Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 The Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo affect at work in the program. You go to a meeting and twenty people tell you that you won’t need to drink today because, and only because you’ve been to an AA meeting. You look to the woman on your left, and she nods. You look to the man on your right, and he nods too. So you think to yourself, “Cool. I guess I don’t have to drink today.” This is without having worked a step, before getting a sponsor, before doing service or twelfth step work. In subsequent meetings the group tells you that doing all these things will bring you even further away from that next drink. The man and woman nod again. A placebo is something that is given to satisfy someone who believes it to be a treatment, or in this case, a solution to one’s drinking problem. AA has a fairly elaborate, time consuming, and lifelong set of instructions on how to stay sober that serve this purpose. Go to 90 meetings in 90 days, then 3-5 meetings a week. Work the 12 steps. Call your sponsor. Do service work. Read the book. Work with newcomers. And looming over it all is the belief that God will relieve you of the desire to drink - if you do these things. So one day at a time AA’s do what they believe will keep them sober and many do stay sober. (Is this not the idea behind “Fake it until you make it?”) I lived for years knowing this, having only a few problems with it because I believed everyone had their problems that needed to be faced, that this was mine, and AA was a small price to pay to avoid the alternative. I honestly believed for a time that the alternative to working the AA program was jails, institutions, and/or death; that if I stopped going to meetings, working the program, or had I not joined AA in the first place, serious consequences would have followed. Of course AA literature allows that alcoholics have been known to stay sober without AA, but I think the Big Book describes these cases as “comparatively rare.” Except for the fairly common stories of alcoholics who manage to “white knuckle” their way through life in their hellish existence without AA I’ve never seen a group show the slightest hope of this happening, so I think it’s safe to say that AA believes this in theory only. In practice Alcoholics Anonymous believes an individual is screwed unless they work the program, and even then the general opinion is that a lot of them will die drunk anyway. Look at the whole picture. A roomful of people tell you that they’re your best friend, only they can understand your problem, and that if you are indeed an alcoholic, your only hope is AA, and nobody gets to AA by mistake, right? They say you should take what you want and leave the rest but then they also say it’s suggested you work the program like it’s suggested you wear a parachute if you jump out of an airplane. This and more helps create the opposite of a placebo effect, namely the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous. The action of not doing what is suggested by AA causes a return to drinking. One day at a time, 3-5 times a week AA members hear over and over and over again how they will slip back into the old life if they don’t attend meetings or stop working the program. “Meeting makers make it,” and “If you don’t go to meetings, you aren’t here to see what happens to people who don’t go to meetings,” are only a few phrases that create this self-fulfilling prophecy. At the very least members hear that missing a few meetings causes an alcoholic to become testy and “squirrel cage,” because they’re not getting what they need to remain mentally balanced, their medicine as it were. This implies, of course, that further missed meetings will result in the ultimate mental imbalance for an AA – the next drink. Slogans such as “If you don’t work a fourth you’ll drink a fifth,” show further the mindset in AA that a member who fails to work the program by certain guidelines is destined to drink. What gives even more power to the nocebo effect in Alcoholics Anonymous is the awesome and unnecessary power members continue to give alcohol. A person who considers their life. One would think that the first goal of a person looking to attain abstinence would be to stop giving alcohol all that power. In AA the opposite happens. New members are offered a conception of alcohol as “cunning, baffling, and powerful…and patient.” It’s not that last drunk or all the other drinks that makes a person an alcoholic, according to many. To them, what makes a person an alcoholic is the fact that somewhere out there is that next drink with their name on it, over which they have no worldly power, and only through the Big Book, sponsorship, and the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous can a person stay sober. And even then it can be done only for today! What has happened is that in order to keep its members from the bottle, Alcoholic Anonymous has created for themselves a certain alcoholism-induced reality that lives not only in the meeting rooms, but has found its way into treatment centers, courtrooms, and most