Addiction

In our struggle for freedom, truth is the only weapon we possess

Dalai Lama –

Addiction therapist Cape Town

The waiting room

Please contact me if you need assistance with your or a family members addictions. I offer private addiction counselling and therapy in Cape Town.

Addiction can be defined as a complex brain disease, often chronic in nature, involving continued compulsive use of one or more substances and /or compulsive behaviours (for example, gambling, sex, eating and internet etc) despite serious health and social consequences. Addiction disrupts circuits in the brain that are responsible for reward, motivation, learning, judgement and memory.

Addiction has varying definitions but they typically include, a need for the individual to avoid intolerable reality with an ongoing compulsive and life damaging relationship with a mood or mind altering substance and/ or behaviour.

Additionally, the individual becomes progressively seduced and ‘caught up in a downward spiral’ over time and find that they are unable to successfully stop or cut down despite the pain, self-defeating
behaviours and effects on those that care about them.

Addiction varies in severity and falls into different broad categories. Those that involve the overuse of Addiction counselling Cape Townmind and mood altering substances and those with an over-involvement in a compulsive behaviour, such as gambling, or in a destructive relationship with food, internet, work, exercise or compulsive sexual behaviour (process addictions).

The rate of descent into the darkness of addiction varies in time and in individuals, including the progressive degree of compulsivity. The transition from the use of a substance or behaviour to misuse to dependency varies. There is an ‘illusion’ held by the individual that they are in ‘control’ and their defence mechanism of denial, distorts their reality and ability to perceive the chaos / truth as it really is. Denial becomes a symptom of the illness and exacerbates the progression of the disease. This tendency to deny or minimise the full reality can and often is experienced by partners and family as well.

 

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