indulging in sexual fantasies with fantasy people, being on the phone to the sex hot-lines, or frantically searching the net and the S&M clubs for someone who will act out a particular, ritualized fetish fantasy, or cruising the bars searching for the “one” who will have sex in a public toilet, or going to dungeons to be whipped, flogged and humiliated, sex addiction is a devastating illness that takes an enormous toll.

Friends slip away. Hobbies and activities once enjoyed are dropped. Financial security crumbles as sums as high as $40,000 or $50,000 a year are spent on sex. Then there is perpetual fear of exposure. Relationships with partners are ruined, as the appeal of intimate sex with a partner pales in comparison to the intense “high” of indulging in the dark and devious world of sexual compulsion. What is a sex addict? Sex addiction, of course, has nothing to do with sex. Any sexual act or apparent “perversion” has no meaning outside of its psychological, unconscious context. A simple definition of sex addiction is not dissimilar to definitions of other addictions. But a simple definition of this complex and intractable condition doesn’t suffice. What sets sex addiction apart from other addictions and makes it so persistent is that the subject of sex touches on our innermost unconscious wishes and fears, our sense of self, our very identity.

Current treatment might include participation in a 12-step program, going to an outpatient clinic, working with the Patrick Carnes material, aversion therapy, or the use of medications to stave off hypersexuality. Most therapy is cognitive-behavioral, designed to help the patient to control or repress the instinct for a period of time, usually out of a desire to comply with the group norms of their 12-step meeting or a need to please the therapist. While I recognize the efficacy the 12-step programs to provide structure and support, in my opinion, the reason that relapse is so prevalent is that these treatment modalities do not effect long-term structural personality change that eliminates the compulsion at its roots. Current treatment does not aim to transform psychic energies so that the reality sector of the mind dominates the personality so that the impulse to act out can be understood and controlled.

While the definition of sex addiction is the same as that of other addictions (recurrent failure to control the behavior and continuation of the behavior despite increasingly harmful consequences), sexual compulsion is set apart from other addictions in that sex involves our innermost unconscious wishes, fears and conflicts. Sex addiction is a symbolic enactment of deeply entrenched unconscious dysfunctional relational patterns with self and others. It involves a person’s derailed developmental process that occurred as a result of inadequate parenting. Hence, permanent growth and change are most likely to occur in the arena of contemporary psychoanalysis, which seeks understanding and repair of these unconscious dysfunctional relational patterns along with the development of a more unified and structured sense of self. This new personality restructuring can better self-regulate feeling states without the use of a destructive defense like sexualization and can find meaning, enjoyment, intimacy, meaningful goal setting and achievement from attainable and appropriate sources in life.

The remainder of this paper will give a brief overview of the historical psychoanalytic views about sexual deviance, and will then articulate the current analytic understanding about the dynamics and treatment of sexual compulsions. Any discussion of historical psychoanalysis must, ipso facto, begin with Sigmund Freud. Freud formulated that sexual deviance occurs due to an incomplete resolution of the Oedipus complex, with its concomitant castration anxiety. Unconscious castration anxiety occurs in the person’s present-day consciousness in the form of fear of confrontation, retaliation, or rebuke, a sense of inadequacy, and perhaps doubts about gender identity. Sex addiction, according to Freud, is a defensive way to cope with a tenuous sense of masculinity combined with unrelenting anxiety about sex, women, intimacy, aggression, and competition. Analysts that followed Freud held varying views. Sexual compulsions derive from an insatiable need for approval, prestige, power, bolstering of self-esteem, love and security which are experienced as being necessary for survival. The addict experiences the absence of sexual acting out as a threat to his very existence. Characteristic of any addict is a long history of a disturbed mother-child relationship. An unempathic, narcissistic, depressed or alcoholic mother has low tolerance for the child’s stress and frustrations. Nor is she able to supply the empathy, attention, nurturing and support that foster healthy development. The result in later life is separation anxiety, fear of abandonment and a sense of imminent self-fragmentation. This anxiety sends the sex addict running to his eroticized, fantasy cocoon where he experiences safety, security, a diminution of anxiety as well as the quelling of an unconscious wish to establish and maintain the missing, yet essential tie to mother. Typical of this person is the hope that he can find an idealized “other” who can embody, actualize and make concrete the longed for endlessly nurturing parent. This approach is doomed to failure. Inevitably, the other person’s needs start to impinge on the fantasy. The result is frustration, loneliness and disappointment. On the other hand, a mother can be overly intrusive and attentive. She may be unconsciously seductive, perhaps using the child as a replacement for an emotionally unavailable spouse. The child perceives the mother’s inability to set appropriate boundaries as seductive and as a massive disillusionment.