other places problem drinkers might find themselves or turn for help. You don’t even have to go to an AA meeting to be told that you can’t stay sober without AA. (Because if you could stay sober without AA you wouldn’t have to ask for help, right?) Even if they don’t like the program or attend AA meetings, people buy into its definition of their problem and it hurts them. AA’s Boogeyman worldview of alcoholism where that darn alcohol is gonna get you if you don’t work with a Higher Power and do what AA says doesn’t appeal to everyone. Unfortunately, many do keep the idea of the Boogeyman, and when they can’t or won’t join AA for any number of very good reasons or choose to leave the program behind them, the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous is one very large factor of those who become AA’s evidence of the need to attend meetings. As always, those who do fine without AA are not talked about. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 > > Nate, are you the author of this? Will you be posting it on your site, coz if not, I'd love to post it. It's a good piece! Apple > > > The Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous > > After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo affect at work in the program. You go to a meeting and twenty people tell you that you won't need to drink today because, and only because you've been to an AA meeting. You look to the woman on your left, and she nods. You look to the man on your right, and he nods too. So you think to yourself, " Cool. I guess I don't have to drink today. " This is without having worked a step, before getting a sponsor, before doing service or twelfth step work. In subsequent meetings the group tells you that doing all these things will bring you even further away from that next drink. The man and woman nod again. > > A placebo is something that is given to satisfy someone who believes it to be a treatment, or in this case, a solution to one's drinking problem. AA has a fairly elaborate, time consuming, and lifelong set of instructions on how to stay sober that serve this purpose. Go to 90 meetings in 90 days, then 3-5 meetings a week. Work the 12 steps. Call your sponsor. Do service work. Read the book. Work with newcomers. And looming over it all is the belief that God will relieve you of the desire to drink - if you do these things. So one day at a time AA's do what they believe will keep them sober and many do stay sober. (Is this not the idea behind " Fake it until you make it? " ) I lived for years knowing this, having only a few problems with it because I believed everyone had their problems that needed to be faced, that this was mine, and AA was a small price to pay to avoid the alternative. > > I honestly believed for a time that the alternative to working the AA program was jails, institutions, and/or death; that if I stopped going to meetings, working the program, or had I not joined AA in the first place, serious consequences would have followed. Of course AA literature allows that alcoholics have been known to stay sober without AA, but I think the Big Book describes these cases as " comparatively rare. " Except for the fairly common stories of alcoholics who manage to " white knuckle " their way through life in their hellish existence without AA I've never seen a group show the slightest hope of this happening, so I think it's safe to say that AA believes this in theory only. In practice Alcoholics Anonymous believes an individual is screwed unless they work the program, and even then the general opinion is that a lot of them will die drunk anyway. Look at the whole picture. A roomful of people tell you that they're your best friend, only they can understand your problem, and that if you are indeed an alcoholic, your only hope is AA, and nobody gets to AA by mistake, right? They say you should take what you want and leave the rest but then they also say it's suggested you work the program like it's suggested you wear a parachute if you jump out of an airplane. This and more helps create the opposite of a placebo effect, namely the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous. The action of not doing what is suggested by AA causes a return to drinking. > > One day at a time, 3-5 times a week AA members hear over and over and over again how they will slip back into the old life if they don't attend meetings or stop working the program. " Meeting makers make it, " and " If you don't go to meetings, you aren't here to see what happens to people who don't go to meetings, " are only a few phrases that create this self-fulfilling prophecy. At the very least members hear that missing a few meetings causes an alcoholic to become testy and " squirrel cage, " because they're not getting what they need to remain mentally balanced, their medicine as it were. This implies, of course, that further missed meetings will result in the ultimate mental imbalance for an AA - the next drink. Slogans such as " If you don't work a fourth you'll drink a fifth, " show further the mindset in AA that a member who fails to work the program by certain guidelines