Posts Tagged ‘healing arts’

A Young Man’s Excessive and Abusive Drinking Leads To a DUI, Time In The Local Jail, and Then Motivation and Self Esteem to Get Alcohol Therapy and Change His Injurious and Dreadful Lifestyle

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Jesse had a particularly difficult time maintaining a job. If truth be told, because of his slothfulness and lack of drive, he was jobless far more regularly than he was in a state of employment. And when he did land a job, he had an awfully difficult time getting to work on time, he typically received poor performance evaluations, and he called off sick so consistently that he almost always got fired four or five weeks after he began working. To no one’s surprise, one of the consequences of Jesse’s less than optimal work track record was the fact that he was just about flat broke almost everyday.

Regardless of Jesse’s appalling employment record and financial lack of attention, conversely, by hook or by crook he managed to drink in an abusive and hazardous manner almost everyday.

So it came as no big jolt when Jesse got a fourth DWI. When he went to court, the judge stated to Jesse that his alcohol-related behavior was awful and, as a result, he was going to sentence Jesse to spend twelve months locked up in jail.

Time While Locked Up In Jail To Reflect On The Injurious Outcomes of Abusive Drinking

During his time in the city jail, Jesse was expected to learn more about alcohol facts, about the damaging consequences of hazardous and irresponsible drinking, and he was expected to get alcohol treatment. The magistrate emphasized the fact that unless Jesse receives professional alcohol counseling and learns how to live a life of abstinence, he will most probably be spending more than a short amount of time placed behind bars.

Jesse articulated that he understood what the magistrate was saying but he still felt that incarceration was not the most effective punishment. The judge saw things from an entirely different orientation and stated that it was his job to keep alcohol dependent individuals off the streets who drink and drive and who get multiple DUIs. To substantiate this assertion, the magistrate listed some venerable, comprehensively researched alcohol statistics that highlighted some of the adverse consequences that are linked to abusive and hazardous drinking.

Even though Jesse understood that he drank abusively, he never thought that he was a person who was addicted to alcohol. So it was a real bombshell when Jesse began suffering from alcohol withdrawals around four hours after getting placed behind bars.

To deal with his symptoms of alcohol withdrawal in a safe and secure manner, Jesse was life flighted to a drug and alcohol rehab center for alcohol detoxification and then returned to jail. While locked up in the county jail Jesse was given alcohol rehabilitation but since he got this treatment as something that was forced upon him, he failed to take ownership of his abusive drinking.

When his time in jail was finished, the magistrate without reservation told Jesse that he would be under close observation and would be mandated to take periodic blood alcohol tests.

Jessie’s Irresponsible Drinking Stops Him From Living in an Accountable and Productive Manner

After hearing how Jesse did not take ownership of his drinking circumstances and how he unenthusiastically followed the rehabilitation regimen while in the city jail, the magistrate knew that it was just a matter of time before he would be seeing Jesse once again in court about his hazardous drinking behavior. As the magistrate reflected on Jesse’s situation, he couldn’t help but think about how some people never “connect the dots” and discover how to live in a mature and adult manner.

An Old Relationship Strengthens Jesse’s Self Esteem and Motivates and Inspires Him to Radically Transform His Life by Getting Alcohol Rehab

But something happened in Jesse’s life that substantially changed his unsafe lifestyle. One day when he was at the grocery store buying cigarettes, he met Alice, a girl he hadn’t seen since the ninth grade. After exchanging pleasantries, Alice candidly told Jesse that due to her drug and alcohol abuse she was lucky to be alive.

When Jesse asked her what happened that changed her life so completely, she explained to Jesse that when her cousin Donna passed away from a drug overdose, this forced her to see the ruinous and injurious life she had been living.

She stressed the point that the first thing she did after her cousin’s passing was to begin going back to her childhood church. That was fourteen years ago and with the support, guidance and help of her preacher and other people at the church, she started going to Alcoholics Anonymous and she also got drug and alcohol counseling at the free clinic. Alice told Jesse that despite a handful of rough moments, she is at long last on the path to long term sobriety and feeling a sense of happiness and bliss for the first time in her adult life. When Jesse accepted Alice’s invitation to attend her parish she was pleasantly surprised. After going to about six or seven sermons, for the first time since he was a young adult, Jesse felt a heightened sense of self esteem and started thinking that maybe there was hope for him and that he could at long last confront his alcohol and drug issues, get alcohol treatment, and start living a more healthy and fruitful life.