Later in life, the addict is hypersexual and has trouble setting boundaries. Real intimacy is experienced as an engulfing burden. The disillusionment of not experiencing appropriate parental boundaries is acted out later in life by the addict’s unconscious belief that the rules don’t apply to him with regards to sex, although he may be regulated and compliant in other parts of his life. A major theme for all addictions is that they have experienced profound and chronic need deprivation throughout childhood. Addicts in general sustain emotional injury within the realm of the mother-infant interaction as well as with other relationships. Intense interpersonal anxiety is the result of this early-life emotional need deprivation. In later life, the person experiences anxiety in all intimate relationships. Because the sex addict has anxiety about being unable to get what he needs from real people and because his desperate search for the fulfillment of unmet childhood needs inevitably end in disillusionment, he inevitably returns to his reliance on sexual fantasies and enactments to alleviate anxiety about connection and intimacy and as a way to achieve a sense of self-affirmation. Sex, for the addict, begins to be his primary value and a confirmation of his sense of self. Feelings of inferiority, inadequacy, and worthlessness magically disappear while sexually preoccupied , through acting out or through spending untold hours on the internet. However, the use of sex to meet self-centered needs for approval or validation precludes using it to meet the intimacy needs of a cherished other. Characteristic of this kind of narcissism is the viewing of other human beings not as whole people who have their own feelings, wants and needs, but rather as deliverers of desperately needed satisfaction that shores up a fragile sense of self. This sets up a cycle wherein his narcissism prevents him from deriving satisfaction from mutual, reciprocal relationships in real-life. Sexualizing, once again, is returned to as a magical elixir wherein his needs are magically met without having to negotiate the very real vicissitudes of intimate relationships. A client of mine, a 48-year-old attractive single man, is in the process of the breaking up of yet another relationship. After spending years of living a noxious childhood household, he went into his own world of fantasizing and masturbation as a way to soothe and protect himself.

“When I was a kid, I was obsessed with beautiful women in the magazines. When I was able to date, I went through one woman after another. In adulthood, I knew there was sadness and anger I didn’t want to face. To evade them, I had a steady stream of women who worshipped me, soothed me, paid attention to my needs. I went to peep shows and I visited prostitutes. Many a night I would spend hours in my car circling the block looking for just the right street-walker to give me oral sex in my car. One night I had sex with a transvestite. I cried all the way home.” He met a girl whom he designated as “perfect — my redemption, my salvation.”

He became engaged but soon lost interest in the sex, which he described as “boring”. While still engaged, he started picking up hookers for oral sex in the car and began compulsively using phone sex. His current relationship is breaking up because he picked a woman for her youth and beauty (which reflected well on his narcissistic self).

The rest of the story is predictable. They moved in together and the beautiful, young, sexy female started become real and having needs of her own. He admits he never felt warmth or love for her; she was merely a supplier of his narcissistic needs. As the relationship deteriorates, he fights the impulses to return to sex with strangers who don’t make demand on him. Another client of mine, a 38-year-old married man, has a compulsion to visit prostitutes. Three years into the treatment, he was finally able to talk about his anger towards his mother for depriving him emotionally through neglect and for never touching or caressing him. He can now make a connection between visits to the prostitutes and his hostility against mother for depriving him of sensual pleasure. He got lost in the mire of his parents’ constant feuding.

“When I was very young I would put a blanket on my genitals as a kind of soothing which I wasn’t getting from my parents. The rest of my life was a struggle to find other ways to soothe myself. When I discovered prostitutes, I thought I was in heaven. I can get sex now and be in total control. I can have it immediately, any way I want it, whenever I want it. I don’t have to concern myself with the girl, as long as I pay her. I don’t have to concern myself with vulnerability and rejection. This is my controlled pleasure world. This is the ultimate antithesis of the deprivation of my childhood.”

The use of sexualization as a defense is a common theme that runs through the psychoanalytic literature. A defense is a mechanism the young child devises to psychologically survive a noxious family environment. While this way of protecting himself works well for a period of time, the continuous use of it as an adult is destructive to the person’s ongoing functioning and sense of well being. By losing himself in sexual fantasies and constantly seeing others as potential sex partners, or by erotic internet enactments, the sex addict is able to significantly reduce and control a wide variety of threatening and uncomfortable emotional states. Most addicts control or bind potentially overwhelming anxiety via the addiction process. Diminution of depression, anxiety and rage are some of the pay-offs that operate to facilitate and maintain life in the erotic cocoon. I quote another patient which illustrates a case of narcissistic personality together with the use of sexualization as a defense. He is a 52-year old attractive, successful single man.

