Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 Ken, since Dr. T. is a member of JCAHO, he might be interested in knowing that I was in a JCAHO-accredited facility right in his own state of Texas and that I found that environment quite coercive. Not only did they make it clear that remaining an atheist or agnostic was NOT an option, they did next to nothing to accommodate any patients who wanted to take a non-spiritual path to sobriety. They allowed the patients' MANDATORY AA meetings to end with the Lord's Prayer, despite objections from one patient (me) that it was a slap in the face of non-Christians. They required us to sit through daily hourlong lectures from a " volunteer " Stepper (who also ran the hospital giftshop)about Step One in which he flagrantly proselytized for Christianity. They had Christian crosses prominently displayed in many places and a HUGE cross up on " Serenity Hill " but not a single symbol of any other major religion. Last time I checked their Web site, they were starting a new special program for Christian patients, but again NOTHING for Jews, Hindus, Moslems, Buddhists or (God forbid) atheists or agnostics. The name of the place is La Hacienda and it is located in Hunt, Texas. Be sure he gets that part. By the way, " LaHa " is NOT affiliated with any church. Also, going to LaHa was no choice of mine. It was the ONLY hospital my employer would allow me to choose in order to detox from heroin. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 Ken, Pass my web site on to him and ask him to read the first four Szasz quotes on the Selected Quotes page. Then ask him how his credentials compare to those of Szasz as outlined in Who's Who in America. Then pass Perkins vs. Pena on to him and ask for his comments on this kind of not for profit trickment. Then ask him to read 's book. Then tell him that my crusade goes on. http://www.angelfire.com/journal/forcedaa/index.html United States District Court Eastern District of North Carolina Tommy G. Perkins Plaintiff vs. COMPLAINT Federico Pena Secretary United States Department of Transportation Defendant FIRST CLAIM 1. That in November of 1985 the Plaintiff was an officer and helicopter pilot with the U. S. Coast Guard with eight years active duty, his fitness reports reflecting a history of being a good officer and an excellent pilot. 2. That in November of 1985, upon arrival at his new duty station of U. S. Coast Guard Air Station City, North Carolina, the Plaintiff confessed an off-duty drinking problem and requested assistance from the command for the problem. 3. That the command scheduled the Plaintiff to attend inpatient alcohol rehabilitation treatment at U. S. Naval Hospital Millington, Tennessee to begin on December 23, 1985 and to last for approximately thirty days. 4. That upon learning that the acting executive officer of U. S. Coast Guard Air Station City had conversed freely with civilians about the Plaintiff's treatment plans, thus compromising the Plaintiff's privacy of medical information, the Plaintiff requested not to go to military inpatient alcohol rehabilitation treatment, and requested to be able to see a civilian counselor on his own. 5.That the Plaintiff was then sent by the command to be evaluated by a Navy psychiatrist at U. S. Naval Hospital Portsmouth, Virginia, who reported the Plaintiff to be normal, fit for flying, and likely to have a bad reaction to inpatient treatment. 6. That in spite of this evaluation by the Navy psychiatrist, the command sent the Plaintiff involuntarily to inpatient alcohol rehabilitation treatment at U. S. Naval Hospital Millington, Tennessee on December 23, 1985. 7. That the Plaintiff spent Christmas week, 1985 observing and being subjected to intense, humiliating, and intimidating verbal abuse insisting that the Plaintiff " believe " in Alcoholics Anonymous principles and that the Plaintiff " believe " that the Plaintiff had the " disease " of alcoholism. That these intimidating sessions took place in a room where a large poster giving numerous references to " God " hung conspicuously on the wall. That the Plaintiff was subjected to mandatory Alcoholics Anonymous meetings that opened with all present reciting, in unison, Serenity Prayer and closed with all present standing in a circle, holding hands and reciting, in unison, the Lord's Prayer. 8. That the Plaintiff observed the treatment to be based on coerced spirituality and beliefs in religious principles that were inconsistent with the Plaintiff's own religious beliefs, especially the torturous lifelong stigmatization of self and others, which is contrary to the teachings of the Plaintiff's own God and the instructions of ch. 6, vs. 5-9 of the Holy Bible from the Plaintiff's own God. 9. That on or about the sixth day of treatment the Plaintiff told one of the staff members that the Plaintiff did not believe the Plaintiff had the disease of alcoholism and that the Plaintiff wanted out of the program. 10. That on December 31, 1985 the Plaintiff was called into a staff office where the entire staff (five people) surrounded the Plaintiff in a semicircle, slammed books on a desk, yelled at the Plaintiff, told the Plaintiff that the Plaintiff's deceased father who did not drink was a " dry alcoholic " , and in an intensely coercive pre-Miranda style setting, demanded that the Plaintiff profess " belief " that the Plaintiff had the disease of alcoholism, which the Plaintiff refused to profess. That the Plaintiff stated that if religion was the basis of the treatment, the Plaintiff would be better off placing himself in an environment of the Plaintiff's own religion as the Plaintiff had done previously while attending graduate school at a university sponsored by the Plaintiff's own religion. That the staff responded to this remark by the Plaintiff by shouting at the Plaintiff with more abusive language and one staff member stating that she had tried that, and it did not work for her and that " their " religious program was the only way to solve the Plaintiff's problem. That during this bizarrely abusive session, one of the counselors who, because he was on leave during the entire week had never even met the Plaintiff, continued to shout in a loud voice, " You are a sick man, Mr. Perkins, you are a sick man. " 11. That this interrogation session was an inquisition of the Plaintiff's " beliefs " rather than his actions, the Plaintiff having already confessed to periodic abuse of alcohol. 