Signs That You’re Unconsciously Enabling Drug Addiction

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The global pandemic has made many people stay indoors for a long time. Locked in with them is the fear of not knowing what will happen next or if the pandemic will ever end. The new normal that you and the rest of the world were forced to embrace brought so much stress, as the news shows how economies are badly hurt while death is wreaking havoc because of a virus that the world is still trying to understand. Leaving everyone with a question, how do you kill something that is not even alive? How do we eradicate an enemy that we cannot even see?

You must have thought of taking any pills that can calm you down, or you might know someone who has gone too deep in taking any substances that they believed to be helping them drown all their fears and loneliness. Prescribed medications are absolutely okay, but going beyond what is advised is when the problem kicks in, worse is if a person tries to take illegal substances.

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Most clients of rehab centers UK have something in common; they reached the point of desperation to escape reality, which eventually brought them to the point of drug addiction without them realizing it. That’s why it’s crucial for them to know the history and records of their patients, sometimes with the help of the patient’s families or friends, to correctly identify the appropriate rehabilitation programs or treatments for drug addiction. Look into medication assisted treatment, it may be an effective apporach for you.

Some have chosen to address addiction through personalized coaching, like what www.wideworldcoaching.com has been doing for those who need guidance.

But really, what are the signs that you’re unconsciously enabling drug addiction?

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  • If you continue to take the medication after the prescription has expired or after your health has improved is a sign that you’re starting to be dependent on the drug. Drug dependency often leads to drug addiction.
  • When the effects of drugs subside, you may experience confusion. Conditions may include uncontrollable shaking, depression, stomach sickness, unexplainable sweating, and headache. Also, you may start feeling hungry even if you just ate a full meal.
  • You’ve started to leave and ignore the things you used to love and focused more on how you can get the medication or drugs, when you can get them, and where you will take them.
  • You’re starting to have a switch in mood and behavior as you become easy to anger and irritable to your families, friends, and colleagues, even to the littlest of things.
  • You will do anything just for you to afford to buy the drugs or medication, from maximizing your credit cards and emptying savings accounts, selling your belongings, borrowing money from your friends and family, and stealing in worse cases.

In his transformative life coaching, Jason Shiers said, “I work with people who are stuck, want to make changes, and see how the mind really works to create lasting change.” Coming out of drug addiction may be challenging but not impossible. If you’re in addiction already, you need to recognize that you need help; that’s the first step in recovering. Willingness and desire to recover from drug addiction are essential to be successful in all programs, treatments, and coaching sessions that you will be given.