“I went on a date the other night. She wanted sex. I didn’t. It’s predictable. I don’t think I can even maintain an erection anymore. While a spend untold hours compulsively websurfing to live in my erotic fantasies, when it becomes real, when you find someone who seems to be the embodiment of your sexual pre-occupation, interest soon wanes as her wants and needs come into the picture. Sometimes, I don’t even bother with the pursuit of real women, because I know the inevitable result is disillusionment. I’m simply not prepared to meet somebody else’s needs. Oddly enough, my life is still dominated by sex. It becomes the lens through which I view everything. I go to a family gathering and get lost in sexual fantasies about my teenage nieces. I live in constant fear of being found out to be a “pervert”. I see a woman on the train dressed in a way that triggers me, and I’m ruined for the day. Regular sex just doesn’t do it for me anymore. It’s got to be bizarre or forbidden or “out of the box”. I arrive at work in an erotic haze. Women around me are all objects of sexual fantasy. I’m distracted; not focused. If something requires my attention, when real life intrudes and yanks me out of my sexual preoccupation, I get angry. Real life is so boring. Ordinary sex with a girlfriend holds no interest for me.”

This patient uses sexualization as a defense. He uses his sexual pre-occupation as a way to ward off chronic feelings of loneliness, inadequacy and emptiness born of a childhood trying to get nurturing from a withdrawn, depressed mother. When stress or anxiety begins to overwhelm the regulation of his emotions, he is beset by intense urges to indulge in his fantasies and enactments. Sexualization thus becomes his standard way of managing feelings that he perceives to be intolerable as well as a way of stabilizing a crumbling sense of self-worth. It is my belief that sex addiction requires a contemporary psychoanalytic approach. Psychoanalysis changed drastically in the 1970’s with the work of a prominent psychoanalyst who jettisoned the Freudian approach and established a kind of treatment that is particularly useful in treating sex addiction. Contemporary analysts no longer conduct treatment three-times a week on the couch. They do not unearth hidden meanings, or remain silent, or put themselves on a “thrown” as being the “One Who Knows”. The process is a shared one and the relationship between patient and therapist is co-created and mutual. Some contemporary psychoanalysts use the concept of a vertical split in treating the addict. The split exists from inadequate parenting which results in structural deficits in the personality. Patients often report that they feel fraudulent, living two separate lives with two different sets of values and goals. They feel they’re acting out a version of “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekell and Mr. Hyde.” One sector of the personality, the one anchored in reality, is the responsible husband and father. This part of the person is conscious, adaptive, anchored in reality, structured, and often successful in business. This is also the sector that experiences guilt and shame about his sexual behaviors and ultimately drives him to seek therapy to ameliorate his misery. The “Mr. Hyde” side of the vertical split has a completely different set of values and seems to be impervious to his own moral injunctions. “Mr. Hyde” represents the unconscious, split-off part of the personality. It is impulse-ridden, lives in erotic fantasy, and is sexualized, unstructured and unregulated. This side of the vertical split seems to be incapable of thinking impulses through, and thus is oblivious to the consequences of his behavior. This is the part of the self that is hidden, dark, driven and enslaved.

A comprehensive discussion of the actual process of therapy is beyond the scope of this paper. Suffice to say, the therapist uses him/herself as an instrument in integrating the split which results in personality structure building. Treatment bridges the gap of the split. Its aim is the establishment of a relationship with the therapist that regulates emotional states, is used as a “laboratory” to bring to consciousness maladaptive relationship patterns, provides empathy and understanding and reconstructs the childhood origin of the addiction. The goal is an integrated self that is able to merely experience a sexual fantasy without being preoccupied with it and without acting out a damaging sexual scenario. The patient achieves some ability to self-regulate moods, and to seek out adequate and sustaining available supportive relationships both in and out of treatment. He is then free to put sexuality in its proper place and free up energies to gain satisfaction from real relationships, pursue creative or intellectual goals, obtain pleasure from hobbies and activities, and have a heightened sense of self-esteem, thus enabling him to end his isolation. He is then free to love, to have deeply satisfying, self-affirming sex, work to his potential, and experience being a valued member of the human community.