12. That the Plaintiff was discharged from treatment on December 31, 1985 and that the follow-up reports stated that the Plaintiff had failed to cooperate in treatment. 13. That shortly after the Plaintiff's return to his duty station the Plaintiff had a conference at the Fifth Coast Guard District office in Portsmouth, Virginia with the district alcohol and drug abuse representative, a senior chief petty officer, and that this conference was attended also by a civilian co-worker of the senior chief. That the Plaintiff stated that the Plaintiff did not want to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. That the senior chief and the civilian became quite indignant, and in a session, although not nearly as intimidating and abusive as the previously mentioned session on December 31, stated that these religious activities would be mandatory. That the senior chief stated that he knew from personal experience from being a member of Alcoholics Anonymous that " his " religious program was the only way to solve the Plaintiff's problem. 14. That the Plaintiff was then forced against his will to swallow daily the dangerously toxic and life threatening chemical, disulfiram, but was not told by any representative of the Coast Guard that any dangerous risks were associated with the ingestion of this chemical. That Coast Guard regulations require that this information concerning possible side effects of the drug be presented to the patient by a physician. 15. That in violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution [ vs. Laird-466 F.2d 283, 285 (1972)], the Plaintiff was ordered to attend three (3) Alcoholics Anonymous meetings per week where religious dogma and prescribed prayer were part of the program. That as proof of attendance at these religious meetings at various churches and civic buildings, the Plaintiff was required to submit to the command slips of paper signed by Alcoholics " Anonymous " members of the civilian community, thus compromising the religious privacy of the civilian community. That the prescribed prayers at these meetings consisted of each meeting opening with all present reciting in unison the Serenity Prayer, and each meeting closing with all present standing in a circle holding hands and reciting in unison the Lord's Prayer. That the Lord's Prayer is a sectarian prayer of sacred text [Abington School District v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203, (1963)]. That prayer is a religious exercise/activity, and " at a minimum, the Constitution guarantees that government may not coerce anyone to support or participate in religion or its exercise, or otherwise act in a way which 'establishes a [state] religion or religious faith, or tends to do so'. " This is a fundamental limitation " imposed by the Establishment Clause. " [Lee v. Weisman, 112 S. Ct. 2649 (1992)]. That this coercion also violates the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment [Abington, 374 U.S. at 223.] That this coercion also violates the instructions of Jesus Christ, the Plaintiff's Lord and Savior ( ch. 6, vs. 5-9 of the Holy Bible). That to determine whether the Establish Clause has been violated, the Supreme Court applies a three-part test (the Lemon Test) set forth in Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971). That under this test, to satisfy the Establishment Clause a governmental practice must (1) reflect a clearly secular purpose; (2) have a primary effect that neither advances nor inhibits religion; and (3) avoid excessive government entanglement with religion. That the Coast Guard clearly failed to satisfy parts (2) and (3) of the Lemon Test. That excessive government entanglement with religion is clearly reflected by the Coast Guard's policy to coerce some of its members to attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, a voluntary organization of people in the civilian community who gather and pray together, many of whom disapprove of others being coerced to join them, and especially by the Coast Guard's policy to require its members to return the signed names of members of Alcoholics " Anonymous " to the command. That the Coast Guard's practice also serves to advance and inhibit religion in this case. That by requiring a member to attend and/or participate in these meetings, where the Lord's Prayer is recited in unison by all, the Coast Guard's practice serves to advance religion, the Lord's Prayer being a Christian prayer from the New Testament of the Holy Bible, which refers to prophesy unique to the Christian faith. That the Coast Guard's practice also serves to inhibit religion, because there are Christians like myself who believe that the words of ch. 6, vs. 5-9 truly reflect the sacred message given by Jesus to the people as He stood on the mountain. 16. That the mandatory attendance at these religious meetings was especially torturous to the spirit and soul of the Plaintiff, since this duty station was in City, North Carolina, the town where the Plaintiff had grown from infancy to adulthood, and where the Plaintiff's parents had introduced the Plaintiff to the Plaintiff's own God, and together they worshiped their own God in their own way and at their own chosen place of worship. 17. That during the nine month period between the Plaintiff's discharge from treatment and discharge from the Coast Guard, all operational capacitations of the Plaintiff, including flight status, security clearance, and operational watches were terminated. (The plaintiffs of vs. Laird were also persecuted severely by their Academy staff until their attorney gained a restraining order to prevent such persecution). 