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♡ Drugs And Alcohol In A Relationship ♡

DISCLAIMER- I love you girls so much- but it is physically impossible for me to answer every email that comes into my inbox. If I spent all day answering questions and didn’t live my life- then I wouldn’t be a very good advice giver (because I wouldn’t be gaining any life experience!) . . . → Read More: ♡ Drugs And Alcohol In A Relationship ♡

California Drug Treatment Usually Begins With The Detox Process

The first step in recovering from alcoholism or substance abuse is to get the substances that have been harming your system out. Dependent on on your substance of abuse, this can take several days or longer than a year. The hard part is when you have been abusing your drug of choice for an extensive time frame, your body has most likely become dependent upon it. It has become almost as vital to your body as food, water or even oxygen. . . . → Read More: California Drug Treatment Usually Begins With The Detox Process

Support Available To Help In Fighting Alcoholism

Even if it is not treated like a disease, undoubtedly, alcoholism is one of the most dangerous medical conditions that an individual can ever have. Drinking in huge amounts can sometimes prove to be disastrous if one drinks on daily basis in huge quantity. Alcoholism is not an ordinary medical condition that can go just by consuming medicines. Moreover, it has the tendency of disturbing social, employment, or family life of an individual. Thus, there is not at all any positive effect that alcoholism has all an individual or his life. . . . → Read More: Support Available To Help In Fighting Alcoholism

Alcohol Abuse

Alcoholism, also known as alcohol dependence, is a disease that includes the following four symptoms: Craving – A strong need, or urge, to drink. Loss of control- Not being able to stop drinking once drinking has begun. Physical dependence- Withdrawal symptoms, such as nausea, sweating, shakiness, and anxiety after stopping drinking. Tolerance-The need to drink greater amounts of alcohol to get “high.” . . . → Read More: Alcohol Abuse

A Couple Appraises Their Hazardous and Unhealthy Drinking and Their Plans and Dreams

Bruce and Sherry have been dating one another for six years. They met while taking the same small systems computer applications class at a medium size private liberal arts college located in eastern Pennsylvania. While they were basically classmates the first semester at school, the second semester of their first year they because friends and just before the start of their second year, they began dating. . . . → Read More: A Couple Appraises Their Hazardous and Unhealthy Drinking and Their Plans and Dreams

A Young Mans Irresponsible Drinking Results in a DUI, Depression, and Time in Jail

Pete had a particularly hard time maintaining a job. To be sure, due to his listlessness, lack of ambition, and less than stellar work attitude, he was out of work far more frequently than he was employed with a job. What is more, when he did get employment, he usually received less than positive performance assessments, he had an awfully difficult time getting to work in a timely manner, and he called off sick so habitually that he commonly got fired a few months after he began working. It consequently should not come as a great surprise that one of the outcomes of Pete’s less than optimal work record was the fact that he was just about flat broke almost everyday. . . . → Read More: A Young Mans Irresponsible Drinking Results in a DUI, Depression, and Time in Jail

Heavy and Hazardous Drinking Results in Critical Health Problems

For more than a few years the alcohol addiction and alcohol abuse research literature has demonstrated the fact that alcohol addiction and serious health problems are highly correlated. For example, a U.S. research project undertaken in 2005 revealed that alcoholism and alcohol abuse cost the U.S. around $220 billion every year. It may be highlighted that these alcohol-related costs were substantially more than the cost connected with cancer ($196 billion) or with obesity ($133 billion). . . . → Read More: Heavy and Hazardous Drinking Results in Critical Health Problems