Dorothy Hayden, LCSW, (www.sextreatment.com) is a New York-based psychotherapist who specializes in sex therapy and sexual addiction. She received her M.S.W. from New York University and her psychoanalytic training at the Post Graduate Center for Mental Health. She can be reached at dhayden@nyc.rr.com

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/the-treatment-of-sex-addiction-a-psychoanalytic-approach-1421252.html

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The Vicious Cycle of Adult ADD, Shame and Sex Addiction

November 8, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

The Vicious Cycle of Adult ADD, Shame and Compulsive Sexuality

Brian is an investment banker in his early forties who, in graduate business school, first began to visit prostitutes, spend money on phone sex, compulsively masturbate and, finally spend as much as 5-10 hours a day looking at internet porn. When sexually acting out, he would feel that someone had turned on his brain for the first time. On the net, he would suddenly feel alive. He had energy and felt the euphoria that sexual immersion seductively provides. His mind slowed down; he didn’t need to keep moving.

Since his teens, he had masturbated nearly every night before going to sleep and sometimes once or twice during the day as well. He was shy in school and dated infrequently, partly from his feelings of inadequacy from the persistent inability to concentrate, multiple failures, disapproval from parents, teachers and peers and the consequent demoralization that contributed to low self-esteem. Undergraduate school had been difficult for him. Complex mathematical formulations from his economics courses were tape-recorded while he fantasized about looking under the girl’s shirt who sat next to him. He was chronically late at classes, his dorm was messy and his clothes were disheveled. He seemed to live in another world.

Once on the job, he loved the thrill, excitement and risk of being a trader, but when he had to sit in boardrooms to listen to his bosses talk about strategy, his “eyes glazed over” with boredom and he entered into an “erotic haze”. He would fantasize about the escort he had been with the night before and anticipated getting home after a long day to get on the chat rooms and look at pornography on the internet. His days were the usual business of forgetting assignments and people’s names, of losing things and being chastised by bosses, as he had been by parents, for not being able to sit still or follow directions.

 At home, he felt empty, depressed and lonely. He was unable to focus on a book or a movie. He often felt different than others. It was as though others were given a chip at birth that allowed them to remember simple things, to process information accurately, to complete tasks in an orderly fashion, to moderate their impulses and calm their bodies and mind when they wanted to. But Brian knew he was “different” from them. His girlfriend complained that he interrupted their conversations and that he always put his needs first from; He could never finish a task that wasn’t engrossing for him. He would lose his temper over trivial things and he didn’t know why.

On the internet, however, looking at a montage of erotic images, he finally felt not scattered. Moreover, he felt soothed, whole and unafraid. Like a magic elixir, he would immediately feel “not different”. He felt alert, focused and alive. However, he soon found himself in job performance because of the long nights and weekends of compulsive sexing. He went to a 12-step “S” program and learned to stay away from compulsive sex. He married and got a promotion at work. Time passed as he worked his 12-step program and settled in to marriage. However, the impulse to call an escort or make an erotic phone call never went away. One day, after two years of abstinence, he ran across an escort in a hotel who offered him her services and he could not think of a reason to refrain. Also, he had realized that his fantasies had taken on a distinct sadomasochist flavor and he had been curious about acting them out with this woman. He had been involved in a deal at work that went wrong and he felt “less than” and somewhat ashamed. Memories of shaming and humiliating remarks about his conduct and learning skills from teachers and parents came flooding back, precipitating his masochistic sexual fantasies.

His sense of self was completely destabilized. So he did what had always worked for him when he felt psychologically fragmented: he went to an escort to shore up his fragile self esteem. Once again he would miraculously feel like he could live with himself. The non-stop put downs that had taken up permanent residence in his head were quieted, at least for a short period of time. Sex took the edge off like a few martinis do for an alcoholic. The “quick fix” however, was followed by a crash which made him feel worse than he did before he went to the escort. Knowing he had once again lost control of himself, he would feel extremely remorseful and depressed. His feelings about himself bordered on self-loathing. After the crash, he no longer felt alert, focused, or euphoric.

While Brian had been able to walk away from cocaine three years ago, the sex addiction had remained entrenched in his psyche: like an athlete’s foot of the mind — it called him — incessantly– an itch to be scratched but never soothed. It was at this point that Brian decided that if he didn’t leave the house, he would not frequent escorts, and so he re-discovered the Internet. In no time at all, Brian was spending untold minutes, hours, days totally absorbed in the internet, using chat rooms to set up erotic encounters, and exploring the fetishistic and S&M images and enticements of the cybersex world. Porn surfing became his medium of acting out because the images were flashy, intense, and risky and he could easily go to another web page when the novelty wore off and he would start to be bored. What happened with Brian’s recovery? He seemed to have managed to avoid compulsive sex for a period of time and to make some positive changes in his life. 

