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Stop Labeling Yourself an “Addict”

You don’t want to reinforce negative
behaviours in your life by calling yourself derogatory names. Calling
yourself an “addict” because you once engaged in habitual
self-destructive actions is not the way to overcome your past
addictions and forge a new path.

Some people use kratom to get off
dangerous opioids like heroin, Fentanyl, Oxycontin, Vicodin, and
Norco. Misinformed individuals will scold kratom users because
they’re “just using another kind of drug” and are thus still
“using”, still “addicted”. This is generally untrue, for
reasons that will become clear later.

But getting hooked on opioids, benzos,
barbiturates, muscle relaxers, anti-depressives, and other
medications can happen to anyone if they’re not careful.

How did these substances enter a
person’s life?

They were either prescribed strong
narcotics by a doctor as legitimate painkillers, or they experimented
with them for various reasons like seeking relief from deeply rooted
traumatic events that happened in the past, or the person had a
simple hedonistic desire to experience a “high.”

Whether seeking relief from real pain,
attempting to escape boredom, or narcissistically pursuing chemical
pleasures, the person enjoys the drug too much. They gets compulsive
about it. They start using it in excessive amounts or too often
(getting high all the time), and ends up getting hooked. At this
point the person is labeled an “addict.”

Calling someone an “addict” is
generally a condemnation of that person’s moral failure. Society
proclaims that some pleasures are acceptable, even when taken to an
extreme (alcohol, sex, candy, music, movie viewing, sports,
accumulating money and power), while other pleasures are taboo.
Taking euphoric substances to “get high” is typically considered
a sleazy, immoral thing to do. An addiction is something that, so
society says, happens only a lowlife, trashy person.

Sure, people joke about how they’re
addicted to chocolate, Netflix binge watching, cell phones, NFL
football games, collecting antiques, or other things, but in reality,
they’re joking and exaggerating. They would never seriously say they
were addicted to something, especially a drug that society frowns
upon, like marijuana, cocaine, or heroin.

When we label ourselves, we internalize
a set of expectations about ourselves.

By saying we’re an addict, we mean we
can’t control ourselves. We relinquish self-restraint and submit to a
continual thought: “I must have or do this again, right now.” The
substance or activity has taken over our will power.

By labeling ourselves as addicts or
alcoholics, we increase our dangers. We surrender and remain in a
hopeless condition, merely performing feeble efforts to curtail our
excesses, then relapsing over and over again.

The person labeled by himself or
society as an addict is in a sorry plight. He or she loses hope.
Suffering increases, leading to loss of love from family and friends.
Joblessness, then unemployability may enter into the picture.
Deterioration of personality occurs. A total and deep transformation
takes place inside the person. The mother may feel like her daughter
is a completely different person.

An all-consuming dependence on crime
may become the only way they can survive and score the substance they
crave.

In the midst of this misery,
professionals come along, by choice or court order, often making
things worse. The addict is in despair, but is told there is no
absolute freedom from their chains, they must just adjust to a new
normal. They must resign themselves to a dire reality. They may have
been told by a counselor or a 12 step program group that they will
never stop being an alcoholic or drug addict. All the person can do
is transfer the addiction from the substance to the group. By
attending the group meetings and obeying their rules, they can
achieve a small success in curbing their addictive behaviors.

It’s not true that “once an addict,
always an addict.” That’s a favorite expression of both those who
give up the struggle to fight against the addiction and of
institutions who profit financially from repeat interventions and
commitments to rehab programs.

You are what you are doing now, now
what you did in the past. Past behavior predicts future acts, but
doesn’t do this in an inexorable, fatalistic manner. What you did in
the past influences your future acts (less and less as time goes by),
but it doesn’t necessarly always and forever determine them
unavoidably.

People can change. Desires can
evaporate and never again materialize. Personality can be restored.
New attitudes and improved lifestyles can replace the old ones.