is destined to drink. > > What gives even more power to the nocebo effect in Alcoholics Anonymous is the awesome and unnecessary power members continue to give alcohol. A person who considers their life. One would think that the first goal of a person looking to attain abstinence would be to stop giving alcohol all that power. In AA the opposite happens. New members are offered a conception of alcohol as " cunning, baffling, and powerful.and patient. " It's not that last drunk or all the other drinks that makes a person an alcoholic, according to many. To them, what makes a person an alcoholic is the fact that somewhere out there is that next drink with their name on it, over which they have no worldly power, and only through the Big Book, sponsorship, and the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous can a person stay sober. And even then it can be done only for today! > > What has happened is that in order to keep its members from the bottle, Alcoholic Anonymous has created for themselves a certain alcoholism-induced reality that lives not only in the meeting rooms, but has found its way into treatment centers, courtrooms, and most other places problem drinkers might find themselves or turn for help. You don't even have to go to an AA meeting to be told that you can't stay sober without AA. (Because if you could stay sober without AA you wouldn't have to ask for help, right?) > > Even if they don't like the program or attend AA meetings, people buy into its definition of their problem and it hurts them. AA's Boogeyman worldview of alcoholism where that darn alcohol is gonna get you if you don't work with a Higher Power and do what AA says doesn't appeal to everyone. Unfortunately, many do keep the idea of the Boogeyman, and when they can't or won't join AA for any number of very good reasons or choose to leave the program behind them, the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous is one very large factor of those who become AA's evidence of the need to attend meetings. As always, those who do fine without AA are not talked about. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 nate, i agree. i thin you should post a copy of this in the 12-step free files. btw, what was url for your site? > > > > Nate, are you the author of this? Will you be posting it on your site, coz if not, I'd love to post it. > It's a good piece! > Apple > > > > > > The Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous > > > > After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo affect at work in the program. You go to a meeting and twenty people tell you that you won't need to drink today because, and only because you've been to an AA meeting. You look to the woman on your left, and she nods. You look to the man on your right, and he nods too. So you think to yourself, " Cool. I guess I don't have to drink today. " This is without having worked a step, before getting a sponsor, before doing service or twelfth step work. In subsequent meetings the group tells you that doing all these things will bring you even further away from that next drink. The man and woman nod again. > > > > A placebo is something that is given to satisfy someone who believes it to be a treatment, or in this case, a solution to one's drinking problem. AA has a fairly elaborate, time consuming, and lifelong set of instructions on how to stay sober that serve this purpose. Go to 90 meetings in 90 days, then 3-5 meetings a week. Work the 12 steps. Call your sponsor. Do service work. Read the book. Work with newcomers. And looming over it all is the belief that God will relieve you of the desire to drink - if you do these things. So one day at a time AA's do what they believe will keep them sober and many do stay sober. (Is this not the idea behind " Fake it until you make it? " ) I lived for years knowing this, having only a few problems with it because I believed everyone had their problems that needed to be faced, that this was mine, and AA was a small price to pay to avoid the alternative. > > > > I honestly believed for a time that the alternative to working the AA program was jails, institutions, and/or death; that if I stopped going to meetings, working the program, or had I not joined AA in the first place, serious consequences would have followed. Of course AA literature allows that alcoholics have been known to stay sober without AA, but I think the Big Book describes these cases as " comparatively rare. " Except for the fairly common stories of alcoholics who manage to " white knuckle " their way through life in their hellish existence without AA I've never seen a group show the slightest hope of this happening, so I think it's safe to say that AA believes this in theory only. In practice Alcoholics Anonymous believes an individual is screwed unless they work the program, and even then the general opinion is that a lot of them will die drunk anyway. Look at the whole picture. A roomful of people tell you that they're your best friend, only they can understand your problem, and that if you are indeed an alcoholic, your only hope is AA, and nobody gets to AA by