18. That on September 15, 1986 the Plaintiff was discharged from active duty in the United States Coast Guard his fitness reports reflecting, of course, that the Plaintiff had done no right and, of course, that the Coast Guard had done no wrong. 19. That the religious based beliefs that the Plaintiff refused to proclaim and yet the Defendant was in such powerful alignment with, are considered by today's experts who study and research the field of substance abuse with reason, objectivity, scientific method and without religious prejudice, to be erroneous. 20. That as Mr. Jefferson stated so many times that it would if it were allowed to, error is on the flee. Yet the Plaintiff has been ruthlessly stigmatized and incapacitated from his government position for not allowing the Defendant to pursue its happiness by tyrannizing over the mind and beliefs of the Plaintiff with the religiously aligned convictions of the Defendant. 21. That " Soon Mrs. Ford was the famed founder of the prestigious Betty Ford Center, a lofty perch from which, at last, she could look down on people as sickos. " , Szasz, Our Right to Drugs: The Case for a Free Market, p.88. 22. That " As noted in the first chapter, in 1963 the Supreme Court declared that a law does not violate the principle of church-state separation if its purpose and primary effect are secular. Since then practically every effort to introduce religion in the public school or to get public funds for church schools has been accompanied by a recitation of 'purpose and primary effect' as if it were a verbal talisman whose mere incantation was sufficient to exorcise the ghost of unconstitutionality. The reductio ad absurdum of the purpose effect test is to be found in the 1972 case of Laird v. . One would assume that in the United States no one could be forced to go to church. At least four times within the past 25 years the Supreme Court has said so. Nor is this tradition of recent vintage; it is more than three centuries old, dating back to a letter, written in 1654 by to the people of the Town of Providence, in which he said: There goes many a ship to sea, with many hundred souls in one ship, whose weal and woe is common, and is a true picture of a commonwealth, or a human combination or society. It hath fallen out sometimes, that both papists and protestants, Jews and Turks, may be embarked in one ship; upon which supposal I affirm, that all the liberty of conscience, that ever I pleaded for, turns upon these two hinges--that none of the papists, protestants, Jews, or Turks be forced to come to the ship's prayers or worship, if they practice any. I further add, that I never denied, that notwithstanding this liberty, the commander of this ship ought to command the ship's course, yea, and also command that justice, peace and sobriety, be kept and practiced both among the seamen and all the passengers. " Leo Pheffer God, Caesar, and the Constitution p. 163 23. That " Had not the Roman government permitted free inquiry, Christianity could never have been introduced. Had not free inquiry been indulged at the era of the Reformation, the corruptions of Christianity could not have been purged away. If it be restrained now, the present corruptions will be protected, and new ones encouraged. Was the government to prescribe to us our medicine and diet, our bodies would be in such keeping as our souls are now. " , Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia. 24. That " The mental health system is a well-oiled machine that destroys the hopes and dreams of millions of vulnerable souls, wreaks havoc on their bodies, and inducts them into becoming chronic mental patients. " , Seth Farber, Madness, Heresy, and the Rumor of Angels: The Revolt Against the Mental Health System, p.110. (Enclosure 1) 25. That " Psychiatric drugs and electroshock are spreading an epidemic of permanent brain damage. " , Breggin, Toxic Psychiatry, dust jacket. 26. That " What also remains unmentioned in debates on drug legalization is that all loyal liberal-despotic psychiatrists--Grinspoon among them--believe in forcing some of the most toxic drugs in our pharmacopoeia down the throats of the most helpless people in the country, rationalizing coercive drugging as the 'drug treatment of psychotics.' Grinspoon never suggests a harmfulness tax for Haldol. " , Szasz, Our Right to Drugs: The Case for a Free Market, p.108. 27. That " The most serious threat to good government and freedom in America is not posed by evil-minded men and women. It is posed by legislative and judicial activists and other sincere persons of the best intentions, who are bent on remaking America in the image of their own thinking. They lack faith in the capacity of people to be the masters of their own fates, and the captains of their own souls, and insist that government assume the task of controlling their thoughts and managing their lives. " Senator Sam J. Ervin Jr., Preserving the Constitution, p.169. 28. That " Typical of the utter fraudulence of the Clinton health-care plan is the line about 'asking everyone to pay his fair share.' Government is not about 'asking.' It is about telling--and about punishing those who do not obey. " , Sowell, editorial, The Virginian Pilot, June 10, 1994. (Enclosure 2) 29. That " The new Nero will approach us with the silky manners of a doctor. " , C.S. . SECOND CLAIM 1. That the Plaintiff is a citizen of the United States of America and has been so continuously since his birth on January 13, 1949 at New London, Connecticut. 2. That a position as officer in the United States Coast Guard is an office and/or public trust in the context of the Religious Test Clause of Article. VI, Section 3 of the United States Constitution. 