Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jul 2007
Source: Xtra! (CN ON)
Copyright: 2007 Pink Triangle Press
Contact:  http://www.xtra.ca/site/toronto2/html/city.shtm
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2152
Author: Laura Mueller
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

OVERCOMING ADDICTION WITHOUT GETTING ADDICTED TO GOD 		

"We made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care 
of God as we understood Him."

That statement could easily come from any Christian prayer book. But 
many people would be surprised to find out that it's actually from 
one of the most popular self-help methods in North America.

But ask almost any alcoholic or sober alcoholic and they'd probably 
recognize that quote as step three in the Alcoholics Anonymous 12-step program.

Since Alcoholics Anonymous was founded over 50 years ago, it's become 
the default standard for addiction recovery. It is undeniably the 
most popular method used to achieve sobriety in North America. And AA 
has spawned numerous copycats to help the downtrodden free themselves 
from addictions to any conceivable aspect of life: gambling, drugs, 
food, even shopping.

The message AA sends is that addiction is an illness that you have no 
power over. The only way to be saved from that affliction is to turn 
yourself over to a higher power of your choosing (with the guise of 
simplicity, this "higher power" is generally referred to as God in AA 
literature). Addiction recovery is all or nothing. If you can't 
achieve complete sobriety you're seen as uncommitted to the program. 
In order to be accepted back into the group after a relapse, you must 
admit your wrongdoing and make a renewed pledge to your higher power.

AA contends that if you live the program, it will work for you. 
Although the language in AA literature is clearly religious and 
arguably Christian-based, AA adherents insist that everyone, from 
Aboriginal people to gays, lesbians, and atheists can be cured by the 
program. And it's evident that AA members buy into the hype.

"Someone who can't benefit from AA just doesn't have an addiction to 
drugs or alcohol," says Shawn, an Ottawa AA member. (AA insists that 
members use only first names.)

"Mr. and Mrs. Everyone"?

It's a claim that's especially significant to the queer community, a 
group many contend is at higher risk of drug and alcohol problems. 
While there are studies that both support and contradict that claim, 
Nicholas Little, the men's outreach co-ordinator at the AIDS 
Committee of Ottawa, says the conditions queers face create a higher 
risk for substance use than straight people.

"If we know that queers face poverty at a higher level, it's not 
illogical to think that we're probably also using substances as a 
coping mechanism perhaps at a higher rate," says Little.

Florence Kellner, an addictions specialist at Carleton University, 
agrees that drinking and substance abuse are closely associated with 
gay culture, particularly because the gay social scene revolves 
around going to bars.

"Men may go to gay bars to satisfy their curiosity... a lot of people 
come out while they're drinking. They associate drinking with coming 
out, because both are satisfying," says Kellner.

AndrA(c) Fontaine, who works with addicted seniors at Ottawa's 
Centretown Community Health Centre, says that coming out and being 
able to talk about sexuality is essential to recovery.

"They don't feel safe enough to talk about their partners, so they 
don't feel included into what the mainstream programs are, and that 
becomes problematic," says Fontaine.

AA isn't designed to help individuals, Fontaine says, it's for "Mr. 
and Mrs. Everyone."

"Everyone has to fit into their program," says Fontaine. "It's just 
supposed to be '28 days and you're cured.'"

80 percent fail at AA

Despite claims that AA can work for anyone, studies have shown that 
at least 80 percent of people who try to get sober through AA will relapse.

So if AA's 12 steps have been co-opted by almost every addiction and 
incorporated into almost every treatment centre's program, where does 
that leave the more than 80 percent of people who can't (or don't 
want to) get sober with AA? Where does it leave people who feel 
marginalized by AA's overtly religious rhetoric, and people who just 
want to be able to drink normally again, or use other substances that 
aren't causing them harm?

Courts in Canada and the United States are known to require mandatory 
AA attendance as repentance for drunk driving charges. These 
sentences are frequently challenged, and courts have overturned the 
decision on the basis of freedom of religion.

Studies have shown that doctors are more likely to refer patients to 
12-step programs, often because such programs are the most well known 
and until recently, the only treatment option -- not because they are 
the most effective.

"The medical community doesn't want to deal with [addiction]," says 
Florence Kellner, "[because] it's not something that can just be 
cured with a pill."

Religion in denial

When their doctors aren't able to help them, many people 
automatically turn to AA. But some quickly learn that AA isn't the 
right place for them.

Kellner says that many people are turned off AA because they think 
it's "very, very dependant" and can even make people addicted to the 
program itself. She says some people even accuse the program of being 
"cult-like."

Jim Christopher went to a few AA meetings to connect with other 
recovering addicts and maintain his sobriety, but he says he was 
quickly turned off by the "oppressive shame" of the group's approach.

"AA is religion in denial," says Christopher. "I'm not saying that's 
bad or good, that's just what they are."

Christopher decided to start meeting with people who wanted to stay 
sober -- and secular. Eventually his idea grew into Secular 
Organizations For Sobriety (SOS), otherwise known as "Save Our 
Selves." And 22 years later, the group is the biggest secular 
organization for addiction recovery in the world.

Christopher says that unlike Alcoholics Anonymous, Los Angeles-based 
SOS attempts to make everyone feel welcome and gives people tools 
(including elements of the 12-steps) to craft their own plan for recovery.

"It's terrible that the options are pushed under the rug or only 
presented if you scream," says Christopher. "[SOS is] still 
struggling in the marketplace because of the entrenchment of AA."

Canadians can now take advantage of the SOS approach. A new SOS 
meeting began in June at the secular organization Centre For Inquiry 
in Toronto.

The Centre's director, Justin Trottier, says the Centre For Inquiry 
would help set up more SOS meetings across the country with the help 
of their campus groups.

Treatment for 'different realities'

On a local level, community services like the Lifestyle Enrichment 
For Senior Adults (LESA) program at Centretown Community Health 
Centre in Ottawa offer a non-religious, individual approach.

The program's co-ordinator AndrA(c) Fontaine says there is no 
judgement at LESA. They consider relapse to be a part of recovery, 
and they also offer harm reduction programs instead of 
abstinence-only treatment.

Fontaine stresses the need for GLBT-specific recovery programs that 
address issues that lesbians, gays, and trans people face when 
fighting addiction.

"There's no specific programming for gays, lesbians, and 
transgendered [people in Ottawa]," says Fontaine. "I really believe 
we need to gear our services to specific groups like the [queer] community."

While gay and lesbian specific recovery programs are offered in other 
urban centres like Toronto, Canada's capital city doesn't have an 
addiction recovery program for gays or lesbians.

"All these communities have different issues," says Fontaine. "They 
need treatment that addresses the different realities they face."

"AA is just one model," says Fontaine. "We need to see more variety."

Nicholas Little points out that the queer smoking cessation program 
at Ottawa's Pink Triangle Services could serve as a model for other 
queer-specific services related to substance use.

"It's based on a lot of research that shows that folks who are queer 
or who queer-identify do better when the option for queer-specific is 
available," says Little.

Treatment that looks at drug or alcohol use in isolation isn't 
useful, says Little, because it doesn't factor in how lifestyle 
affects substance use.

"If you went into a substance use program that wasn't a queer 
friendly space or didn't take factor in the fact that queer people 
experience higher levels of poverty, you're missing a whole big piece 
of the puzzle."

For a comprehensive list of drug and alcohol treatment programs in 
Canada, check out:

Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse -- www.ccsa.ca
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman