Relapse After Long-Term Sobriety
by Janet Piper Voss, Executive Director, Illinois Lawyers' Assistance Program
Joe was a successful trial lawyer with an active practice in a
small, well-respected firm. Colleagues, clients, and friends
like him and saw him as accomplished in every aspect of his
life. Well known in his community, he served on the local
school board, was active in his church, and directly worked on
behalf of several charitable community organizations. His
wife was a community leader; he had a daughter in law school and a
son studying at an Ivy League college. He appeared to have
the perfect life.
Only his wife and a couple of close friends remember the
difficult days when Joe struggled with his alcoholism, but that was
24 years ago. Once he sought treatment and went to Alcoholics
Anonymous (AA), his life turned around and he seemed unstoppable in
his success - until the day so many years later when he was
arrested for drunk driving, disorderly conduct and resisting
arrest. What happened to this life of recovery? What
happened to the sobriety that gave Joe a good life?
Unfortunately, lawyer assistance programs confront this scenario
more often than you might think. Every year or two, there is
another story of a lawyer or judge who relapses to alcohol or drug
addiction after long-term sobriety. With help, some get
themselves back onto the road of recovery in spite of losses to
reputation and to relationships. Unfortunately, some do
not.
Relapse is the return to alcohol or drug use after an individual
acknowledges the presence of addictive disease, recognizes the need
for total abstinence, and makes a decision to maintain sobriety
with the assistance of a recovery program. According to a
survey of members of AA, 75 percent experience a relapse during
their first year of recovery. For those who are sober five
years, the rate drops to 7 percent. People who successfully
complete a formal treatment program such as a 28-day inpatient
program or an intensive outpatient program have significantly
higher recovery rates than those who do not.
Relapse is not uncommon in early recovery because individuals
are learning what changes they must make to live a sober
life. The relapse can be a learning experience in how to
develop better coping skills and get through difficult experiences
without the use of alcohol or drugs. When relapse comes after
many years of continuous sobriety, it is a clear indication that
something is missing in the recovery, even if it appears intact to
those who associate with the individual.
At any stage of life, heavy alcohol or drug use alters the
brain. When people stop drinking or using drugs, the brain
does not return to normal. But with treatment and AA, these
people learn to manage the resulting symptoms. They remove
shame and guilt by working the 12 steps of AA. They manage
stress with prayer and meditation and by living life one day at a
time. They reduce conflict by mending relationships.
They make their lives better with rigorous honesty. When they
need help, they turn to other people for support and
encouragement.
Over time, this lifestyle becomes a way of life, and concern
about relapse fade. If these individuals are successful in
the eyes of the world, it is easy for them to become
complacent. They may become less rigorous about applying all
the coping skills they developed when they first learned how to
live a sober life. Then, when stress levels increase or
conflicts arise as they do even in normal lives, the altered brain
remembers what takes away those feelings immediately and
effectively. So these individuals pick up the drink or the
drug - and everyone wonders how this could have happened.
Complacency can set in when life is going well.
Individuals in recovery sometimes believe that they no longer need
to focus on their recovery efforts; they are convinced they will
never drink or use drugs again. When drinking is the furthest
thing from someone's mind, then not drinking is no longer a
conscious thought, either. It can be dangerous to lose sight
of the principles of recovery (honesty, openness, willingness)
because everything is going well. More relapses occur when
life is going well than when it is not.
Addiction is cunning, baffling, and powerful - words direct from
the "big book" of AA. This is never more evident than when
someone whose life is so good returns to a destructive
lifestyle. Could it be that those who experience success on
so many levels of their lives forget that their sobriety is the
reason for the success that has come in recovery?
There are also those who relapse during times of extreme
difficulty - the loss of a loved one, the onset of serious or
debilitating illness, or the loss of a career that has been
important both for financial reasons and for a sense of
well-being. During difficult times, it is more important than
ever for these individuals to focus on a recovery program of
openness and honesty with themselves and with those who can help
and support them. It is the time to return to the skills that
have kept them sober for so many years.