3. That alcohol rehabilitation treatment in the United States Navy/Coast Guard was at the time of the Plaintiff's discharge from active duty, based on the coerced beliefs and practices of the spiritual, religious, and dogmatic principles of the Alcoholics Anonymous program including mandatory attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous meetings which opened with all present reciting, in unison, the Serenity Prayer, and closed with all present standing in a circle and reciting, in unison, the Lord's Prayer. 4. That the United States Coast Guard's policy of discharge for not completing such treatment as described above is in violation of the Religious Test Clause of Article. VI, Section 3 of the United States Constitution ( V. Laird, at 293, footnote 63). 5. That the Plaintiff was subjected to and refused such Religious Test and therefore was consequently discharged from active duty. WHEREFORE the Plaintiff prays that: 1. He be placed on the permanent retired list of the United States Coast Guard and enjoy all benefits including full retirement pay for the amount due one retired at the rank of Lieutenant (03). 2. He be granted in lump sum payment back retirement pay for the above stated rank from September 15, 1986 to the date that he receives his first regular retirement check. 3. He be awarded such other relief as the Court deems just. This the 12th day of September 1994 ______________________________ Tommy G. Perkins 215 Harrell Street City, NC 27909 > > > > What advice would you have, Dr. Talmadge, for those who did suffer from > > treatment > > > facilities that offered nothing but high-priced 12-step remedies and who did > > so in > > > an extremely coercive environment? > > > > Ms. Kelsey, > > > > I have previously expressed my contempt for hospitals that blurred the boundary > > with 12-Step and appropriated these approaches for profit. As I said, that is > > about big business, not about AA. As a surveyor for the Joint Commission on > > Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, I have had occasion to visit many > > treatment programs across the country. I mention this not to boast, but simply > > to stress that my work has involved what we call quality assurance, which > > includes tremendous emphasis on patient rights and the protection of patients > > from harm. Any treatment program based on an extremely coercive environment > > would be seriously at risk for losing its accreditation (and its ability to stay > > in business). > > > > At the same time, it is my experience that unhappy people have a strong tendency > > to blame their circumstances, their families, and external forces for what is > > wrong. This is particularly true for addicts and alcoholics, by the way. > > > > My advice is threefold. > > > > First, take responsibility for what has happened. That would include the > > selection of an inferior treatment facility. If you were coerced to go there, > > taking responsibility would mean being accountable for the behavior that got you > > sent there. No one likes to hear that, but the advice holds up over time. I am > > not blaming the person with the problem -- far from it. But I am saying that the > > person with the problem, however we choose to define it, must take > > responsibility for creating the situation. We are not victims. > > > > Second, examine the payoff in staying angry about what happened instead of > > getting your life together in the present, going ahead, and learning from your > > experience. When people hang on to resentment and anger, there's almost always a > > big payoff for doing so. Among other things, when we do that we get to be right, > > and for many people being right is more important than being happy. If you have > > any doubt about this, read a dozen or so posts recently published on this list. > > > > Third, and this is probably the most important, practice forgiveness. People > > have treated you (or someone) badly. Forgive them. The only reason to carry on > > and refuse to forgive is to perpetuate the suffering. This is a piece of > > personal advice, and it does not address whatever need you may feel to crusade > > or to protect and defend others. All of us crusaders must always look carefully > > at our motives. Sometimes the crusade is about getting even, not about making > > the world a better place. Revenge doesn't help anyone. Forgiveness and taking > > responsibility makes the world a better place. > > > > And remember, free advice is worth somewhat less than what you pay for it! > > > > warm regards > > > > T. > > > > -- > > M. Talmadge, M.D. > > Associate Professor of Psychiatry > > & Director, Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship Program > > University of Texas Southwestern Medical School > > Dallas, Texas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 My response would be that the world has become easier to comprehend since I placed responsibility for misdiagnosis and resulting mistreatment of my mild depression in 1984 where it belongs: with the undertrained, undereducated Employee Assistance Program (EAP) counselor who offered only 12 step treatment. It's not unreasonable, as a consumer of health services, to assume that the professional I consult is at least as well-informed as I am about mental health. Further, I did take steps to protect myself from this ill-advised treatment. I expressed my own view of what my problem was, and my disapproval of 12 step chemical dependency treatment; I was not offered an alternative. I was not court-ordered for any reason. An intake evaluation indicated I was not chemically dependent. In hindsight, it's easy to see what I should have done differently. The main thing I should NOT have done is placed my trust in an incompetent counselor. I should have run, not walked, out of that clinic as soon as my self-report was rejected. So I do take responsibility for my choices. However, I see no corresponding acceptance of responsibility on the part of the treatment industry or organizational AA, for inadequately discharging THEIR obligation to me. Ineffective treatment would be one thing; but 12 step treatment actually