Out of the Woods. Diane Cameron

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Out of the Woods - Diane Cameron

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Attend one of the many women’s networking nights with a focus on women’s health. Your local Chamber of Commerce or YWCA may be the host.

      • Invite a friend and try a new fun kind of exercise: NIA (Non-Impact Aerobics or Neuromuscular Integrative Action), dance, yoga for round bodies, tap dance or clogging.

      IN EARLY RECOVERY I READ a little pamphlet called, Transferring Obsessions, written by Dr. Judi Hollis. I remember being so mad when my sponsor first gave me that pamphlet and told me to read it, but it had a huge impact on my later recovery and I am grateful to Dr. Hollis to this day.

      She was writing to an audience of Overeaters Anonymous members. She talked about what happens when a woman or man in eating disorder recovery begins to let go of that addiction and how, if a higher power is not the replacement, he or she will move on to shopping, decorating, exercising, dating, sex, work, and using alcohol or other drugs. In my OA community, using drugs was frowned on but there were members who still used alcohol, seeing the separation of substances rather than the singularity of addiction.

      It was not unlike the way most professionals viewed drug addiction and alcoholism twenty-five years ago. At that time many hospital treatment programs for drug addiction allowed participants to drink alcohol. In some programs people completing their treatment for drug addiction were given a beer bash as the celebration of their ninety days of “clean” time. We are amazed by that today. Maybe someday we’ll be amazed by alcohol treatment that allows tobacco use or ice cream parties on Friday nights.

      Addiction is one disease with many manifestations. We have a tendency, in recovery, to substitute addictive behaviors and compulsions. It makes sense. Today there are any numbers of things that I can “use”—be it behavior or substance—as a way to “fix my feelings.” Conversely, I know that if I can sit still and feel my challenging feelings then I will be much less likely to reach for a substance or behavior to fix me.

      Most of us have more than one thing we can use to not feel. You hear it in meetings. Sometimes we hear it spoken about seriously and sometimes as a joke but it’s there. The AA member who says he gave up booze but picked up ice cream or the Al-Anon member who comments on her “retail therapy” is talking about this common tendency.

      Stay in recovery long enough and you learn that there is truth in those jokes. As recovery progresses we notice that we can get carried away with any number of ways of soothing or numbing our emotions.

      We are human beings, and even nonaddicts use food or a new pair of shoes to boost their moods, but those of us who identify as addicts have to be mindful that we can always use a good thing in a bad way to escape our feelings.

      Maybe the easiest way to discern whether something is an issue is to apply a few diagnostic questions: Do you feel shame about this? Do you keep this a secret? Does it bother you if someone points out what you are doing? This discernment continues into later recovery. It must.

      But after many years, we are sitting in the same chairs and saying things that are remarkably similar. The principles of recovery are the same, whatever the substance or behavior.

      I heard early on that “we will give up our addictive behaviors in the order in which they are killing us.” That is why some people enter recovery first for food issues, and others enter for alcohol or other drugs, and yet another person enters to address family or relationship problems. But after many years, we are sitting in the same chairs and saying things that are remarkably similar. The principles of recovery are the same, whatever the substance or behavior.

      My entry into recovery brought me face-to-face with transferring addictive activities. Before I went to Alcoholics Anonymous I was confronting my problems with food and relationships. So my first steps toward healing were in Overeaters Anonymous and then in Al-Anon.

      Later I began to notice that often when my relationships were rocky, alcohol was a factor. Then I noticed that there was alcohol in my food, too. I told myself that I was “having dessert.” But I was “eating” desserts like Irish coffees and ice cream with cups of Kahlua. I asked myself, “How bad could that be?” You didn’t see drunks with whipped cream mustaches did you? I always had a spoon in my hand; it was the perfect denial.

      So I had to deal with food and relationships and alcohol. Under all of it was a messy family history burdened with still more addiction and abuse and shame, but that took years to uncover and to heal.

      Alcohol and other drugs may be things of the past, but what about those credit card bills? And what about gambling and sex, and all those shoes? So I work too hard. Is working too hard a genuine problem? We have to be willing to keep asking these questions.

      That was my experience. As I began to recover from drinking, it got harder to delude myself that certain other behaviors were okay. Without the booze, the hole in my heart began to hurt, and my bargain-basement self-esteem gaped open. I needed soothing. But with what?

      As a society, we are familiar with the addictive substances we take into our bodies to change our moods—alcohol and/or other legal and illegal drugs, nicotine, caffeine, etc. More recently we have begun to recognize the behaviors that we engage in for the same reason—to change our feelings: video gaming, overspending, gambling, sex, and the ever-popular shoe shopping. These are the process addictive behaviors. They are things we do—watching television, overeating, working long hours, starving ourselves, exercising—to change our mood or to avoid growth.

      Some things like alcohol and other drugs, nicotine, caffeine, sugar, sometimes salt (who ever eats just one potato chip?) overlap categories as substance addiction or process addiction.

      Technology can become a vehicle for process addiction when it’s used to avoid emotional discomfort or pain: texting, tweeting, playing games on our phones . . . and on and on and on.

      Here’s the tricky part, and why I need ongoing discernment involving other people in recovery: The addictive processes are often things that also have good qualities. For example, let’s look at exercise.

      As we get healthy in recovery we want to get in shape. We start going to the gym or running. But what happens when we miss a day of running or we can’t get to the gym? Do we start to feel anxious, angry, and resentful? Some of us exercise for the same reason we used substances: Fix my feelings! I’ve been there.

      And shopping? Who doesn’t want to look nice or wear clothes that are becoming? But do we obsess? Spend money we don’t have? Wander the mall in a trance? I’ve done all that, too.

      Later in my recovery I had to examine my relationship with money and work. Oh, I had such denial about work. How could something so good be so bad? Wasn’t I making up for lost time, finally becoming a productive member of society?

      Work, like food, has to be looked at carefully. Putting in long hours may not be the only criterion to use in determining whether or not working is an addiction. We have to

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