1 - Addiction vs dependence

The term dependence is commonly used to refer to the use of a psychoactive substance , the absence of which leads to psychological or even physical discomfort, encouraging the consumer to resume his consumption and to perpetuate it.

This is the case with heroin. The heroine gives a lot of pleasure the first time. Then the day when the consumer will stop because there is an addiction, there is less desire, he will have difficulties. Because he is already a prisoner of it and the fact of not being able to use it will bring suffering. In this case he will become dependent on his consumption, not to have pleasure, but not to suffer.

 

The term addiction is rather retained to group drug addictions and dependencies without products . In the 1970s in Anglo-Saxon countries, it was shown that the notion of dependence also encompasses “drug-free addictions”. Addiction is a relationship of dependence that is more or less alienating for the individual, and more or less accepted or even sometimes totally rejected by the latter's social environment.

You can be addicted to:

What is an addiction? To define a dependency, we retain three elements:

In addition to all this, there are other phenomena:

It's like when the boat sinks, the person attaches himself to the only thing that remains stable in front of him, namely the mast. The problem is that the mast sinks with the boat, so it will also sink with the boat.

To end this first presentation on dependence and addictions, we can quote Ivan ILLICH:

“In a consumer society there are two types of slaves: prisoners of addiction and prisoners of envy” 

Let us understand by this that what we are talking about today is very much linked to our society as well as to its functioning. We will recall that in nature, there are no animals that are dependent apart from a few elephants in Africa or India that consume fermented fruits that make them stagger. But an elephant is not in danger. In the wild, animals that are intoxicated do not survive.

It is society that creates this zone where the person can manage to put these behaviors in place. So it is intimately linked to our society.

2 - Pleasure

There are four basic sensations that must be understood as a system of perception and reaction to the world. "I perceive the world in a certain way and I react to it, so I have fear, pain, anger and pleasure"

Some general points about pleasure

You can have fun with:

Any activity repeated for a certain time can lead to pleasure, this is called perversion. We can therefore define perversion as the diversion of an activity towards obtaining pleasure.

“If I allow myself, I can resist it; if I forbid myself, it will become irresistible” Giorgio Nardone

The problem with pleasure is that there are two things that interpenetrate, ie “I have an activity that brings me pleasure so I continue to do it. And if I try to decrease it, reduce it, or control it, what I'm going to increase by decreasing is my desire for that activity. »

There will then be two things that will counterbalance each other in a negative way: pleasure and the control of pleasure. One of the ways to get around this control of pleasure is to authorize pleasure in certain areas in order to make it less desirable.

What alcohol addicts say is:

You have to accept having lost control, because by accepting this you let yourself go and you have less desire.

What is done with pleasure? What are the attempted solutions?

3 - Strategies for taming addiction 

"Addiction is not within everyone's reach, you have to insist heavily and neglect many signals to get there" Jacques Barsoni

That is to say that at the beginning there is a certain confinement in my relationship with me and me to arrive at an addiction: it is me folded up on me.

 

Christian Moretto is a psychotherapist and trainer in New York. He was trained by Giorgio Nardone and is an associate researcher at the Center for Strategic Therapy (Arezzo). In the United States he worked in the field of product addiction (cocaine, heroin, alcohol, etc.) but also in other activities (addiction to online shopping, the Internet, work).