worsened my condition, and I was coerced to express gratitude for being harmed. I consider myself a survivor of treatment. My own experience took place over 15 years ago. I'm certain I could not bring charges; even if I could, I don't think I'd want to. I only began dealing with this situation last year, because up until 1999 I took full responsibility for everything that happened. Based on what I've learned in the past year, it appears to me that the overuse of 12 step treatment is creating several counterproductive attitudes in the population it is supposed to serve. Powerlessness, helplessness, and lack of accountability do not help a person to deal with their problems in a healthy way, or to live as independently as possible. Priorities seem to become distorted, rather than clarified, by involvement in 12 step groups. Looking to the future, my own as well as the communities in which I live, it is clear that everyone involved in *A and the treatment industry continues to avoid accountability for the problems they created in the lives of people like me, and blame us as individuals for placing our trust in authority figures like the EAP counselor I worked with. I haven't yet figured out how I can best work to remedy this situation. Perhaps I am not moving fast enough for Dr. Talmadge, but I fail to see how I owe any supporter of 12 step treatment _anything_. Judith > > > My advice is threefold. > > > > First, take responsibility for what has happened. That would include the > > selection of an inferior treatment facility. If you were coerced to go there, > > taking responsibility would mean being accountable for the behavior that got you > > sent there. No one likes to hear that, but the advice holds up over time. I am > > not blaming the person with the problem -- far from it. But I am saying that the > > person with the problem, however we choose to define it, must take > > responsibility for creating the situation. We are not victims. > > > > Second, examine the payoff in staying angry about what happened instead of > > getting your life together in the present, going ahead, and learning from your > > experience. When people hang on to resentment and anger, there's almost always a > > big payoff for doing so. Among other things, when we do that we get to be right, > > and for many people being right is more important than being happy. If you have > > any doubt about this, read a dozen or so posts recently published on this list. > > > > Third, and this is probably the most important, practice forgiveness. People > > have treated you (or someone) badly. Forgive them. The only reason to carry on > > and refuse to forgive is to perpetuate the suffering. This is a piece of > > personal advice, and it does not address whatever need you may feel to crusade > > or to protect and defend others. All of us crusaders must always look carefully > > at our motives. Sometimes the crusade is about getting even, not about making > > the world a better place. Revenge doesn't help anyone. Forgiveness and taking > > responsibility makes the world a better place. > > > > And remember, free advice is worth somewhat less than what you pay for it! > > > > warm regards > > > > T. > > > > -- > > M. Talmadge, M.D. > > Associate Professor of Psychiatry > > & Director, Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship Program > > University of Texas Southwestern Medical School > > Dallas, Texas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 You see that's what I like about you Tommy. You don't ask for much and you give so much in return. > Re: Big time grouper urges forgiveness > > > Ken, > > Pass my web site on to him and ask him to read the first four Szasz > quotes on the Selected Quotes page. Then ask him how his credentials > compare to those of Szasz as outlined in Who's Who in America. Then > pass Perkins vs. Pena on to him and ask for his comments on this kind > of not for profit trickment. Then ask him to read 's book. > Then tell him that my crusade goes on. > > http://www.angelfire.com/journal/forcedaa/index.html > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 Warning: This response is trifling, childish, churlish, boorish and is indicative of my distaste for the psychiatric profession. As such it's very likely to annoy you. It's a small measure of the temporary insanity with which I'm currently afflicted that I'm even responding to the mucky muck. That and I kind of like the word mucky muck. Read at your own risk. In order to respond to this I'd have to nitpick him to death. For example what does it mean to be " extremely cohersive " . I would imagine that it's not enough to be cohersive they have to be " extremely chohersive " to suffer the consequences. And what are the consequences for being extremely cohersive. Well according to him the consequence is risking loosing their accreditation. Not loosing mind you just risking loosing it. Which makes me want to ask the next question. How many has he personally recommended loosing their credentials? For that matter how many have lost their credentials or been refused accreditation as result of those surveys? Accept responsibility for choosing an inferior treatment facility. Like most people in need of one know what the hell they should be looking for. also it smacks of " You get what you pay for " > Big time grouper urges forgiveness > > > Hello everyone, > > The following was posted by a Dr. Talmadge on addict-l who is a > big muckymuck in > addiction > treatment and an AA member. Does anyone have any comment they'd > like me to forward > to him at addict-l? > > Ken > > > > Ms. Kelsey, > > > > > > > At the same time, it is my experience that unhappy people have > a strong tendency > > to blame their circumstances, their families, and external > forces for what is > > wrong. This is particularly true for addicts and alcoholics, by the way. Apparently addicts and alcoholics are more human than humans? > > My advice is threefold. > > > > First, take