How Women Recover From Addictions
~ Source: Ohio University News Release ~
Most Replace Addiction With Another Passion in Their Lives
Women who recover from drug and alcohol addiction may not kick the
habit just for their children or because they have a sudden "wake up
call" about their problem, according to a small new study of former
female addicts.
These women – many of whom are over the age of 35 and hold a college
degree – took a proactive role in overcoming substance abuse,
replacing those addictions with new lifestyles that include school,
work, community service and physical exercise.
Women are the fastest-growing segment of substance abusers in the
United States: About 2.7 million American women abuse alcohol or
drugs, or one-quarter of all abusers, according to the federal
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. But there is little research
on women's stories of how they recover from drug and alcohol
addiction, according to Ohio University sociologist Judith Grant.
Grant, a visiting assistant professor, spent three years in a non-
profit agency in Canada, where she worked as a researcher and
educator with more than 300 female addicts enrolled in a recovery
program. Many of the women faced different challenges than male
addicts and devised unique ways to overcome substance abuse, Grant
said.
To document their stories, the sociologist interviewed 12 Canadian
women and 14 Ohio women who have been off drugs and alcohol for at
least 18 months. She presented preliminary findings this week at the
American Society of Criminology meeting in Chicago.
While this study may not be reflective of all women addicts, it
implies that some of the earlier studies may have mischaracterized
addiction recovery for women. One concept the analysis refutes is
that women abandon drugs and alcohol for the sake of their kids,
said Grant.
"Children are important, but if these women don't recover for
themselves, they generally relapse," she said.
The women also could not specify a "turning point" that prompted
their recovery; for most the awareness of the need to overcome their
substance abuse was a slow process, Grant found. And their success
at recovery did not hinge on changing their identities from "addict"
to "ex-addict," as the literature suggests, but unearthing their
real selves. The women viewed using drugs and alcohol as an activity
they were involved in, not an identity they had assumed.
"They bring back an old identity from before they got addicted,
before the violence and drug abuse," she said. "This is really me
now,' they say. 'The blanket is gone.'"
Half of the women in the study had used a program such as Alcoholics
Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous to overcome addiction, but the
other half succeeded on their own. All of the women have replaced
addiction with another passion in their lives, Grant said, ranging
from physical exercise to volunteer work to school. Some now mentor
other women who are overcoming addiction.
The participants began using drugs or alcohol in their teens or
early 20s to mask the pain of family violence and incest, according
to Grant, who added that all also reported having a family member
who was an addict. These experiences produced crippling low self-
esteem, a theme particular to these women's stories.
"I've never heard a male addict, to this day, in my work, talk about
a 'lack of self-esteem,'" Grant said.
Grant hopes her findings will be of use to addiction recovery
agencies and other organizations that assist women. The strong link
between domestic violence and substance abuse should be acknowledged
by addiction recovery centers and battered women shelters, she said,
which tend to treat each problem in isolation.
With Special Thanks To XeCreations For Creating This Website-Alternative Self Help Recovery From Alcoholism and Drug Addictions. Provides Self Help Resources, Recovery Links And Is A Self Help Guide To Assist Those In Recovery or Those Seeking Recovery From Alcohol and Drug Addictions.