Can Addiction be "Cured"

Nurses General Nursing

Published

So, I am a recovering addict. I like to think of my addiction as "acute" "in remission" or dare I say it "cured".

I never tried a drug until I became a nurse. I didn't take them simply because they were accessible. I took them initially after a surgery for pain and then I took them because my body craved them so intensely that I would stoop to any level to get them.

I made my decision making "drug focused". Every action I took could be related to finding the drug, getting the drug and using the drug. I worked in the ICU and used 10 mg Morphine vials multiple times for post-op patients.

When a patient comes out of surgery it is really fast paced. The process of signing out and then wasting each unused drug took precious time away from patients. Why waste 8 mg's of MS when you will probably be giving an additional 2 mg's Q 10 mins for the 1st hour post-op anyway. So, you would give 2 mg's and put the vial in your pocket and pull it out each time you needed it until the patient was comfortable. Then you would chart the doses and waste what was left with another nurse.

One morning when I got home from work, I had forgotten to check my pockets. There it was. 6 mg's of MS. So, I set it aside and planned on taking it back on my next shift. But I had to put it someplace safe so no one would see it. What would they think.

It happened over and over again, intentionally, maybe, maybe not. Never used it, just put it in the drawer. I think I was afraid to use it cause what if I had a reaction? Or took too much and my kids found me on the floor unconscious?

One day, I put it in my hip. I felt like I was energized. I got so much done at home that day. After about a month of IM Demerol and Morphine, I had a patient on dilauded.

Took the excess drug home........along with an insulin syringe. I must have tried for 30 minutes to find a vein. I can find them blind-folded on my patients, but it is more difficult when your doing it upside down. After another month, I was shooting MS and demerol 4 or 5 times a day. But I did not believe I was an addict.

It all started with the Lortab after my tonsillectomy. I felt efficient, loving, attentive, smarter and focused when I took opiates. I didn't have to use every day. I was PRN so I would go a week without working and without using. I went on vacation for 2 weeks and didn't have any problems.

When I came back I worked 1 shift, took some dilauded and used it when I got off. I was called in the next day, I thought to work a shift, and was confronted by the DON, HR and several Admin nurses. I denied diverting but said I had partied while on vacation and would probably test + on the UDS.

Ignorant as I was, I gave them the urine and went home totally freaked out. I knew it would be positive and could not begin to imagine what would happen next. Looking back, I should have just quit and dealt with "suspicions" of diversion instead of giving them a dirty drug screen. But I didn't know I had a choice.

I broke down and told my husband that I was suspected, tested and probably terminated for using. But I didn't tell him what I used or that I was diverting. Told him it was Lortab, but I didn't have a current RX for it. So, when I was terminated and reported to TPAPN, I had to finally tell him what really happened. He reamed me up and down. Not supportive, did not recognize a "problem", just called me a junkie and was more concerned that I had potentially screwed my career. Our marriage is fine, believe it or not, and we only bring it up when we are really angry.

I have been sober since June 2 2006, the day after I got caught. Been through treatment, meetings and so on. I am working in LTC and have access to Lortab, MS tablets and Roxinal. Do I have cravings or feel compelled to take them? Nope. Did I learn my lesson? Yep.

But if you ask the professionals if I am "cured" they say there is "no cure". Once an addict, always an addict. But why? If I never did drugs until they were prescribed and have quit without issue and have proven my ability to be around the same drugs that I was addicted to?

Simply because I am the child of an alcoholic, the sister of an addict and the daughter of an undiagnosed and untreated mother with depression and bi-polar. Since I was molested as a child and my father died when I was 16. Since I slept around during high school so I could avoid the abuse at home. Since I dated men twice my age looking for a father figure until, Thank GOD, I met my husband and became a responsible adult and a mother.

Do all of these characteristic combined with the exposure to and subsequent physical addiction to Lortab define me as an addict for the rest of my life. Does that mean AA and NA meetings forever? Does that mean I can't drink at parties and dinner with friends because I might relapse and start using?

Someone please explain this to me. All addicts deny the addiction at some point in recovery, but don't people recover from the physical addiction and are strong enough to make the right choices when confronted with similar situations? HELP!! Thanks

Specializes in ICU.
longhorn was the original post, i was just commenting to the people that followed up my discussion.

sorry about creating confusion.:bugeyes:

it's all these confused, old people. lol

screwing up the thread again and getting confused. :lol2:

:selfbonk:

who turned off the alarms and let the old people out?

ps.. hehe i'm joking, don't turn me in for being 'age-ist' i'm old too.

Specializes in Intensive Care , Coronary care emergecy.

the older i get the better i was!!!!! lol:bowingpur

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

PS.. hehe i'm joking, don't turn me in for being 'age-ist' I'm old too.

Yeah........well, wait another decade or two and see what mush your mind turns into!! HAHAHA!!!!!:lol2:

Specializes in M/S, Travel Nursing, Pulmonary.

Is 30 about the age it starts? Thats when it started for me.

