Archive for the ‘Dr. Drew’ Category

The Dr. Drew Response

November 14, 2009

Lately, I’ve been reading Dr. Drew’s latest book, “The Mirror Effect.”   It addresses celebrity narcissism and the extreme behavior that goes along with it. Dr. Drew does a great job at highlighting what has become typical tabloid material – multiple stints in rehab, sex tapes, drug use, eating disorders, etc. – and explaining the self-destructive pathology behind it.

Dr. Drew references troubling celebrity behavior over and over throughout the book. As I read, I found that most responses to this self-destructiveness fit in one of three categories (depending on one’s own background):

3 responses to troubling celebrity behavior:

  1. Dr. Drew (empathetic / sympathetic)
  2. “Regular” society (intrigued)
  3. Relaters (Individuals with their own psychopathology)


The Dr. Drew Response

“As a group, however, [celebrities] often behaved in ways that unnerved and puzzled me.”

“…their behavior makes my heart ache for them.”

I’m coining this the Dr. Drew Response since I can’t think of any other word to better describes the reaction. His heart aches! He sees someone being self-destructive and he cares and feels their pain. It’s sympathy + knowledge + understanding + insight.


“Regular” society

“…this kind of behavior is portrayed as tragically glamorous, dramatically alluring, and, most alarmingly, normal and expected.”

A lot of people are interested in the self-destructive behavior of celebrities. It is a little bit of an obsession: Is Nicole Richie losing weight? Is Lindsay using? Is Amy Winehouse still alive? People want to know. The troubling behavior is intriguing and the press does a great job at, in essence, kicking celebrities when they’re down.


Relaters

“Witnessing such behavior also tends to provoke our own narcissistic impulses, causing us to feel envy, and tempting us to act like the celebrities we admire.”

“But for anyone who has experienced childhood trauma – the fundamental source of pathological narcissism – surrendering to such impulses can lead even mildly narcissistic people to spiral out of control with devastating results.”

Individuals with their own psychopathology or traumatic histories can be tempted (or even feel envious) by the self-destructive behavior of celebrities. There’s something triggering about it that makes these people want to engage in the same self-destructive behavior.

So there we go: In this world we have Dr. Drews, Regulars, and Relaters. I think that your response can change depending on the situation, and that it applies to anyone struggling – not just celebrities.

For example, I think about this girl who went to my college and was very obviously struggling with an eating disorder. “Regular” people would gossip about how sick she was. You’d hear the “I see her at the gym every single morning” and “I heard she eats a plate of broccoli for dinner” comments. Yes, it’s wrong and mean, but unfortunately that’s reality (at least on college campuses). Now, I was a Relater (struggling with an ED myself), so this girl kind of triggered me. I didn’t want to be that sick, but seeing her around campus would almost encourage my eating disorder; tempt me to cut corners, lose just 5 lb., eat a plate of broccoli for dinner, etc. That drove me CRAZY. I didn’t want to be a Relater – I wanted to be a Dr. Drew. I wanted to just empathize with her, wish she would get help, recognize how miserable she probably felt, and know how tough things were for her right now.

This is still a goal of mine: That Dr. Drew Response.

A Treatment Refresher

October 8, 2009

While I do have several new posts on the way, I want to highlight a couple of older Grey Thinking posts (some are several years old!  I bet you were not reading GT two years ago) that talk specifically about treatment, your attitude toward treatment, recovery expectations, etc.  While there are a couple of people that I have in mind when it comes to the subject of these posts, I think that everyone can use the refresher.

You as your own case manager
Originally Posted: 01/01/2009

I wish that all these guys were going to stay clean, I really do. I’ve just seen it so many times that I can tell when someone’s really willing to do whatever it takes and when someone’s willing to do what they think it should take. And it’s just not going to work like that, unfortunately.

–Shelly, Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew 2

Wanting to want to recover
Originally Posted: 06/12/2008

Motivation to change implies an intention–weak or strong–to change one’s behavior. However, AN patients may at the same time both wish to recover and be highly resistant to change their behavior. Therefore, we suggest that assessment of motivation in these patients should include not only their motivation to change, but also their different wishes to recover which do not necessarily imply a behavioral intention.