Attention Deficit Disorder

But when faced with the opportunity, he was easily led to return to sex addiction. In Brian’s case, he was not able to get a handle on his sex addiction because he had not been diagnosed and treated for Adult Attention Deficit Disorder. A particular constellation of imbalanced neurotransmitters were creating physical and emotional problems for him, including an inability to regulate attention, control impulses, sleeping, and mood and energy levels. His need to self-medicate his impulsivity, restlessness and mental hyperactivity gave way to using sexually compulsive behaviors to try to fix his brain chemistry.

Poor impulse control combined with a drive for high-risk, intense, novel experiences contributed to Brian’s addiction to sex. Many sexual compulsives with ADD have had experiences like Brian’s. They struggled in school because they got bored or had a hard time paying attention. Once bored, they would stare out the window, often caught up by sexual fantasies. As adults, relationships are difficult for them. Impulses carry them from project to project, relationship to relationship, job to job. Their minds come screeching to a halt as they try to remember a friend’s name or the location of the escort they visited last night. Most feel the self-loathing of people who are working under capacity, and experience the pain and grief of living a life of lost opportunities and diminished personal potential.

Deregulation and Deprivation

Deregulation and impulsiveness are the hallmarks of ADD, as well as the hallmark of sex addiction. Unable to set boundaries on their own behavior, ADDers feel an intense need to continue forever whether it is on a work project or an involvement in a sexual enactment. One definition of compulsion may very well be “a loss of control characterized by an intense desire to continue despite adverse consequences.” A sense of deprivation then emerges when compulsive sexualizing does not provide the gratification and satisfaction that results from having the experience of natural pleasure as it relates to intimacy with another human being. Rather than sex being a way to bring two people closer, sexual enactments for the ADDer can stem from intra-psychic conflict, from a narcissistic need for validation not received in his child’s ADD world, and as a way to medicate the physiological symptoms of brain chemistry deregulation. The result is that sex takes up a disproportionately large place in his psychic equilibrium. His very sense of self depends on his sexuality. Deprivation is not a feeling that is comfortable for the ADD/sex addict. He is a bottomless pit of needs, always looking ahead and never feeling satisfied. The simpler pleasures of life are too mild. Risky, novel, intense and mysterious experiences such as those provided by Internet porn match his voracious appetite. Sex with a spouse seems banal. Marriages are ruined. Unfortunately, trying to feed the monster of endless needs makes the need grow larger and more insistent so the ADD/sex addict sets a vicious cycle in motion.

Despite endless hours looking at cybersex, no amount is ever enough. Sex addicts/cybersex addicts are rarely sated and live daily with a sense of unsatisfied longing. Mood and Emotion There are problems with mood and emotion regulation and stabilization in ADD and sex addicts. ADD/sex addicts often say they live on emotional roller coasters – the need for risk and intensity in life and in sexuality is ever-present. For the ADDer, feeling states fluctuate with extreme alterations in the highs and lows over hour or even minutes. Maintaining emotions on an even keel is an intricate process involving fine adjustments by different parts of the brain and nervous system. Since setbacks throw ADDers off balance easily, they may try to adjust their instability with a sex/internet binge to balance mood and brain chemistry. The release of endorphins and dopamine from sex temporarily settles the physical, emotional and biochemical roller-coaster that many ADDers experience on a daily basis. Distractibility The ADD mind drifts hither and yon. It daydreams, wanders and drifts among loosely and tenuously connected thoughts, often moving to sexual fantasies that quell its restless energy. This is the famous “distractibility” of ADD. An ADDer might engage in sexual fantasies when he should be working. The radio in the ADD brain seems to have a malfunctioning scan button that won’t let him switch channels efficiently. The sex addict’s solution is to stay tuned to one channel only and it is usually sexual fantasy to which the channel is set.