Specializes in Intensive Care , Coronary care emergecy.

it started about 18 for me heheheheheh

Specializes in Med-Surg., Agency Nursing, LTC., MDS..

Yep, My vote goes to... Abbott & Costello...! Let the silliness go on.... bunch a crazy ol' people,anyway...lol...

Specializes in Intensive Care , Coronary care emergecy.

My vote also is to abbott and costello... my children love them, and i do to. who wants to come over and watch them me.:coollook: its not that far to come lol

Specializes in Home Care, Primary care NP, QI, Nsg Adm.

"Yep, My vote goes to... Abbott & Costello"

STOOGES VS ABBOTT AND COSTELLO

(apples and oranges for me but we'll keep it democratic)

I don't think addiction is a "disease" that needs to be "cured," I think addiction is a manifestation of our internalized issues. I had drug and alcohol problems in my late teens and, in retrospect, it's amazing I healed myself and decided to clean up before getting hurt or getting into trouble. A lot of people I know died, some are wasting away, some are functional and successful alcoholics. I don't dig that path...not only can addiction absolutely destroy people, but it can slowly nurture apathy and defeat, as well. No es bueno.

I see my parents (who are successful) and my family, friends and many people around me who drink alcohol almost every night, like I would if I gave into desire (or availability.) When drug use is accepted socially, it becomes easier to succumb to it's temptations. Is alcoholism is all we have at the end of the day? So we can be totally responsible and functional, but dependent on a nightly buzz? I find myself and the people around me working so hard to improve this troubled world, and it really gets us down. We need to take action, not sit on the couch with a drink watching TV. (I refuse to get a TV. Networks freak me out-wasting hours of life watching programming is creepy.)

Upon confession, it sounds like your hubby was refreshingly honest, but I feel he should have been more loving and supportive. Obviously, you weren't satisfied with some part of your life, so you started altering your state of being as a way of correcting this annoying little need for something more (innocent as you told yourself it was.) I think you and your husband should be sensitive to your heart, it tells you when something's not right inside. Keep working on you, and stay away from that crap. Drug use is a cop out - a red light! Addiction is something we can put behind us forever, but the desire to escape is a part of being human, too...if we don't listen to the voice inside when it tells us we need to focus inward, we may try to smother it out with drugs. Hey, some people smother it with material excess, some with status seeking, some with loveless sex.....escapism is part of modern American culture! How do we get sold out on product or drugs we don't need without consumerism's creation of desire?

Wow. Hey I went for about 10 years watching pretty much no TV, then another 10 years watching only kiddy programs a little with my son. Now that I am old- I relish relaxing to a good movie in the evening. I refuse to feel guilty. It is a time when I don't have to be cleaning, don't have to be working on anything. So I sit and take my mind off my trouble for a while. Big deal. Hey it keep me out of the bars!

Specializes in none.

I've only read a third of this thread, but I wanted to put my thoughts out here as a former drug addict.

I do believe drug addiction can be cured, and I disagree with a few of the assertions made by others in this thread. I don't believe, "Once and addict, always an addict". I don't necessarily think that people who become addicted to drugs are predisposed to addiction, and I definitely don't think that people use drugs because of some underlying psychological disorder or disease, although many times that is the case.

Some people get addicted to drugs simply because they like being high, and the pleasurable feelings that drugs give you. You don't have to be someone who was abused as a child, grew up with a family member who was addicted, have a crap life, etc. to become addicted to drugs. You don't have to have an addictive personality to become addicted to drugs.

I would categorize myself as the above. I started in my teens with marijuana, which I greatly enjoyed due to the peaceful, relaxing buzz it gave me. I tried it the first time because I was in a social setting and that was what everyone else was doing. However, I kept on smoking regularly not because of the social aspect, but because I liked how I felt on it. I wasn't seeking something that I didn't have in my life, nor did I have some sort of psychological vacuum to fill. I actually had a very pleasant childhood with a nice family and people who loved me. I wasn't driven to drugs in any way.

Of course weed is a very tame drug, even compared to alcohol and tobacco, and I eventually moved on to drugs that gave even better highs and greater rushes. I can say I've tried nearly everything under the sun. Uppers, downers, hallucinogens, narcotics, stimulants, etc.

And I beat the addiction. I can say though that there ARE levels of addiction, and I wasn't nearly as addicted as some people. I never experienced withdrawal symptoms, even after a long heroin binge. That certainly helped with quitting, as I didn't have to deal with the symptoms that people who are deeply addicted go through, but the biggest factor that allowed me to quit was purely mental.

I eventually realized that getting high every day is juvenile and immature behavior, and I saw that I wasn't going anywhere in life (this was around when I graduated high school), and I was also tired of the people I hung around with and the risky situations I put myself in.

Simply put, I grew up. One day I decided that enough was enough and stopped everything. I ended up moving to a different area (which also helped) and took up sports as a hobby while I took some time off school while I tried to figure out what I wanted to do with my life. I enrolled in a nearby community college and went through the EMT program, passed the course with a 4.0, and easily passed the national registry. I then went into the firefighter program, but dropped out in the first because I didn't like the danger, and the fact that I was more interested in medicine. Now I'm doing my prereqs in order to go into the ADN program.