mistake, right? They say you should take what you want and leave the rest but then they also say it's suggested you work the program like it's suggested you wear a parachute if you jump out of an airplane. This and more helps create the opposite of a placebo effect, namely the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous. The action of not doing what is suggested by AA causes a return to drinking. > > > > One day at a time, 3-5 times a week AA members hear over and over and over again how they will slip back into the old life if they don't attend meetings or stop working the program. " Meeting makers make it, " and " If you don't go to meetings, you aren't here to see what happens to people who don't go to meetings, " are only a few phrases that create this self-fulfilling prophecy. At the very least members hear that missing a few meetings causes an alcoholic to become testy and " squirrel cage, " because they're not getting what they need to remain mentally balanced, their medicine as it were. This implies, of course, that further missed meetings will result in the ultimate mental imbalance for an AA - the next drink. Slogans such as " If you don't work a fourth you'll drink a fifth, " show further the mindset in AA that a member who fails to work the program by certain guidelines is destined to drink. > > > > What gives even more power to the nocebo effect in Alcoholics Anonymous is the awesome and unnecessary power members continue to give alcohol. A person who considers their life. One would think that the first goal of a person looking to attain abstinence would be to stop giving alcohol all that power. In AA the opposite happens. New members are offered a conception of alcohol as " cunning, baffling, and powerful.and patient. " It's not that last drunk or all the other drinks that makes a person an alcoholic, according to many. To them, what makes a person an alcoholic is the fact that somewhere out there is that next drink with their name on it, over which they have no worldly power, and only through the Big Book, sponsorship, and the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous can a person stay sober. And even then it can be done only for today! > > > > What has happened is that in order to keep its members from the bottle, Alcoholic Anonymous has created for themselves a certain alcoholism-induced reality that lives not only in the meeting rooms, but has found its way into treatment centers, courtrooms, and most other places problem drinkers might find themselves or turn for help. You don't even have to go to an AA meeting to be told that you can't stay sober without AA. (Because if you could stay sober without AA you wouldn't have to ask for help, right?) > > > > Even if they don't like the program or attend AA meetings, people buy into its definition of their problem and it hurts them. AA's Boogeyman worldview of alcoholism where that darn alcohol is gonna get you if you don't work with a Higher Power and do what AA says doesn't appeal to everyone. Unfortunately, many do keep the idea of the Boogeyman, and when they can't or won't join AA for any number of very good reasons or choose to leave the program behind them, the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous is one very large factor of those who become AA's evidence of the need to attend meetings. As always, those who do fine without AA are not talked about. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 1, 2001 Report Share Posted January 1, 2001 > Nate, Nice write-up. Really hit home for me and my experience with AA. What you write is exactly my interpretation of AA during my membership. I believe thats how most AA's experience it although if you argue with an AA he/she will tell you thats not exactly how it is. Although we know otherwise. Pat > > > The Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous > > After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo affect at work in the program. You go to a meeting and twenty people tell you that you won't need to drink today because, and only because you've been to an AA meeting. You look to the woman on your left, and she nods. You look to the man on your right, and he nods too. So you think to yourself, " Cool. I guess I don't have to drink today. " This is without having worked a step, before getting a sponsor, before doing service or twelfth step work. In subsequent meetings the group tells you that doing all these things will bring you even further away from that next drink. The man and woman nod again. > > A placebo is something that is given to satisfy someone who believes it to be a treatment, or in this case, a solution to one's drinking problem. AA has a fairly elaborate, time consuming, and lifelong set of instructions on how to stay sober that serve this purpose. Go to 90 meetings in 90 days, then 3-5 meetings a week. Work the 12 steps. Call your sponsor. Do service work. Read the book. Work with newcomers. And looming over it all is the belief that God will relieve you of the desire to drink - if you do these things. So one day at a time AA's do what they believe will keep them