What Are Stages of Change and How Do They Apply to Addiction


 

What are stages of change and how do they apply to addiction – Stages of Change’ was developed by Prochaska & DiClemente. It basically was a basis of research about cigarette smoking literature, and it helps cognitive behavior therapists, in particular, understand the motivation of an individual who’s coming in for treatment. The first stage in the ‘Stages of Change’ is called precontemplation, meaning the client just says, “Well, I don’t really think I have a problem.” In the twelve steps of the disease model, we call that denial. “I don’t really have a problem. You think I have a problem, then that’s your problem.” The next stage is contemplation. Contemplation is, “Yeah, I’ve got a problem, but I don’t know if I want to do anything about it.” That’s often the case. Lots of people come in and say, or they say to their spouse, “I know I have a problem, but I don’t know if I really want to go through all the misery, or all that stuff to stop.” Some people stay in the contemplation phase for years. Sometimes they even go to the grave in the contemplation; they never even evolve out of it. Then the next stage, if there that balance beam of the contemplation phase eventually tips it up, is that they’ll then go into the preparation. In other words, they’ll pick up a self-help book, or they’ll maybe go to a therapist and start to learn about the resources that are available to discontinue this behavior. If that’s successful, they’ll move on to what’s called the action phase, with action being doing something. They stop gambling. They stop

 

From Twitter:

RT @RadicalBooks: Why Pornography is Counterrevolutionary – A Guidebook to Help Porn Addicts Overcome Their Addiction: http://t.co/8Henmjmt – by AntiAcademics (Anti-Academics)

 

From Twitter:

Why Pornography is Counterrevolutionary – A Guidebook to Help Porn Addicts Overcome Their Addiction: http://t.co/8Henmjmt – by RadicalBooks (Radical Books)

 

From Twitter:

Recommended Books and DVDs for families of substance abusers | Changing Lives Foundation Blog http://t.co/la04KwaM http://t.co/ZxO1h12m – by ChangngLives (Changing Lives )

 

5 Responses to What Are Stages of Change and How Do They Apply to Addiction

  • forestskog says:

    “I’m not? interested in making a lifestyle out of inventorying myself.?”
    Well said. Inventory-sure. obsessive inventorying-no

  • prschuster says:

    Removing the? urge to drink works for me. I agree with you there.

  • BlankUberAlles says:

    normal people? have to resist the urge to drink.

    Recovering alcoholics remove the urge to drink.

  • BlankUberAlles says:

    In all my 20 some year experience? with AA I’ve never been socially pressured about anything

  • prschuster says:

    You can quote the BB all you want but my experience with AA tells me that there is a lot of social pressure to inventory yourself to death. Normal people who never work a 12 step program usually learn from their mistakes and strive to make progress in their personal dealings without doing a 4th & 5th step. I’m not interested in making a lifestyle out of inventorying myself. The thing that helped me most was cutting through the BS and learning how to resist the? urge to drink.

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