Once he’s in his compulsive, rigid focus, it’s hard for him to turn off the scan button to redirect. Hence, distractibility is not the only problem; ADDers can also have problems with hyper focusing, or over focusing. Once the person’s attention is captured, he can stay engaged with what he’s doing almost endlessly. Some may not be able to pay attention; ADD sexual compulsives usually can’t stop paying attention. Hours and hours go by, chores don’t get done, children and spouse are neglected, books go unread, the glory of the sound of music is muted. This type of erotic hyper attention can also take its toll in exhaustion, fatigue, and sometimes failing health. The over- persistence of the sexual compulsive can make switching gears out of the “erotic haze” very difficult. Although this type of self-absorption makes productive/creative work and interpersonal relationships impossible, refocusing is painful. Going from one task that involves excitement, risk, mystery, intensity, soothing and escape is excruciating when taking out the garbage or paying the bills is called for. Another factor that contributes to sexual addiction for ADDers is that many people with ADD have defective sensory filters that make them experience the world as a barrage to the senses — noises, sights and smells rush in without barriers or protection. When you live with ADD, you may be constantly bombarded with input that others may not even notice. This assault on the senses often creates feelings of intense anxiety and irritation that can trigger sexual acting out.

The comfort of the “erotic haze” on the internet or the soothing experience with an escort can ameliorate these incessant barrages of sensory stimuli to the ADD brain. Impaired Social Skills Some ADDers have experienced the negative impact of ADD on social adjustment. Many are shy and were not particularly popular in school, especially if learning disabilities have been in the picture. Social ostracizetion has been part of the childhood of many ADDers.

As adults, many ADDers have to work very hard to interact effectively in social and work situations. The development of social skills is more an art than a science because we must learn to read the ever-changing reactions of others. If deficient selective attention interferes with paying attention to social cues in order to listen and respond empathically, the ADDer may feel extremely ill at ease. How much easier to go to a chat room to enter into an eroticized communication where sexuality can be used as a surrogate for real social interactions.

Shame

Many ADD children grew up in families in which put-downs, disapproval, personal attacks and threats of abandonment were commonplace events. Punishment and frustration from teachers and taunts from peer groups added to a sense of worthlessness. As an adult, the ADD child judges himself mercilessly and often tries to be perfect in a desperate attempt to shield his shame. He feels deeply ashamed of being “different” due to ADD as well as of being a sexual compulsive – a “deviant”, if he becomes one. Chronic, relentless shame is devastating. Mired in feelings of worthlessness, defectiveness and despair, he is full of doubt about his very validity. Shame and sex addiction are natural partners. The more intense the pain of self-hatred, the stronger the drive to find a sexual behavior that offers relief from internal pain and emptiness. For the sex addict, the answer to his inner problems lay outside himself in the “magic” of sexual desire, for or from, another. He confuses sexual desirability with self-acceptance. He is trying to fill the void that has been at least partially created by shame. He simply cannot bear feeling empty inside.

ADD temper problems or problems with rage may also stem from this chronic shame. A rageful person is desperate to keep others far enough away so they won’t see his sense of defectiveness. A shamed person can only think to defend himself from real or imagined attacks by cruelly attacking the other person. And rage works. It drives people away and so protects the person from revealing his shame. But this device of using rage to keep people away is very damaging to a person’s self-esteem. Rage breaks the connection between people and so increases the shamed person’s shame. A rage/shame spiral can result. Social isolation lends itself to engrossment in sexual fantasy as a way to ameliorate lonliness. The person who is shame-based sees himself as deeply and permanently flawed. He “knows” he is not like other persons. He “knows” he is different. He “knows” he is so bad he is beyond repair. He “knows” he will never be able to join others in a world of productivity, balance, self-respect and pride.

Shame and Perverse Sexuality

 An early-life sense of shame for being “different” and fear of abandonment can influence the sexual development of an ADD child. Parents who may have been unstable themselves and who had no knowledge of the special needs of an ADD child, may create a shame-based home environment. The messages that the ADD child who has chronic behavior problems, hyperactivity, aggressiveness and learning disabilities receives at home may include:

1. You are not good;

2. You are not good enough;

3. You don’t belong;

4. You are deficient and disappoint us.

 5. You are not worthy of love.

Shame and sexuality become closely connected. Children shamed early in life may become sexually compulsive or develop perverse fantasies as a way to feel better about themselves. Fetishism may occur. Sadomasochistic fantasies and enactments may become paramount. Exhibitionism may be developed and acted on. Exhibitionism can easily be a chosen perversion for the person who is shame-based. The person who is shamed, instead of hiding, calls attention to himself. He may expose himself in public, in an automobile or by standing in a window.

The ADD child may have suffered from a lack of recognition of his real and valid feelings, wants and needs by parents and teaches who expected him to be other than the way he was. The exhibitionist seeks to redress this lack of recognition. He also uses his perversion as a strategy for dealing with shame by displaying what he really wants to hide – himself. Sadomasochistic fantasies and enactments are common among shame-based people who have difficulty imagining that relationships can include mutual respect, dignity and pride. People who have grown up with shame, like many ADD people, often believe that fulfilling, exciting relationships must be shame-based.