And during these three years I've been clean, I haven't thought about getting high once, nor would I feel the urge even if I had a suitcase full of drugs in front of me ala Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I have no desire whatsoever to get high. I simply am a lot more mature than I was, I have priorities and responsibilities now, which I didn't have back then, and I also have a very strong determination to succeed with regards to my goals, the main being becoming a good nurse.

Now I'm sure this isn't the case for everyone, and indeed, I might be in the very small minority of those who might be truly 'cured' of addiction. I would also not identify myself as a 'recovering addict' as I'm long past the recovery stage.

I believe that people can change fundamentally, and that for some people the past can remain the past. But I also know that others have demons and serious issues that they may not get over in their whole lifetime. Everybody is unique in this way, but I think it is very premature with what we know about addiction to claim that one can never totally get over addiction. People can move on, and I would like to say that I'm proof of it.

Specializes in ICU.

It sounds like you are very young, and you did the right thing by stopping all the drug use early on.

I believe that had you kept going, you would have ruined your life. I also believe that you DID escape from something while using the drugs, you escaped into feeling HIGH. You are very lucky that you had the will power to stop.

I would catagorize your drug use as drug use,, and not addiction. From what you're explaining, you were never addicted to the drugs you took,, you merely were taking them and having fun. This is a totally different thing than addiction,, therefore you're not "cured" from anything,, you were never addicted. You never had withdrawls, you never sold your car to get an ounce of coke or meth, or whatever. You were never addicted. So, your situation does not apply to recovery, or addiction.

I've only read a third of this thread, but I wanted to put my thoughts out here as a former drug addict.

I do believe drug addiction can be cured, and I disagree with a few of the assertions made by others in this thread. I don't believe, "Once and addict, always an addict". I don't necessarily think that people who become addicted to drugs are predisposed to addiction, and I definitely don't think that people use drugs because of some underlying psychological disorder or disease, although many times that is the case.

Some people get addicted to drugs simply because they like being high, and the pleasurable feelings that drugs give you. You don't have to be someone who was abused as a child, grew up with a family member who was addicted, have a crap life, etc. to become addicted to drugs. You don't have to have an addictive personality to become addicted to drugs.

I would categorize myself as the above. I started in my teens with marijuana, which I greatly enjoyed due to the peaceful, relaxing buzz it gave me. I tried it the first time because I was in a social setting and that was what everyone else was doing. However, I kept on smoking regularly not because of the social aspect, but because I liked how I felt on it. I wasn't seeking something that I didn't have in my life, nor did I have some sort of psychological vacuum to fill. I actually had a very pleasant childhood with a nice family and people who loved me. I wasn't driven to drugs in any way.

Of course weed is a very tame drug, even compared to alcohol and tobacco, and I eventually moved on to drugs that gave even better highs and greater rushes. I can say I've tried nearly everything under the sun. Uppers, downers, hallucinogens, narcotics, stimulants, etc.

And I beat the addiction. I can say though that there ARE levels of addiction, and I wasn't nearly as addicted as some people. I never experienced withdrawal symptoms, even after a long heroin binge. That certainly helped with quitting, as I didn't have to deal with the symptoms that people who are deeply addicted go through, but the biggest factor that allowed me to quit was purely mental.

I eventually realized that getting high every day is juvenile and immature behavior, and I saw that I wasn't going anywhere in life (this was around when I graduated high school), and I was also tired of the people I hung around with and the risky situations I put myself in.

Simply put, I grew up. One day I decided that enough was enough and stopped everything. I ended up moving to a different area (which also helped) and took up sports as a hobby while I took some time off school while I tried to figure out what I wanted to do with my life. I enrolled in a nearby community college and went through the EMT program, passed the course with a 4.0, and easily passed the national registry. I then went into the firefighter program, but dropped out in the first because I didn't like the danger, and the fact that I was more interested in medicine. Now I'm doing my prereqs in order to go into the ADN program.

And during these three years I've been clean, I haven't thought about getting high once, nor would I feel the urge even if I had a suitcase full of drugs in front of me ala Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I have no desire whatsoever to get high. I simply am a lot more mature than I was, I have priorities and responsibilities now, which I didn't have back then, and I also have a very strong determination to succeed with regards to my goals, the main being becoming a good nurse.

Now I'm sure this isn't the case for everyone, and indeed, I might be in the very small minority of those who might be truly 'cured' of addiction. I would also not identify myself as a 'recovering addict' as I'm long past the recovery stage.

I believe that people can change fundamentally, and that for some people the past can remain the past. But I also know that others have demons and serious issues that they may not get over in their whole lifetime. Everybody is unique in this way, but I think it is very premature with what we know about addiction to claim that one can never totally get over addiction. People can move on, and I would like to say that I'm proof of it.

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