responsibility for what has happened. That would include the > > selection of an inferior treatment facility. If you were > coerced to go there, > > taking responsibility would mean being accountable for the > behavior that got you > > sent there. No one likes to hear that, but the advice holds up > over time. I am > > not blaming the person with the problem -- far from it. But I > am saying that the > > person with the problem, however we choose to define it, must take > > responsibility for creating the situation. We are not victims. Please disregard the cohersive nature of the treatment or it's religious nature or if you most notice it at all be assured it's your fault you're even in this mess to begin with. I know you don't like to hear that but let's face it if you could handle your liquor/drugs you wouldn't be here so please stop whining about your current treatment and concentrate on how you brought it on yourself. Don't go blaming this on us. This makes me wonder if one of the survey questions is: Does the facility encourage patients to take responsibility for their behavior or does it teach the disease concept and powerlessness concept through XA. > > Second, examine the payoff in staying angry about what happened > instead of > > getting your life together in the present, going ahead, and > learning from your > > experience. When people hang on to resentment and anger, > there's almost always a > > big payoff for doing so. Among other things, when we do that we > get to be right, > > and for many people being right is more important than being > happy. If you have > > any doubt about this, read a dozen or so posts recently > published on this list. There is no such thing as justifiable anger mister. Get on with the business of your life now and stop living in the past. Sure you may be right but are you happy? Please keep in mind I'm not averse to you being happy it's just that I'd rather me be happy so make me happy by being happy about your current situation. > > Third, and this is probably the most important, practice > forgiveness. People > > have treated you (or someone) badly. Forgive them. The only > reason to carry on > > and refuse to forgive is to perpetuate the suffering. This is a piece of > > personal advice, and it does not address whatever need you may > feel to crusade > > or to protect and defend others. All of us crusaders must > always look carefully > > at our motives. Sometimes the crusade is about getting even, > not about making > > the world a better place. Revenge doesn't help anyone. > Forgiveness and taking > > responsibility makes the world a better place. I'm beginning to wonder why he keeps putting a moral face on a secular problem. You're forced into treatment? Hey forgive the rat bastards for they truly do not know what they do. Forced to attend XA? You gotta let go man or you're just going to keep suffering. As if forgiving is going to get you out of the current situation. > > > > And remember, free advice is worth somewhat less than what you > pay for it! > I really can't explain this but I'm taken with a fit of laughter every time I read that last sentence. I'm feeling the need to apologize now but In my defense I did warn you at the very beginning of this message. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 --- >Hello everyone, > >The following was posted by a Dr. Talmadge on addict-l who is a big muckymuck in >addiction >treatment and an AA member. Does anyone have any comment they'd like me to forward >to him at addict-l? > >Ken > -------------------- Ken -- I wept when I read Talmadge's cruel post. The hospital facility I and others in my agency were coerced to attend for 9 months was also JCAHCO accredited. It meant nothing. The facility had a contract with my agency guaranteeing them payment if they would agree to provide 9 months of " treatment " to every employee sent there. And every employee who had a single " positive " random test was sent there, regardless of whether they even came close to meeting the criteria for alcohol/drug abuse or dependence. The treatment was entirely 12-step based and was identical for everyone, and any expression of personal opinion deviating from what was presented, or questioning of anything the counselors said or did, resulted in threats of being reported to the agency EAP as " non-compliant " , which of course meant not being allowed back to work. Employees were encouraged to lie, to betray their true selves, to constantly guess what the counselors wanted to hear so they could mouth the words and get that precious " compliance " report sent monthly to the agency EAP. Many employees were forced to go on Welfare due to not being allowed to work, and most had had acceptable to excellent job performance records. This program destroyed marriages, families, and self-respect. I actually did write a letter of protest to JCAHCO, but never got a response. I tried to take responsibility for my single misbehavior, but was told repeatedly I WASN'T responsible, because a " disease " made me do it, and that I should be " grateful " to the EAP for " helping " me. I am NOT responsible for the sadism of my EAP or the treatment counselors, nor for the fraud perpetrated at taxpayers' expense by this facility and its contract with my agency. I do NOT forgive the EAP or the treatment facility. I do NOT practice " acceptance " of unethical behavior perpetrated by authority figures who abuse their power. Such " acceptance " would be against my religious and cultural tradition. Rita p.s. Would Dr. Talmadge give the same " forgive, don't take action " advice to rape victims? > > " M. Talmadge, M.D. " wrote: > >> > What advice would you have, Dr. Talmadge, for those who did suffer from >> treatment >> > facilities that offered nothing but high-priced 12-step remedies and who did >> so in >> > an extremely coercive environment? >> >> Ms. Kelsey, >> >> I have previously expressed my contempt for hospitals that blurred the boundary >> with 12-Step and