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Addiction and hope for recovery
by Ann Purcell

Enlightenment for Everyone    Translate This Article
6 June 2017

Drug and alcohol addiction is a huge problem in our society.

Chances are you have an addict in your family or you know someone who has addiction problems. I have several addicts in my own extended family.

Addiction can destroy a person's life—leading to prison, in and out of expensive rehab programs, or in many unfortunate cases, even causing death.

Opioids are ravaging families and communities—both affluent and inner city areas. According to a recent front page story in a Florida newspaper, The Coastal Star, $1.1 billion a year has been spent in heroin-related hospital charges across Florida as of 2015.

Those hospital charges are largely paid for by Medicaid and Medicare,* with taxpayers footing the bill. They do not include the costs incurred by police, fire rescue, courts, and prisons.

A shocking new HBO documentary by Perri Peltz, Warning: This Drug May Kill You, reveals that opioid addiction has reached epidemic proportions.

There are many causes of excessive drug and alcohol abuse in our society, which I am not going to discuss in this article. However, the problems are so bad that our government is now faced with the urgent need for different approaches to combat this destructive plague. 114 people die every day from drug overdoses and 6,748 go to the emergency room. And that is just from opioid drug abuse.

Only 30% Rehabilitation Success Rate

According to Joseph A. Califano, Jr., former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and founder of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, ''The therapeutic community claims a 30% success rate, but they only count people who complete the program.'' The other 70-80% have dropped out by the 3-6 month marker.

Anxiety After Rehab

There are many rehabilitation facilities around the country, some more successful than others in getting addicts off drugs or alcohol, at least while they are in residence. The biggest problem of relapse happens when they leave the rehab facilities. Because of the high percentage of relapse, there are more and more support groups and mentoring programs to help people who are fighting to stay clean after they have left rehab.

Last year I was at a conference on Recovery, Meditation, and the Brain, sponsored by the David Lynch Foundation, and co-sponsored by the The Freedom Institute, at which several former addicts spoke, including Elizabeth Vargas of ABC TV's 20/20 show. They all told the same story—they were able to get off drugs or alcohol, but rehab did nothing to address the anxiety they felt when they left treatment. This often overwhelming anxiety causes them to relapse.

In the case of opioids, many people start taking prescribed opioid medications for pain, which then leads to addiction down the road. However, in many cases anxiety is the reason some people begin taking drugs or alcohol, as clearly stated by comedian Russell Brand.

Click here to read the original article by Ann Purcell on EnlightenmentforEveryone.com, including a video in which Russell Brand also talks about how Transcendental Meditation helped to alleviate his anxiety, loneliness, and agitation.

Let Freedom Ring

The Freedom Institute is one forward thinking rehabilitation facility in New York City, which is addressing this problem of anxiety by teaching their clients the Transcendental Meditation technique. They began the program by first teaching all the staff, and about a year ago, they started teaching their clients TM.

There are over 360 peer reviewed studies showing the benefits of Transcendental Meditation in mind, body, and behavior, including research documenting the effectiveness of TM in treating drug and alcohol abuse.

Scientists are now studying the clients at the Freedom Institute and the preliminary results are very positive in helping addicts in their recovery and dealing with anxiety.

Prevention Better Than Cure

If Transcendental Meditation can help people in their recovery, it could also help people from getting addicted in the first place. If TM were taught in schools at an early age, it would go a long way toward preventing people from getting involved with drugs or alcohol in the first place. There are over 200,000 students who have learned Transcendental Meditation in the past several years. . . .

In order to solve the problem of addiction we have to approach it from every possible angle—through prevention, effective rehabilitation and follow-up programs to address unhealthy diets, lack of exercise, and intense anxiety experienced by recovering addicts.

The Freedom Institute is leading the way in this all-encompassing approach in which former addicts feel freedom from the devastating problems of anxiety and craving for drugs. In addition, the practice of Transcendental Meditation helps them to become happy and productive human beings, contributing fully to society.

Copyright © 2017 Ann Purcell

* US government health care programs for elderly and low-income people.

See related article:
Award-Winning Actor/Comedian Russell Brand Headlines Freedom Institute's 2017 Spring Gala



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