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Book Review: Alive! By Eileen P.
DeClemente
This is a powerful book, and also a very sad one. I run a
Computer Lab, we offer free classes, and we offer free internet
access. It is based in a large homeless shelter, probably the
largest shelter in North America, we offer beds to over 1,100
people every night. Who are these people? Well some recent
surveys show that approximately 1/3 are addicts, booze, drugs,
or gambling. Another 1/3 suffer from some kind of mental health
issue, and the vast majority of all of the people involved have
some kind of anti social tendencies.
I was intrigued by Eileen DeClemente's book, it hit close to
home. Yesterday, I had a client go into seizure in the lab,
while it is not an everyday occurrence, it is not something
that is rare. The first time I witnessed a seizure I was
horrified. The brain short circuits, the victim literally
freezes, crashes to the floor, and often twitches and
convulses. It is not a pretty sight.
In Alive! A Courageous Story Of Addiction, True Love, and
Forgiveness Eileen DeClemente tells her life story of addiction
and recovery. It is not a pretty story. Eileen started with
booze at the tender age of 11, as an adult she added
prescription drugs, and street drugs. At one point her daily
intake was in the region of 90 pills, a bottle vodka, and a
couple of cases of beer.
The problem is, the more you do, the harder it is to get the
high, and Eileen was the expert. The highs became less and
less, in fact the highs went away, she needed to "use" just to
maintain.
Eventually Eileen, as every addict does, crashed hard. One last
seizure, one last abuse of her position as mother and wife, and
one last realization that she had taken the wrong path.
Recovery is not easy, physical dependency creates physical and
mental problems. We glibly refer to 'withdrawal symptoms,' they
are not just symptoms, they are facts, they are a bone crushing
reality.
It is estimated that 30% of people living in the US either are
addicts, or know an addict. Alive! should be on every high
schools reading curriculum, it reveals the story from the
inside out.
Eileen was one of the lucky ones, at age 34 she woke up, but
years of addiction have taken their toll. She is now 55 and
diagnosed with Alzheimer's, and she freely admits that it is
likely a result of her addictions.
This book is written from the heart, and includes letters from
Eileen's two daughters and her pharmacist as well as facts
about addiction and recovery ? for addicts and their families.
Topics include: growing up in a dysfunctional home; coping
mechanisms; making better choices; relationships, friendship,
significant others and family dynamics; parenting, healing,
forgiving and loving unconditionally; seeking help and not
being afraid.
This is a book that I plan on recommending to my co-workers,
and a book that I recommend everyone should read. You can get
your own copy from Amazon, and you can also get more
information from Eileen's web site.
by Simon Barrett - 12th July 2008
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Simon Barrett is an adult educator in Calgary, Alberta. With
the 11 months a year of winter, he reads a lot of books! He is
also a contributing editor for http://www.bloggernews.net and maintains
a personal blog at http://zzsimonb.blogspot.com.
Review Source:
http://www.creativewriter.me.uk
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