sober and many do stay sober. (Is this not the idea behind " Fake it until you make it? " ) I lived for years knowing this, having only a few problems with it because I believed everyone had their problems that needed to be faced, that this was mine, and AA was a small price to pay to avoid the alternative. > > I honestly believed for a time that the alternative to working the AA program was jails, institutions, and/or death; that if I stopped going to meetings, working the program, or had I not joined AA in the first place, serious consequences would have followed. Of course AA literature allows that alcoholics have been known to stay sober without AA, but I think the Big Book describes these cases as " comparatively rare. " Except for the fairly common stories of alcoholics who manage to " white knuckle " their way through life in their hellish existence without AA I've never seen a group show the slightest hope of this happening, so I think it's safe to say that AA believes this in theory only. In practice Alcoholics Anonymous believes an individual is screwed unless they work the program, and even then the general opinion is that a lot of them will die drunk anyway. Look at the whole picture. A roomful of people tell you that they're your best friend, only they can understand your problem, and that if you are indeed an alcoholic, your only hope is AA, and nobody gets to AA by mistake, right? They say you should take what you want and leave the rest but then they also say it's suggested you work the program like it's suggested you wear a parachute if you jump out of an airplane. This and more helps create the opposite of a placebo effect, namely the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous. The action of not doing what is suggested by AA causes a return to drinking. > > One day at a time, 3-5 times a week AA members hear over and over and over again how they will slip back into the old life if they don't attend meetings or stop working the program. " Meeting makers make it, " and " If you don't go to meetings, you aren't here to see what happens to people who don't go to meetings, " are only a few phrases that create this self-fulfilling prophecy. At the very least members hear that missing a few meetings causes an alcoholic to become testy and " squirrel cage, " because they're not getting what they need to remain mentally balanced, their medicine as it were. This implies, of course, that further missed meetings will result in the ultimate mental imbalance for an AA - the next drink. Slogans such as " If you don't work a fourth you'll drink a fifth, " show further the mindset in AA that a member who fails to work the program by certain guidelines is destined to drink. > > What gives even more power to the nocebo effect in Alcoholics Anonymous is the awesome and unnecessary power members continue to give alcohol. A person who considers their life. One would think that the first goal of a person looking to attain abstinence would be to stop giving alcohol all that power. In AA the opposite happens. New members are offered a conception of alcohol as " cunning, baffling, and powerful.and patient. " It's not that last drunk or all the other drinks that makes a person an alcoholic, according to many. To them, what makes a person an alcoholic is the fact that somewhere out there is that next drink with their name on it, over which they have no worldly power, and only through the Big Book, sponsorship, and the fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous can a person stay sober. And even then it can be done only for today! > > What has happened is that in order to keep its members from the bottle, Alcoholic Anonymous has created for themselves a certain alcoholism-induced reality that lives not only in the meeting rooms, but has found its way into treatment centers, courtrooms, and most other places problem drinkers might find themselves or turn for help. You don't even have to go to an AA meeting to be told that you can't stay sober without AA. (Because if you could stay sober without AA you wouldn't have to ask for help, right?) > > Even if they don't like the program or attend AA meetings, people buy into its definition of their problem and it hurts them. AA's Boogeyman worldview of alcoholism where that darn alcohol is gonna get you if you don't work with a Higher Power and do what AA says doesn't appeal to everyone. Unfortunately, many do keep the idea of the Boogeyman, and when they can't or won't join AA for any number of very good reasons or choose to leave the program behind them, the Nocebo Effect of Alcoholics Anonymous is one very large factor of those who become AA's evidence of the need to attend meetings. As always, those who do fine without AA are not talked about. