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- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!agate!dog.ee.lbl.gov!csa2.lbl.gov!boulos
- From: boulos@csa2.lbl.gov (Thomas Boulos CDF/LBL x7181)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Re: Narcotics Anonymous = a cult?
- Date: 22 Jan 1993 17:04 PST
- Organization: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory - Berkeley, CA, USA
- Lines: 27
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <22JAN199317045013@csa2.lbl.gov>
- References: <1993Jan21.194657.2104@guvax.acc.georgetown.edu> <1joi5bINN25r@matt.ksu.ksu.edu>
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-
- In article <1joi5bINN25r@matt.ksu.ksu.edu>, kkruse@matt.ksu.ksu.edu (Korey J. Kruse) writes...
- >I have noticed a "cultish" attitude about it. I remember reading
- >accounts of groups of AA people that hung around each other for years
- >and almost invariably as soon as all of them were dry one of the members
- >of the group would go "off the wagon" presumably just to become "cured"
- >again by his group of friends. I never really bought into AA's notion
-
- I read about this kind of occurence in a very good book called
- _On Becoming a Person_. I don't remember the author, but it's a
- book on psychology (writen by a psychiatrist) which I would recomend to
- anyone intersted in gaining some insight into people or themselves. It
- quotes research (another reason I like it). On drug addictions (psychological
- aspects) it states that the (psych) addiction is to the "game" -- which
- includes certain players: the addict, the supplier, the helpful freind
- (or sometimes doctor -- someone who encourages the addict to quit), and
- maybe someone else. He states that once chemical addiction is completed,
- the game playing doesn't necessarily stop -- as long as the ex-addict can
- pick up another role in the game. Concerning AA (or NA), the individual
- has switched from "addict" to "helpful freind", and this does nothing
- to stop the addiction to the game. A story quoted as supporting evidence
- was an AA in a small town. It turned out that once most (all?) of the
- alcoholics in the town joined AA and kicked the habit, they ALL fell off
- the wagon -- with no more addicts to help, their psychological game
- was going to end, was the explaination.
-
- ciao, -tom
-
-