appropriated these approaches for profit. As I said, that is >> about big business, not about AA. As a surveyor for the Joint Commission on >> Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, I have had occasion to visit many >> treatment programs across the country. I mention this not to boast, but simply >> to stress that my work has involved what we call quality assurance, which >> includes tremendous emphasis on patient rights and the protection of patients >> from harm. Any treatment program based on an extremely coercive environment >> would be seriously at risk for losing its accreditation (and its ability to stay >> in business). >> >> At the same time, it is my experience that unhappy people have a strong tendency >> to blame their circumstances, their families, and external forces for what is >> wrong. This is particularly true for addicts and alcoholics, by the way. >> >> My advice is threefold. >> >> First, take responsibility for what has happened. That would include the >> selection of an inferior treatment facility. If you were coerced to go there, >> taking responsibility would mean being accountable for the behavior that got you >> sent there. No one likes to hear that, but the advice holds up over time. I am >> not blaming the person with the problem -- far from it. But I am saying that the >> person with the problem, however we choose to define it, must take >> responsibility for creating the situation. We are not victims. >> >> Second, examine the payoff in staying angry about what happened instead of >> getting your life together in the present, going ahead, and learning from your >> experience. When people hang on to resentment and anger, there's almost always a >> big payoff for doing so. Among other things, when we do that we get to be right, >> and for many people being right is more important than being happy. If you have >> any doubt about this, read a dozen or so posts recently published on this list. >> >> Third, and this is probably the most important, practice forgiveness. People >> have treated you (or someone) badly. Forgive them. The only reason to carry on >> and refuse to forgive is to perpetuate the suffering. This is a piece of >> personal advice, and it does not address whatever need you may feel to crusade >> or to protect and defend others. All of us crusaders must always look carefully >> at our motives. Sometimes the crusade is about getting even, not about making >> the world a better place. Revenge doesn't help anyone. Forgiveness and taking >> responsibility makes the world a better place. >> >> And remember, free advice is worth somewhat less than what you pay for it! >> >> warm regards >> >> T. >> >> -- >> M. Talmadge, M.D. >> Associate Professor of Psychiatry >> & Director, Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship Program >> University of Texas Southwestern Medical School >> Dallas, Texas > --== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- Before you buy. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 16, 2000 Report Share Posted August 16, 2000 In my UK rehab their was a christian chapel in the basement and the " spiritual counsellor " was a catholic priest. They made a big deal abt ther fact that he was defrockled for alcoholism, rather less abt the fact that got to wear a frock again. If Id realized he was still Catholic, I would have refused to see him. P. > Ken, since Dr. T. is a member of JCAHO, he might be interested in > knowing that I was in a JCAHO-accredited facility right in his own > state of Texas and that I found that environment quite coercive. Not > only did they make it clear that remaining an atheist or agnostic was > NOT an option, they did next to nothing to accommodate any patients > who wanted to take a non-spiritual path to sobriety. They allowed the > patients' MANDATORY AA meetings to end with the Lord's Prayer, > despite objections from one patient (me) that it was a slap in the > face of non-Christians. They required us to sit through daily > hourlong lectures from a " volunteer " Stepper (who also ran the > hospital giftshop)about Step One in which he flagrantly proselytized > for Christianity. They had Christian crosses prominently displayed in > many places and a HUGE cross up on " Serenity Hill " but not a single > symbol of any other major religion. Last time I checked their Web > site, they were starting a new special program for Christian > patients, but again NOTHING for Jews, Hindus, Moslems, Buddhists or > (God forbid) atheists or agnostics. > > The name of the place is La Hacienda and it is located in Hunt, > Texas. Be sure he gets that part. > > By the way, " LaHa " is NOT affiliated with any church. Also, going to > LaHa was no choice of mine. It was the ONLY hospital my employer > would allow me to choose in order to detox from heroin. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2000 Report Share Posted August 17, 2000 " Such " acceptance " would be against my religious and cultural tradition " -- well said, Rita -- this is precisely my objection to swallowing any old muck in the name of recovery -- XA is a totally quietist " religion " -- don't concern your sick little head with the world -- it's all inside you, an ideal code for any political order as no one is going to stand up against anything if they're sold on unconditional " acceptance " -- I agree there are clear limts to " acceptance " , and for me as a thinking Christian that limit is reached pretty quickly when you have to sit through some of the mindless BS about HPs and " any god will do " and God knows what that you get covered in the rewms. won't go on, but I'm with you all the way in my sick failure to " accept " lies, blackmail, injury, distorted stats, bullying, S-M psychos and any old filth dressed up as personal growth in XA yours . > >Reply-To: 12-step-freeegroups >To: 12-step-freeegroups >Subject: Re: Big time grouper urges forgiveness >Date: Wed, 16 Aug 2000 16:36:59 -0700 > > > >--- > > > > > > >Hello