A Saturday Night Out With School Friends at a Local Disco Leads To Excessive and Abusive Drinking, Alcohol Poisoning Symptoms, and Then a Feeling of Appreciation

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

When Janice was in high school, she had secured a reputation as a person who studied a lot and who rarely, if ever, “painted the town red” by drinking with her pals. She seemed nearly obsessed about “shining” academically so that she would be able to find a career that she not only liked but one that also gave her some monetary security.

After much consideration, in time she made up her mind that she wanted to be a trial lawyer. In order to achieve this goal, nonetheless, she would first have to attend four years of undergraduate education.

After Completing High School Janice Gets Accepted Into A Famous Undergrad University as Training For a Career as a Lawyer

After Janice graduated from high school, she applied to and was accepted into a highly regarded program in sociology. Her logic behind this decision was that this area of study would be good preparation for law school and wouldn’t be indistinguishable from the preponderance of law school applicants who pick political science as their undergraduate major.

After graduating with a 3.8 GPA at the undergrad level, she applied to and was accepted at an esteemed law school at one of the Pacific Ten universities.

She enjoyed her legal studies but every so often she was inundated with all the work that was required at law school. In much the same way as she had done in her high school and undergraduate days, nonetheless, she made buddies painlessly but hardly ever got involved in social functions until the quarter had ended.

After Being Elated With the Fact That She Had Done a Super Job on Her Tests, Janice Wanted to Let Her Hair Down and Do Something Enjoyable

Janice was the type of person who worked in a diligent manner to finish what she started and then would take a break when she could. As it turns out, however, a large number of the things she did between terms or during her summer vacations did not have much to do with drinking. Obviously, Janice was anything but a party-person. Now that her final examinations for her second year in law school were done and pleased that she had done a super job on her finals, nonetheless, she wanted to let her hair down and do something besides school work for a change.

Drinking at a Local Club Results in Alcohol Poisoning, Calling 911, The Emergency Services Number, and a Trip to An Alcohol Rehab Clinic

So Janice and some of her buddies went to a local watering hole where they had a few glasses of wine. As the hours flew by, Janice continued to drink without having a care in the world about tests the following day. Indeed, Janice mentioned to her pals how overjoyed she was to party with her pals from school.

As the evening progressed, Janice and her pals continued to drink. As a matter of fact, she was having such an incredible time that she didn’t want the night to end. It was almost like she was making up for lost time and making an attempt to force a year’s worth of laughter and fun into a single evening. Such a “game plan,” however, seldom works. In truth, when Janice went to the powder room and vomited, her pals started to feel apprehensive about her safety.

Around ten minutes later when Janice started to slur her words, speak in a confused manner, and then fall unconscious, nonetheless, her pals instantly knew that they needed to call the emergency number and ask for emergency assistance because they thought that Janice was displaying alcohol poisoning symptoms.

Once Janice was in the hospital, the presiding physician corroborated what her pals had thought, namely, that Janice had far more alcohol than her body could process and, as a consequence, she suffered from an alcohol overdose.

After the emergency room treatment team pumped her stomach until no gastric contents were observable, Janice was transported to the recovery room. After staying approximately two hours in recovery, Janice was then wheeled to one of the regular hospital rooms. Fortunately, the worst was over and all of her vital signs were back to normal.

In response to Janice’s medical predicament, her friends caringly telephoned her Mom and Dad. As a consequence, early the next morning, her parents and her favorite pals went to the hospital to visit Janice and look into her medical condition.

Janice Narrowly Escapes Death, is Thankful to be Alive, and Promises to Never Again Drink in an Irresponsible Manner

Janice was attentive to the fact that she had dodged a bullet and, as a consequence, was thankful to be alive. At the same time, however, she was somewhat disheartened knowing that she had almost died the night before. Her Mom and Dad realized how intensely she worked at school and how little she let herself socialize with her friends. Nevertheless, they also were aware that Janice needed to avoid irresponsible drinking.

As a consequence, they recommended that down the road, whenever a drinking opportunity presents itself, that she always drink in moderation and responsibly. Janice was fine with this and assured her friends and her Mom and Dad that she would never again drink in an excessive and irresponsible manner. In her own words, “I never had a clue that I would become one of the alcohol abuse and alcoholism statistics in the local town newspaper. I now realize that excessive and hazardous drinking is not for me. I swear that this will never happen again.”

Fortunately, Janice was not only “book smart” but she also had a lot of common sense. That is, she rapidly understood that she had made an error in judgment and decided that she would never make the same mistake again. In actual fact, she now knew that she had involved herself in “binge drinking” and that even one instance of this kind of abusive drinking can end in a fatality.