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Featured Addictions Articles

Alcohol and Drug Abuse in Mental Health
Alcohol abuse is overrated, while drug abuse is underrated. The DSM manual suggests that substance abuse there are differences in the definition of drug and alcohol use. To confuse matters worse the law has its own version of who is an alcoholic or drug ...

Crystal Meth Addiction - How Serious Is It?
The images in my last month local newspaper was enough to make anyone stop for a moment and see the devastating effect of crystal meth (Crystal methamphetamine) now becoming more mainstream and reaching epidemic proportion. The newspaper featured stories ...

Quit Smoking Treatments
Nicozan is a new generation aid to help you give up smoking. Nicozan gives you the best possible chance of success and our workplace trials with thousands of smokers over ten years have demonstrated this. If you've decided to quit, you've come to the ...





Adultery as Sexual Addiction: Should You Stay Married?
 
I outline 7 kinds of affairs in my E-book, "Break Free From the Affair." One affair, "I Can't Say NO!" is characterized by addictive tendencies. Infidelity (as well as pornography, strip clubs, online chatting, compulsive masturbation, etc.) may be a part of the sexual addiction.

Often the spouse or partner of a sexually addicted person intuitively knows of the addiction and the struggle his/her partner has with the behavior.

The partner often "feels for" his/her partner and is in a great quandary about staying in the marriage or leaving the marriage.

If you are a person facing this dilemma or know of someone who is, here are some pointed questions to help move more quickly through the decision making process:

1. Do you really want to save the marriage or are you just plain worn out? Does it seem that it would be much easier to just put up and tolerate the crazy kind of behavior you bump into with him? Are you emotionally fried and think of confronting him with your feelings and thoughts of ending the marriage as jumping into more emotional turmoil?

2. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you think you should hang in there for religious, moral or other "should" reasons? Most spouses who partner with those who can't say no are very conscientious people. Is that you? Do you want to do the right thing? Are you willing to continue feeling the humiliation and facing the dangers because you believe you should stay in the marriage? Do convictions rather than practical and personal concerns dictate your decisions?

3. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you believe you should stay to protect the children? Do you think you are the only spouse who can care for the children? (You may be.) Or maybe your spouse cares deeply for the children and is a good parent. (That may be also.) Do you think that ending the marriage would make life immeasurably worse for your children? Do you fear for their welfare if you confront his behavior?

4. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you see absolutely no way out and are resigned to this marriage? You may experience a powerful pervasive feeling of being stuck. You may believe that you have tried everything and that it is in the best interest of everyone to stay where you are. Couple your weariness with your sense of being stuck and you may tolerate a great deal of disappointment and pain for the sake of the marriage.

5. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you see yourself as incapable of getting out? Your self-esteem may be at rock bottom. You may think of yourself as incapable of starting over, incapable of starting a new relationship, incapable of making the transition to a new life and incapable of making decisions on your own. It is not unusual for the spouse of someone who can't say no to lose her sense of dignity and self-respect as he attempts to control, intimidate and dictate.

6. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you need to protect him? Do you see beyond what is there to him basic emptiness and fear? It's there and you know it? Perhaps you fear what might happen to him if you do indeed leave? Will he be able to cope? What destructive path might he take next? So you hang in there, aware of his underlying pain and hope some day it will be addressed.

7. Do you really want to save the marriage or do you live in the fear that if you talk about leaving you will face danger? Perhaps you might face violence? You might face the emotional game playing at a new level of intensity? Does it seem wiser to hold back, not confront, not move toward change for fear of what he might say or do? Do you sometimes feel frozen with fear?

8. Do you really want to save the marriage or have you given no thought to how you might start over? This is a little different than the fear of starting over. Perhaps your life has been so wrapped around his or the care of your children that you have given little, if any, thought to you. Have you thought of your desires, your skills, your dreams, your hopes and your future apart from him? Or, apart from your children?

Take some time to seriously and thoughtfully address these questions. Once you do, you may experience a new found freedom to act and move in new ways. Dr. Robert Huizenga, The Infidelity Coach, has helped hundreds of couples over the past two decades heal from the agony of extramarital affairs and survive infidelity. Visit his website at: http://www.break-free-from-the-affair.com

Addictions News



Telegraph.co.uk

Mobile addict parents guilty of child 'neglect' warns psychologist
Telegraph.co.uk
By John Bingham, Social Affairs Editor A generation of young people is growing up with a virtual addiction to computers, televisions and smartphones with striking similarities to alcoholism, according to Dr Aric Sigman. By the time they turn seven, ...
Child screen addict fearsHerald Scotland
Keep children away from TV before age of 3, parents toldScotsman

all 33 news articles »

Addiction affliction: Psychiatrists create a stir with broad definitions
Pittsburgh Post Gazette
It is often said, on everything from oil to junk food, that we're a nation of addicts. That adage will have greater meaning if the American Psychiatric Association adopts broad new definitions of addiction next year in the manual that shapes the ...

and more »

Okla. addict breaks from past to secure her future
NECN
He's the ghost of addictions past, someone she used to smoke crack and hustle with. He came in once and flashed a crack pipe at her, and she told him to leave her alone — she left that life behind. Crack stole more than two decades of Wallace's life, ...
Addict breaks from past to secure futureNewsOK.com

all 2 news articles »

ModeraXL Sets Milestone and Defies Traditional Rehabilitation Success Rates
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
ModeraXL (www.moderaxl.com), a specially formulated powder to treat addiction, succeeds with a 75% success rate. Denver, Colorado (PRWEB) May 21, 2012 ModeraXL is an all-natural powder formulated to replenish nutrients in the brain that are depleted by ...

and more »

Catalyst Pharmaceutical Partners Announces Completion of Enrollment in CPP-109 ...
MarketWatch (press release)
"There is a major need for effective and well-tolerated treatments for patients with cocaine addiction, and CPP-109 potentially represents a breakthrough product for them. I would like to thank our partners at the National Institute on Drug Abuse and ...

and more »