My doctor perscribed chantix today for my
alcohol addiction along with anti
depressants. I understand that chantix
was put on the market to stop smoking and
now the medical community thinks it can
help alcohol addicts. My question is has
anyone to date been treated for alcohol
with this drug? Did it help? Are you now
alcohol free and how long?
Thanks to all who step forward!
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shadowalker164
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 175 Location: Tampa, FL
Posted: 08-09-07 11:47am
A guy asked me one time what a cure for my
drinking might look like. I looked him
right in the eye and I told him what I
wanted in the way of a cure was to drink
until I was blind drunk as often as I
wanted to. Get just as obnoxious and
insufferable as I wanted to get, and still
have people love me. Oh yea, and not go to
jail either.
Every year or so a new magic bullet is
discovered. One would think that with all
the wonder cures that have shown up that
guarantee a cure for alcoholism that it
would be hard to find a wet drunk
anywhere. Here, just eat this pill, or
change to this diet, or use this or that
mental trick to learn to drink like a
normal person. One would thing that this
problem of alcoholism would be a disease
of the past. Remember back in the olden
days when men and women actually died of
alcoholism?
Now chantix has shown up as the newest
entry in a long list of magic bullets. I
am not sure how this drug is suppose to
work, so I can’t comment on it’s
effectiveness. But…
It joins a long line of drugs designed to
fix us alcoholics. If I understand how
Campral and another similar drug,
naltrexone works, it kills the buzz. That
may seem like a solution in the short
term, but just like any other drug, it's
effects wear off. What happens when the
alcoholic no longer has that drug in his
system? These drugs, antibuse, and all
other systems of killing the enjoyment of
intoxication do not address the underlying
desire to get loaded. The obsession to
drink that a true alcoholic suffers from.
They haven't fixed anything. They haven't
changed anything. The best they can do is
put a bandage on a hemorrhaging wound. As
part of a larger program, these drugs may
be helpful, but the cure for my alcoholism
didn't come in the form of a pill or
shot.
What a hopeless alcoholic needs is to have
that obsession removed. Once an alcoholic,
always an alcoholic, but if I don't take
that first drink, I can't get drunk. And
the real question is how do I stop
desiring that first drink? That's the real
trick.
Don't kid yourselves deckhand, this
getting and staying sober business doesn't
come to us without some effort on our
parts. There is no painless, effortless,
pill in a bottle that will make the change
in this alcoholics life sufficient to keep
me from picking up that first drink. And
in picking up that first drink, starting
that tragic chain of events all over
again.
By the way, come October the 8th, it will
have been 9 years since I have found it
necessary to pick up that first drink.
On the road to the good stuff,
Richard
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Barbarella
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 29 Jul 2007 Posts: 2 Location: Scotland
Posted: 08-12-07 11:28am
Hi shadowwalker
I must say I did enjoy your write-up, I
think you are absolutely right. By the
way you're good at typing. I notice
things like that as I'm a secretary
myself. Cheers he he
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whosus
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 11 Aug 2007 Posts: 4 Location: niles, mi
Chantix Posted: 08-13-07 08:01am
great reply shadowwalker194, when reading
your reply i could tell you were in
recovery, my husband has been clean and
sober for 19 years. you are so right no
magic pill will cure an alcoholic. the
problem lies within yourself and untill
you come to realize that and that you are
an alcoholic, you will never be well. if
you never drink again but do not address
the issues within yourself things will be
the same.... the old saying of if nothing
changes nothing changes is so true. yes it
is true once an alcholic always and
alcholic is fact. its how you choose to
live you life that makes you well.
changing friends is probably the first
step. my husband found a fellowship AA has
new friends true friends and our whole
family has changed as a result of him
finally coming to terms with his addition.
remember it is a family sickness. good
luck to you. go for the good life.