Men pay hundreds of dollars to see dominatrixes who physically humiliate them and repeatedly tell them something is wrong with them. The submissive man, fearing abandonment, tries to please the “mistress” by becoming whoever she wants him to be, no matter how humiliating or de-humanizing her demands may be. The reasoning is such: “If anyone saw the real me, they would be revolted. I must please the mistress by being a person she would be proud of.” Pleasing the dominant parental figure is a way on undoing the pain of having a parent that couldn’t be pleased. The S&M enactment thus turns trauma into triumph because the masochistic man succeeds in pleasing his dominant partner. Self-abuse is a common result of shame. Here, the person who is deeply shamed engages in masochistic behaviors that damage him. Seeking out the services of a dominatrix who may beat, whip and verbally humiliate him is one such way of self-abuse. The other side of the S&M coin is the desire to humiliate and administer pain to others. Shame is a threat to a person’s basic sense of being. The shamed person feels small weak, vulnerable and exposed. He may find this self-hatred to be unendurable and in order to survive psychologically, he transfers his hatred on to others, treating them with distain and contempt.

Dorothy Hayden, LCSW, is a New York-based psychotherapist who specializes in the sex therapy, Adult ADD and sexual addiction. She received her M.S.W. from New York University and her psychoanalytic training at the Post Graduate Center for Mental Health. She can be reached at dhayden@nyc.rr.com. www.sextreatment.com

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/the-vicious-cycle-of-adult-add-shame-and-sex-addiction-1425182.html

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Men and Sex Addiction: The Eroticization of Depression

November 6, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction | Comments(0)

Men and Sex Addiction:  The Eroticization of Depression

My work over the last fifteen years as a psychotherapist treating sexual compulsions has brought me into contact with men – and more men.  They come to my consulting room wearing the mask of shame, humiliation, and confusion.  Often, after a period of therapy, they come to a common link among them:  they are depressed.  Empty and suffering from a disorder that, for men, can be as hidden as sexual deviance itself, depression in men is hardly spoken about.  It is women who are depressed – it’s a women’s disease — with depression occurring four times more often in the fairer sex. 

Yet I believe there’s a deep cultural collusion taking place: Men don’t speak the truth to themselves or others about the dark, jagged, emptiness that consumes them.  Talking about the depth of these feelings is so, well, unmanly.  The real story about men, sexual acting out and depression is as complex as each of the wounded souls who enter my consulting room.  The impact of depression and sexual deviance/addiction on each of them is enormous. 

It is here that issues of gender come into play.  Girls are socialized to be connected and expressive.  But from a very young age, the boy is told by his culture to act upon feelings – to seek relief through action rather than through connection or introspection.  Pain is externalized in men, resulting in domestic violence, failures in intimacy, alcoholism, workaholism and, certainly, sexual compulsion. 

The theme of the manliness of invulnerability has permeated our culture for generations.  Look at the male heroes we choose: The Man of Steel, Robocop, Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk, The Terminator: all creatures literally made not of flesh and blood and certainly not, horror of horrors, feelings.  The culture sends the message that the man who is suffering from unwanted and confusing feelings should not expect help.  He must resolve his problems on his own. (“suck it up”) 

Often he seeks to resolve his emotional problems by turning to a substance, person or activity to regulate his self esteem and to ward off depression.  I believe that this is at the heart of the addictive process.  When a covertly depressed man’s connection to the object of his addiction is undisturbed, he feels good about himself.  But when the supply runs out – the affair is over, he can’t get to the computer to see porn, he is spurned by women he desires, the credit card maxes out – his self-worth plummets and the hidden depression begins to unfold.  Such feelings of emptiness and depletion can drive him back to his addiction, contributing to the vicious cycle of addiction. 

Overt depression, prevalent in women, can be seen as internalized self-hate.  Covert depression, which is prevalent in men, can be viewed as internalized disconnection – the experience of helplessness, hopelessness and despair is warded off by various “acting out” defenses, inclusive of sex addiction. 

The hidden depression in such men stems from a lack of internal vitality.  The pain they have but refuse to feel stems from a toxic relationship to the self, which is another way of describing depression.  Depression is a disorder wherein the self attacks the self.  In overt depression, that attack is evident:  in covert depression, the man’s defenses protect him from awareness of any feelings.  Sex addiction is a perfect way to not feel feelings. 

