6 Ways To Reframe Your Thinking About Addiction

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Most of us understand that addiction is a difficult experience to go through, and not one to blame a person for. We understand that as the addiction becomes harder to stray away from in a physical context, the control a substance or behavior has can only run deeper. For example, someone who is addicted to alcohol needs to be carefully weaned from it at the right intervals, so as not to cause health issues based on physical dependency.

However, it’s also true that addiction can influence and even warp your thinking. This doesn’t mean you’re a bad person with unethical thoughts, that you’ve lost your dignity, or that you don’t deserve to express yourself. You absolutely do. It’s important to accept that most people in the throes of addiction aren’t thinking clearly, which is another side effect of the addiction, a disease and not a personal failing. Later, when you celebrate success in sober living, that becomes clearer to see. It’s so very hard to see the forest for the trees in the middle of your difficult experience.

For this reason, in the post below we hope to suggest six possible ways you can reframe your thinking about addiction. If you do that, you may find some value in yourself going forward:

Addiction Isn’t A Reflection Of A Person’s Worth

Some addicts feel they’ve failed, that their problems are a direct result of some moral flaw or personal inadequacy. This is a cruel trick the mind plays, and it must be refused even when it feels perfectly logical and natural. A disease is never a reflection of a person’s worth. Sure, you may have willingly engaged in using a substance, but does that mean you’re a lesser person because of it? No. It absolutely doesn’t make you a lesser person if that experience bit and impeded your control. That’s what it does to the brain.

If you can, begin thinking that addiction is a complex health condition and not a personal flaw of your character, because that frees a person from the crushing weight of shame. This means you have room for acceptance and seeking help, which you deserve. The worth of a human being is untainted by mistakes or difficulties; it doesn’t depend on their struggles or their current state of health, including their mental health and wellness.

Reframing The Idea Of ‘Relapse’

The word “relapse” often carries a final-sounding suggestion, as if it only defines a complete failure of the recovery process, which can be hugely discouraging. It helps to reconsider this word not as a defeat, but as a setback you can overcome and bounce back from, something you can keep practicing a path forward from. 

Keep in mind that a person doesn’t judge the entire journey of a marathon runner because they stopped to tie their shoe or took a wrong turn for a moment; it’s a simple pause that doesn’t limit all the progress already made. It can also be a nice learning opportunity. Even addition therapists will tell you that recovery isn’t linear.

Accepting Help Isn’t A Sign Of Weakness

Accepting help makes you stronger, believe it or not. After all, who are we without the people around us? You can’t live a life totally alone, so why should that apply here, where you do need at least a minor support system when you start building habits? If you ask for and accept help, it’s actually a profound act of courage and self-awareness, which shows a person knows the challenge they have and wants to focus on their health above their ego. It takes real strength to admit they need support.

The desire for self-sufficiency is understandable and yes, can even be noble, but addiction is a problem that generally gets worse when you’re isolated. The replacement for addiction isn’t just sobriety, as they say, it’s connection. Connection and community can take a few forms of course, like reaching out to professionals, joining support groups, or leaning on loved ones when you need to. Doing so is wise.

Don’t Worry About The Label Of ‘Addict’

You may have had an addiction,  but does that mean you’re an addict? Perhaps now, but forever? No, you’re so much more than that, and this can easily drop away from you when it no longer applies, and you can pull it off like a cobweb.

Remember that you don’t have to be reduced to only your disease, ignoring your complexity, talents, and goodness. Do we only define someone going through cancer as “cancer patient?” Of course not, they might be a spouse, a parent, a friend, and a professional. Try not to get caught up on the words if you can avoid them, and mind how you talk about yourself. If you can say anything, try to be a little more kind and gentle.

Consider The Purpose Of Treatment

Sometimes, a person views addiction treatment, no matter if it’s the usual therapy, a 12-step program, or rehab care, purely as a place to stop using the substance or behavior. It’s easy to feel like this is a scary step that divides you from everything you’ve become used to.

But the real truth is that the purpose of treatment is to help you feel more at home and comfortable in yourself again. If you can do that, then you’ll feel more open and comfortable in who you are and why. Sometimes, it can even help you with issues that have worried you since you were little. That sounds scary, but there’s so much positive emotion to be found in this, it’s unbelievable. Having an optimists view can really pay off.

Seeing The Future As An Open Road

6 Ways To Reframe Your Thinking About Addiction

After an active addiction, thinking about the future will usually and understandably feel clouded by fear, uncertainty, or a sense that things won’t ever change. But the great thing is that it can. And it can for you too. Sometimes, you have to repeat that to yourself every single day to believe it. But the more you do, the more likely it will be. So dare to dream about it.

With this advice, we hope you can more easily reframe your thoughts about addiction and use those to empower you.

By Meghan

Meghan Patel is a freelance writer who explores a wide range of subjects. Her ability to craft engaging content makes her stand out in a crowded field.

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