everyone, > > > >The following was posted by a Dr. Talmadge on addict-l who is a big >muckymuck in > >addiction > >treatment and an AA member. Does anyone have any comment they'd like me >to forward > >to him at addict-l? > > > >Ken > > >-------------------- > > Ken -- I wept when I read Talmadge's cruel post. The hospital >facility I and others in my agency were coerced to attend for 9 months was >also JCAHCO accredited. It meant nothing. The facility had a contract >with my agency guaranteeing them payment if they would agree to provide 9 >months of " treatment " to every employee sent there. And every employee who >had a single " positive " random test was sent there, regardless of whether >they even came close to meeting the criteria for alcohol/drug abuse or >dependence. The treatment was entirely 12-step based and was identical for >everyone, and any expression of personal opinion deviating from what was >presented, or questioning of anything the counselors said or did, resulted >in threats of being reported to the agency EAP as " non-compliant " , which of >course meant not being allowed back to work. Employees were encouraged to >lie, to betray their true selves, to constantly guess what the counselors >wanted to hear so they could mouth the words and get that precious > " compliance " report sent monthly to the agency EAP. Many employees were >forced to go on Welfare due to not being allowed to work, and most had had >acceptable to excellent job performance records. This program destroyed >marriages, families, and self-respect. I actually did write a letter of >protest to JCAHCO, but never got a response. > > I tried to take responsibility for my single misbehavior, but was told >repeatedly I WASN'T responsible, because a " disease " made me do it, and >that I should be " grateful " to the EAP for " helping " me. I am NOT >responsible for the sadism of my EAP or the treatment counselors, nor for >the fraud perpetrated at taxpayers' expense by this facility and its >contract with my agency. > > I do NOT forgive the EAP or the treatment facility. I do NOT >practice " acceptance " of unethical behavior perpetrated by authority >figures who abuse their power. Such " acceptance " would be against my >religious and cultural tradition. > >Rita > >p.s. Would Dr. Talmadge give the same " forgive, don't take action " advice >to rape victims? > > > > > > " M. Talmadge, M.D. " wrote: > > > >> > What advice would you have, Dr. Talmadge, for those who did suffer >from > >> treatment > >> > facilities that offered nothing but high-priced 12-step remedies and >who did > >> so in > >> > an extremely coercive environment? > >> > >> Ms. Kelsey, > >> > >> I have previously expressed my contempt for hospitals that blurred the >boundary > >> with 12-Step and appropriated these approaches for profit. As I said, >that is > >> about big business, not about AA. As a surveyor for the Joint >Commission on > >> Accreditation of Health Care Organizations, I have had occasion to >visit many > >> treatment programs across the country. I mention this not to boast, but >simply > >> to stress that my work has involved what we call quality assurance, >which > >> includes tremendous emphasis on patient rights and the protection of >patients > >> from harm. Any treatment program based on an extremely coercive >environment > >> would be seriously at risk for losing its accreditation (and its >ability to stay > >> in business). > >> > >> At the same time, it is my experience that unhappy people have a strong >tendency > >> to blame their circumstances, their families, and external forces for >what is > >> wrong. This is particularly true for addicts and alcoholics, by the >way. > >> > >> My advice is threefold. > >> > >> First, take responsibility for what has happened. That would include >the > >> selection of an inferior treatment facility. If you were coerced to go >there, > >> taking responsibility would mean being accountable for the behavior >that got you > >> sent there. No one likes to hear that, but the advice holds up over >time. I am > >> not blaming the person with the problem -- far from it. But I am saying >that the > >> person with the problem, however we choose to define it, must take > >> responsibility for creating the situation. We are not victims. > >> > >> Second, examine the payoff in staying angry about what happened instead >of > >> getting your life together in the present, going ahead, and learning >from your > >> experience. When people hang on to resentment and anger, there's almost >always a > >> big payoff for doing so. Among other things, when we do that we get to >be right, > >> and for many people being right is more important than being happy. If >you have > >> any doubt about this, read a dozen or so posts recently published on >this list. > >> > >> Third, and this is probably the most important, practice forgiveness. >People > >> have treated you (or someone) badly. Forgive them. The only reason to >carry on > >> and refuse to forgive is to perpetuate the suffering. This is a piece >of > >> personal advice, and it does not address whatever need you may feel to >crusade > >> or to protect and defend others. All of us crusaders must always look >carefully > >> at our motives. Sometimes the crusade is about getting even, not about >making > >> the world a better place. Revenge doesn't help anyone. Forgiveness and >taking > >> responsibility makes the world a better place. > >> > >> And remember, free advice is worth somewhat less than what you pay for >it! > >> > >> warm regards > >> > >> T. > >> > >> -- > >> M. Talmadge, M.D. > >> Associate Professor of Psychiatry > >> & Director, Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship Program > >> University of Texas Southwestern Medical School > >> Dallas, Texas > > > > >--== Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ ==-- >Before you buy. ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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