In some cases, physicians prescribe pain medications following
surgery or other health issues without knowing the individual is in
recovery. Although the use of addictive or mood-altering
prescription drugs is sometimes necessary, it is important that the
recovering person and the physician communicate openly and work
together to prevent drug abuse. We have seen many instances
where the abuse of prescription drugs leads a recovering lawyer
back to alcohol or to another drug of choice.
In this pharmaceutical era that reminds us constantly that there
is a medication to help with any problem, taking a pill can seem
quite normal. Medications that keep us from feeling physical
or emotional pain, that help us relax, or that enable us to sleep
are the ones that can lead to abuse and addictive use. They
are the drugs that can threaten sobriety.
Major life events do come along in everyone's life and will
challenge a lawyer's recovery even when there is a carefully
thought-out relapse management plan. Such events as illness,
death, divorce or the end of a relationship, and loss of job are
not unique to recovering people, but it is even more important that
recovering lawyers learn to handle these situations so their
sobriety is not threatened.
Relapse is a process, not an event. Many who relapse are
not consciously aware of the warning signs of relapse even as they
are occurring. It happens because something is missing in the
recovery program. Those who are successful in recovery learn
to recognize their own particular warning signs and high-risk
situations. They learn to take a daily inventory of active
warning signs and then proactively seek the right way to handle
them. They learn to recognize the spiral that leads to
relapse and set up intervention plans ahead of time that they can
activate before they reach the point of taking a drink or a
drug.
Warning signs of relapse change with more recovery. Some
of the typical warning signs in early recovery may be denial of
addiction, craving (physical and emotional), and euphoric recall
(remembering only the positive experiences of previous alcohol
and/or drug use). There is also the tendency to "awfulize"
sobriety by focusing on the negative aspects of life without
alcohol or drugs and failing to see the improvements that have come
with abstinence. In later recovery, warning signs are more
likely to be dissatisfaction with life, inability to find balance
in lifestyle, complacency, and a gradual buildup of stress and
emotional pain. Because the struggle to find lifestyle
balance and the presence of stress are two of the major complaints
we hear from lawyers in general, it is no surprise to learn that
recovering lawyers face these challenges in their recovery and can
be vulnerable to relapse if they do not constantly monitor and
manage these aspects of their lives.
A lawyer who recently celebrated the
35th anniversary of his sobriety told me his
Saturday morning AA meeting is still an important part of his
life. He explained that this is where he made the friends who
helped him through a difficult time in his recovery, when he was
going through a divorce and feeling vulnerable of his negative
emotions. It continues to be the place he turns when the
going gets rough - or when he simply needs to talk to someone who
will really understand. When his is in a good place, he goes
there to help his friends through the difficult times. This
is testimony to the fact that a recovery network is important at
any stage of recovery. Without recovering people in our lives
with whom we share our struggles and our successes, it can become
too easy to forget the addiction that once was active and the
recovery that makes it possible to live a happy and successful
life.
Another lawyer, sober for more than 30 years, told me he makes a
commitment to his sobriety every morning. He promises himself
that he will put his recovery first, and preserving his sobriety is
constantly in the forefront of his mind.
The danger of relapse is always present, even if there are
decades of sobriety. Those who are successful in maintaining
their sobriety seem to be always mindful of the benefits that have
come to them in recovery. Acknowledging those gifts on a
daily basis and continuing to focus on a good recovery program, no
matter how many years have passed, is the surest way to avoid
relapse and maintain the good life of sobriety.
"Relapse After Long-Term Sobriety" by Janet Voss was
originally published in GP Solo. ©2009 by the American Bar
Association. Reprinted with Permission. All rights
reserved. This information or any portion thereof may not be copied
or disseminated in any form or by any means or stored in an
electronic database or retrieval system without the express written
consent of the American Bar Association.
Posted 1/30/13