This sense of self-attack could also be called shame, an acutely uncomfortable feeling of being worthless, less than others, outside of the human community.  Some experience it as the desire to be “invisible”.   For many men the state of shame is itself shameful, adding to their distress and pushing them to conceal their depression from others.  While some men have the classic symptoms of depression — feelings of hopelessness, helplessness and despair — many more experience depression as a state of numbness, known in psychiatry as alexithymia.  This experience is not about feeling bad so much as about not having the capacity to feel at all.  This incapacity to feel is often discussed as a sense of “emptiness” or “boredom” that emerges when the sex addict isn’t engaging in his chosen sexual expression. 

A common defense against the painful experience of shame is inflated value, or grandiosity which sexual acting out provides.  A feeble sense of self wards off negative feelings through the sense of power that men feel when they are in “the erotic haze.”  But such attempts are never fully successful.  The underlying assault on self always threatens to break through.  Underneath the high of sexual acting out are deep feelings of inferiority and shame and powerlessness. 

Quite a number of theorists have written about the use of grandiosity to ward off shame.  This flight from shame into grandiosity lies at the heart of sex addiction.  The excitement of sex, the “erotic haze”, the orgasm, the identification with “perfect” men in internet pornography — lifts the man out of depression and the state of shame into a state of powerfulness, eradicating unwanted feelings as surely as a few martinis do for the alcoholic. 

One thing that distinguishes the sex addict from the non-addict is the use of sex as a substitute for self-esteem. The difference between normal and addictive use of sex is the difference between an already adequate sense of self-esteem and desperately shoring up an inadequate one.  Nondepressed men turn to sex for relaxation, intimate sharing and fun.  

Depressed men turn to sex for relief from distress.  Sexual acting out is a magic elixir, transforming shame into grandiosity and moving him from a sense of helplessness to a sense of omnipotent control.  The feelings associated with depression vanish with the experience of having an inordinate powerful sense of self. 

When the awareness of a pattern of sexual addiction and the very painful consequences becomes clear, the addict may begin to seek treatment.  Most sex addiction therapists recommend a behavioral way of curtailing the sexual acting out and the acceptance of a recovery program.  

In therapy, the addict is likely to experience strong feelings about the consequences of his acting out.  The secret life is unveiled revealing affairs, exhibitionism, voyeurism, masochism or other behaviors comprising a particular sex addict’s modus operandi of sexual deviance.  The real story about men, sexual acting out and depression is as complex as each of the wounded souls who enter treatment (or remain out of it).  The impact of depression and sexual deviance on each of them is enormous.

In treatment, the addictive defense must be confronted and stopped. Then, the hidden pain emerges as depression, and underneath the depression lies childhood trauma.  It is only when these traumas are worked through that there can be true freedom from addictive slavery.  Only after the shame cycle has stopped, after the addictive pattern has been broken and the person has moved into “recovery” can the pain of hidden depression be addressed and resolved.

 

 

Dorothy C. Hayden, LCSW, MBA, CAC, is a psychoanalytic psychotherapist who specializes in chemical dependency, sex addiction, BDSM, fetishes, cross dressing and sexual perversion.Ms. Hayden graduated in 1995 from New York University with an M.S.W. and holds an M.B.A. in marketing from Baruch College (1987). She attended advanced clinical training at the Post Graduate Center for Mental Health, and the Object Relations Institute. A graduate of the Milton H. Erickson Institute for Psychotherapy and Hypnotherapy, she uses hypnosis in working with fetishes, sexual dysfunction and sexual enhancement. She is also certified in Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP). Site: www.sextreatment.com e-mail: dhayden@nyc.rr.com

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/addictions-articles/men-and-sex-addiction-the-eroticization-of-depression-1424113.html

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Suppression and manipulation of pharmaceutical drug research …

November 6, 2009 | By deflv In Addiction, Drugs, Food, Health, Internet, Object | Comments(0)

One of the blessings of the internet is that one comes across blogposts like this one: Health Care Renewal post about the suppression and manipulation of pharmaceutical drug research, ghost-writing, institutional conflicts of ….. European Community Respiratory Health Survey (1), European Food Safety Authority (3), European Medicines Agency (2), European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (1), European Union’s Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (1) …

Read more here: 
Suppression and manipulation of pharmaceutical drug research …

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Technorati Tags: Addiction, control, Drugs, european, european-union, Food, Health, health-survey, Internet, renewal, respiratory, the-suppression

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