But it doesn't act like a disease!
Dateline: 02/26/97
One of the difficulties in recognizing alcoholism
as a disease is it just plain doesn't seem like one. It doesn't look, sound,
smell and it certainly doesn't act like a disease. To make matters worse,
generally it denies it exists and resists treatment.
Alcoholism has been recognized for many years
by professional medical organizations as a primary, chronic, progressive
and sometimes fatal disease. The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug
Dependence offers a detailed and complete definition of alcoholism, but
probably the most simple way to describe it is "a mental obsession that
causes a physical compulsion to drink."
Mental obsession? Did you ever wake up in the
morning with a song playing over and over in your head? It might have been
a commercial jingle you heard on television, or a song from the radio,
but it kept playing ... and playing and playing.
Remember what that was like? No matter what you
did, that silly tune kept on playing. You could try to whistle or sing
another song or turn on the radio and listen to another tune, but the one
in your head just kept on playing. Think about it. There was something
going on in your mind that you didn't put there and, no matter how hard
you tried, couldn't get out!
That is an example of a simple mental obsession
-- a thought process over which you have no control. Such is the nature
of the disease of alcoholism. When the drinking "song" starts playing in
the mind of an alcoholic, he is powerless . He didn't put the song there
and the only way to get it to stop is to take another drink.
The problem is the alcoholic's mental obsession
with alcohol is much more subtle than a song playing in his mind. In fact,
he may not even know it's there. All he knows is he suddenly has an urge
to take a drink -- a physical compulsion to drink.
Compounding the problem is the progressive nature
of the disease. In its early stages, taking one or two drinks may be all
it takes to get the "song" to stop. But soon it takes six or seven and
later maybe ten or twelve. Somewhere down the road the only time the song
stops is when he passes out.
The progression of the disease is so subtle and
usually takes place over such an extended period of time, that even the
alcoholic himself failed to notice the point at which he lost control --
and alcohol took over -- his life.
No wonder denial is an almost universal symptom
of the disease. For those who have come to the realization that they do
have a problem, help may be as close as the white pages of the telephone
directory. But for those who need help and do not want it, intervention
may be the only alternative.