When engaging in addictive behaviors,
the person is indeed acting like an addict, but their genuine desire
to change interrupts that addictive mindset and self-damaging
activity. This is the key point. We must emphasize and reinforce the
person’s sincere wish to beat the addiction.

By calling a person who is trying to
recover from addiction an addict, many negative things occur. The
person’s self-definition is poisoned. Hope is shattered. It’s not
being realistic, it’s being cynical.

Porn, gambling, kleptomania
(uncontrollable theft for the fun of stealing things), over-eating,
diet soda, gossiping, ice cream, pyromania (setting fires),
self-harming, and other types of behavior can be addictive. The
addict can’t stop engaging in the activity. The desire to stop starts
to fade away in a defeatist mentality. They become enslaved.

So the addict needs to either continue
until the addiction kills them or gets them imprisoned and thus
deprived of the thing, or he or she needs to change their behavior.
One way to change behaviour is to end it: you stop cold turkey, or
you gradually wean yourself off a substance or obsessive act. Another
way is to substitute something more healthy and more socially
acceptable.

Enter the member of the coffee family
known as mitragyna speciosa, or kratom.

Kratom is a far safer and more
effective solution for the ailments and symptoms of many people.

Kratom is a natural plant that is
helping alcoholics and drug addicts regain their health, sanity, and
productivity. It relieves pain, anxiety, depression, and fatigue. It
is said to even boost the immune system.

In spite of some sectors of society
(the FDA and the orthodox medical community) ignorantly persecuting
kratom, this substance has shown great results as a replacement for
opioids, alcohol, benzos, and other dangerous drugs.

A kratom user is not a kratom addict.
He or she is substituting kratom for dangerous drugs, but the kratom
is not habit-forming the way addictive drugs are.

Kratom users must use certain
precautions to prevent abusing or getting too dependent on the plant.
One way is to do a reset: stop using kratom for a few days or weeks.
This avoids building a tolerance to kratom and keeps users from
constantly escalating their dose amounts and frequency. Another
practice is to use the lowest dose possible that achieves the desired
effects.

When you switch from narcotics to
kratom, everything changes.

You become more sociable, more
employable, more valuable to your family. Your friends will notice a
huge difference. Your pain or other problems are greatly decreased,
but you aren’t sneaking around, stealing, or engaging in disreputable
activities in the middle of the night to score another fix.

Many addictive drugs give diminishing
returns. The more you take, the more you crave. You don’t reach any
satiation point where you’re finally satisfied. You keep drinking,
swallowing pills, or injecting the drug into your veins until you
collapse or nod off to sleep. Only lack of money prevents acquiring
more of the dope or liquor. The amount needed to achieve the same
effect is constantly off in the distance. You’re “chasing the
dragon” – but never catching it.

Kratom is entirely different. You
quickly determine your best dosage and you stick to it. The amount
and frequency of the dose do not keep increasing everlastingly. You
settle on the ideal number of grams and the timing of the doses and
it doesn’t ever change, except in special cases of new injuries or
unexpectedly intensified pain.

Kratom users can become useful to
society and their family. They become good fathers, caring mothers,
faithful wives, loving husbands, loyal children, hard working
employees, creative artists, innovative musicians.

Kratom solves the problems of pain,
melancholy, nervousness, and avoidance of people. While we cannot
make any medical claims for kratom, until it acquires FDA approval as
a nutritional supplement or a medical treatment, we can share
anecdotal evidence, testimonies, and customer experiences.

But one thing is certain already.

Kratom users, in the vast majority of
cases, are not addicts. They are simply using an herbal substance to
solves certain problems and their lives are greatly improved as a
result. And kratom users are cautious, temperate, sober, and
scientific in how they use this wonderful plant. There are no kratom
parties, kratom binges, or kratom fiends.

Don’t even call yourself a “recovering addict” if you used to be hooked on narcotics or alcohol. Label yourself a happy, successful, fulfilled kratom user. Your addiction days are over and done. You are now on the path of natural well-being and psychological advancement.

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