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2001 Report Share Posted January 2, 2001 > > Nate, are you the author of this? It's been my weekend project. I'd actually never heard of the term Nocebo until a week ago. I learned online that it's a pretty new word - it's not in my 4-inch thick 1998 dictionary. I came across it in a book I'm reading in a section talking about the study of voodoo. It seems that voodoo hexes can kill people but the person has to believe it will kill them, must have seen hexes kill other people, and the world the hexee lives in must believe that a voodoo hex can kill a person. Will you be posting it on your site, coz if not, I'd love to post it. I'm putting it the updated version of www.sobrietyfrontiers.com but I'd be honored if you posted it on www.aadeprogramming.com. I found one sentence that was messed up during a cut/paste maneuver that I've since fixed. I'll send you the final version if you like. Nate > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2001 Report Share Posted January 2, 2001 Nate s wrote: >After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo >affect at work in the program. [snipped for brevity] Hello, I'm a former AA member who just joined the " 12-step-free " list. I resumed drinking about three years ago after nearly six continuous years of sobriety and constant attendance at AA meetings (and that doesn't include the hundreds, if not thousands of hours spent going to AA meetings *before* I finally quit) not to mention the many meetings I've been attending off and on over the past three years or so trying to recapture my long-lost sobriety. Just wanted to thank you for the VERY enlightening comments I've been reading on this list. I also found the " AA deprogramming " et. al. websites extremely enlightening as well. I do want to stop drinking permanently (coincidentally, my last drunk was nine days ago on Christmas Eve day ), but I do NOT want to return to AA. Don't get me wrong, it's not that I " hate " or " despise " AA, but I simply don't want to go back to AA for precisely the same reasons many of you don't. In fact, that's how I discovered this list just last night. I was sitting here, thinking that if I want to stay sober, then I better by gawd get to an AA meeting, start all over again, exhibit the appropriate display of " humility " and " honesty " by picking up yet another " surrender " chip, dutifully and humbly nod up and down as they tell me to " keep comin' back...don't drink, don't think and go to meetings...fake it'till ya' make it...it gets better...a day a time...yada yada yada. " I so dreaded the idea that I thought " there has got to be a better way " and searched the net looking for something else. And that's how I found this very enlightening list. I must admit, however, that given my recent track record, deep down I'm skeptical about my odds of staying sober without AA (probably due to years of AA brainwashing?) but I seriously do wish to quit drinking permanently and be happy. Thanks, Mike Marron Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2001 Report Share Posted January 2, 2001 check out the links to alternative programs in this groups links page. SMART, RR and MM. i think MM is only one which deals with moderation , maybe smart does as well, but i think it mainly absitence oriented. > > >After a short time in AA I began to see an obvious placebo > >affect at work in the program. > > [snipped for brevity] > > Hello, I'm a former AA member who just joined the " 12-step-free " > list. I resumed drinking about three years ago after nearly > six continuous years of sobriety and constant attendance at > AA meetings (and that doesn't include the hundreds, if not > thousands of hours spent going to AA meetings *before* I > finally quit) not to mention the many meetings I've been > attending off and on over the past three years or so trying > to recapture my long-lost sobriety. > > Just wanted to thank you for the VERY enlightening comments > I've been reading on this list. I also found the " AA deprogramming " > et. al. websites extremely enlightening as well. I do want to > stop drinking permanently (coincidentally, my last drunk was > nine days ago on Christmas Eve day ), but I do NOT want to return > to AA. > > Don't get me wrong, it's not that I " hate " or " despise " AA, > but I simply don't want to go back to AA for precisely the same > reasons many of you don't. > > In fact, that's how I discovered this list just last night. I > was sitting here, thinking that if I want to stay sober, then > I better by gawd get to an AA meeting, start all over again, > exhibit the appropriate display of " humility " and " honesty " by > picking up yet another " surrender " chip, dutifully and humbly > nod up and down as they tell me to " keep comin' back...don't > drink, don't think and go to meetings...fake it'till ya' make > it...it gets better...a day a time...yada yada yada. " I so > dreaded the idea that I thought " there has got to be a better > way " and searched the net looking for something else. And > that's how I found this very enlightening list. > > I must admit, however, that given my recent track record, deep > down I'm skeptical about my odds of staying sober without AA > (probably due to years of AA brainwashing?) but I seriously do > wish to quit drinking permanently and be happy. > > Thanks, > Mike Marron Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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