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Appendix of TAP 19: Counselor's Manual for Relapse Prevention With Chemically Dependent Criminal Offenders
Relapse Prevention Workbook for Chemically Dependent
Criminal Offenders
Introduction
If you are reading this workbook, you probably have had trouble
with alcohol or drugs and have gotten into trouble with the law.
Many people who have trouble with alcohol and drugs don't believe
it is a problem for them. You may not believe it is a problem
for you.
The purpose of this workbook is to find out if you have a problem
with alcohol or drugs and how this connects with your problems
with the law. If you can understand how the two are connected,
you may be able to prevent problems from happening again.
Problems with the law usually occur for one or both of the following
reasons.
- The way you think gets you into trouble
- You have an alcohol or drug problem that gets you in trouble.
Some people know they have an alcohol or drug problem. They want
to stop using, but they haven't been able to. These people are
called chemically dependent. This workbook is designed to help
you if you have a problem with alcohol or drugs and the law, whether
or not you believe you are chemically dependent.
One thing you probably want to do is to resolve your problems
with the law. In order for that to happen, you must be willing
to do several things.
- Consider that you might have a problem with alcohol and/or
drugs. If alcohol and drugs get you into trouble with the
law, your family, or your job, it is likely that you are chemically
dependent. If this is true, the only way you can resolve these
problems is to stop using alcohol and drugs. This may not be easy,
but you can do it if you will accept help.
- Consider that your thinking might be wrong on some issues.
If your thinking is wrong, it can cause you to act in ways that
get you into trouble. It can cause you to feel like you don't
fit in, prevent you from getting what you want out of life, and
cause you to not get along with other people. When this happens,
the only way you know how to feel good is to try to fool or "con"
other people.
- Decide that you can change your life. No matter how
much people try to help you, you must be willing to believe that
you can make your life better if you do certain things. You must
be willing to look honestly at your life and want to change. If
you are willing to do this, you can make your life different.
This workbook can help you.
Section I: What Are My Problems?
The first section of this workbook has two self-tests. If you
are honest when you answer the questions, you will find out
- If you are chemically dependent (can't stop using alcohol
and drugs without help). By finding out whether you are chemically
dependent, you can make decisions that will change your future.
- If your personality is like that of other offenders.
You will see evidence of these similarities in your life. Your
personality is made up of the way you think, feel, and act. These
questions will help you to decide if you want to change your personality.
Understanding your problems is important in getting where you
want to go. It is all right if you don't like what you find, but
if you want to change, you must accept that you have problems.
To get where you want to go, you have to be honest about where
you are. It is like the man who called somebody to ask directions
to get to his house. He didn't want to tell the person where he
was at the time because he didn't want him to know, so he told
him he was somewhere else. Of course, the directions he received
were useless to him.
Section II: How Did I Get Here?
The second section of this workbook will help you understand how
you have gotten into trouble in the past. By understanding your
past thoughts, feelings, and actions, you can understand what
will happen in the future unless you change. This section will
show you what you have to change.
This section will also help you to understand your thinking, feeling,
and ways of acting that caused you to use alcohol or drugs or
break the law. It will help you understand how one thing leads
to the other.
Sections III, IV, and V: How To Change
The final three sections of this workbook teach you how to change
your thoughts, feelings, and ways of acting that have gotten you
into trouble in the past. They will show you how to make a plan
that you can use on a daily basis to change your life for the
better.
This workbook alone will not change your life. You must also use
other forms of help. You can change your life for the better if
you are willing to do several things.
- Not Use Alcohol or Drugs. The first thing you must
do is be willing to stop using alcohol and drugs. Recovery from
chemical dependency must begin with abstinence. There is help
available to do this.
- Attend Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) or Narcotics Anonymous
(NA) Meetings. The best place to find out how to recover is
somewhere you can be with people who have been in the same situation
as you. You should attend as many meetings as possible. The more
you talk with recovering people, the more you can learn from them.
When you go to meetings, listen to what people say. Ask yourself,
"How am I like these people?" "How did they change?"
"What things did they do that I can try?" Ask someone
to be your sponsor. A sponsor is a person whom you respect who
has been sober for quite a while. This is someone you can talk
to on a one-on-one basis. He or she can help you by listening
and sharing his or her own experiences.
When you speak at these meetings, be as honest as you can. You
will get more help if you tell people how you really think and
feel than if you try to impress them. Read as many of the AA or
NA books as possible. The more you read about recovery, the more
your thinking will change. When your thinking changes, you will
start to feel and act differently.
- Get Counseling. Go to one-on-one counseling sessions
at least once a week, and more often if you can. Counseling will
help you work on issues that may cause problems in recovery.
- Read This Workbook. By reading and doing the exercises
in this workbook, you will have a better chance of recovery and
less chance of relapse. Follow the instructions very carefully.
Sometimes it will seem as if you are doing the same thing over
and over again. This repetition forces you to see certain things
again and again so you will remember them. Many times the instructions
will have you copy answers from previous exercises. This is to
help you understand how all of the exercises and all the things
in the exercises and in your life work together.
Sometimes you won't understand why you are doing a certain thing.
The reason will become clearer as you move on. Sometimes you may
get angry and frustrated. Sometimes you will want to quit. This
is normal. Quit for a while, but then try again later. People
who do not quit are more likely to recover.
Try to work in the workbook for 1 or 2 hours, once or twice a
day. There is plenty of space available for each answer. You do
not have to fill in every line for every question.
If you have trouble reading this workbook or understanding it,
ask for help. It may not be easy, but learning how to ask for
help is one of the things you must do to recover.
Most of all, you must put your work into action. It is only by
working on changing that we will change and our lives will get
better. It can happen to you if you try.
We know of a man who spent over half of his life in reform schools
and prisons. He finished high school in prison but had no further
education. He began attending AA in prison, and got out of prison
at age 35. He worked very hard at his recovery. Today, he has
two college degrees, is married and has a family, and works as
a counselor with inmates. He has been sober for over 10 years.
You can change your life too. But, you must understand that it
will take time and hard work.
The "Big Book" is the "school book" of AA
that shows you how to recover. It uses the letters H-O-W to explain
how to recover. This workbook will work for you in the same way.
HonestyThis means being totally honest about how you
think, feel, and act. Unless you are willing to be honest, you
cannot make progress.
Open-mindednessYou must be willing to think that you
may be wrong about some things. Unless you can do this, you cannot
change. If you do not change, the same things will keep happening
to you.
WillingnessYou must be willing to try difficult things
that you do not like and that sometimes hurt at first. The easiest
thing for you to do is what you have always done. The hardest
thing to do is change. But you can do it if you work on changing
day by day. If you change a little each day, in the end you will
be a different person.
Section I: What Are My Problems?
This first section contains two tests. (1) the Alcohol and Drug
Addiction Test and (2) the Offender Personality Self-Test. Completing
each test will help you to understand yourself better and begin
to change.
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Last Updated 11-7-02
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