Dr. Drew should treat eating disorders
Originally Posted: 07/01/2008

There are a lot of components of addiction treatment that I believe in and think are important, and should be applied to eating disorders:

  1. Recovery is a lifelong, daily process
  2. Denial, and not necessarily that you have a problem, but that you need help
  3. The importance of personal accountability
  4. There’s no magic cure
  5. The disorder should be taken as seriously as any potential fatal disease

Do not pass Go, Do not collect $200
Originally Posted: 12/09/2008

“I don’t want to play the rehab game anymore”
– Jeff Conaway, Celebrity Rehab 2
I think that recovery can feel like a game at first because it is so different from the rest of your life. It’s nice to have others care about your wellbeing and there’s something about treatment that gives you permission to take care of yourself. Plus, there is so much positive reinforcement (gold star for following your meal plan over the weekend!). All of this doesn’t sound so bad… and I do believe you can make progress — even with this mindset.
When does the game end? Personally, I think this is when the disorder starts to feel threatened. There is something scary about recovering, and suddenly it doesn’t sound like a great idea anymore.

“I don’t want to play the rehab game anymore”

– Jeff Conaway, Celebrity Rehab 2
I think that recovery can feel like a game at first because it is so different from the rest of your life. It’s nice to have others care about your wellbeing and there’s something about treatment that gives you permission to take care of yourself. Plus, there is so much positive reinforcement (gold star for following your meal plan over the weekend!). All of this doesn’t sound so bad… and I do believe you can make progress — even with this mindset.
When does the game end? Personally, I think this is when the disorder starts to feel threatened. There is something scary about recovering, and suddenly it doesn’t sound like a great idea anymore.

It’s not about what you are doing

July 11, 2009

Since I have a serious Dr. Drew Pinsky addiction (irony intended), I was really sad when his podcast was cancelled.  Thankfully, Celebrity Rehab 2 and Sober House came out shortly after the podcast ended, so I was able to watch those repeatedly for awhile. When VH1 stopped running CR2, I read his books.  Now, having exhausted all of those Dr. Drew resources, I am listening to Loveline.  This kills me a little bit, for several reasons:

  1. It’s called Loveline
  2. Half of it is sex talk
  3. I have to pay $5 a month for it!

Still… It’s Dr. Drew, so I have to do it.  There are calls about addictions and psychological issues, and listening to his responses to those questions is worth my $5.

Dr. Drew had a particularly great quote today:

“It’s not what you’re doing, it’s what you’re missing – and you deserve better.”

The quote was not in relation to alcoholism or eating disorders, but it really hit home with me.  Yes, you need to get better because it’s important to take care of yourself, people care about you, you should care about you, you want to be healthy, it’s pathological, etc.  But also, when you are wrapped up in the ED you are missing life.  Maybe that’s semi-intentional; maybe you’re avoiding life.  You might think you’re just coping with life in an unhealthy manner, but you really are missing it.

You’re missing:

  1. Close relationships with friends
  2. Many normal social situations (getting pizza, going out for lunch, meeting for a drink, getting ice cream for no reason)
  3. Good experiences (as well as bad experiences) that shape you as a person

I can think of a lot of things that I “missed”

  1. Close relationships with HS friends
  2. Trying anything new (for most of my life)
  3. Getting ice cream with friends
  4. A lot of summer cookouts
  5. Trips I wouldn’t go on because there would be too much food or b/c I was depressed & wanted to stay home
    (okay, this is a depressing list so I’m going to stop here)

I think that eating disorders are as much about avoiding life as they are hurting yourself.  First there is all the time that you spend wrapped up in the disorder.  You’re isolating, avoiding events with food, and spending 90% of your day thinking about food and weight.  You have no idea what is going on around you.  And then there’s treatment, which takes up even MORE time… because along with the continuing disordered behavior (it’s not going to go away overnight), you now also have a dietitian, a therapist, a doctor, a psychiatrist (and this is assuming that you don’t really put your life on pause to go to a residential or partial hospitalization program).  You are spending your free time in treatment.  And I don’t know about you, but when I’m working on tough stuff in therapy, I have a harder time dealing with the rest of life.  When I’m upset about whatever my therapist said two hours ago, the last thing I want to deal with is a presentation that’s due tomorrow.  So yes, even in recovery, you are avoiding / escaping / missing (whatever you want to call it) your life.

It’s kind of ironic when you think about it.  You spend so much time in therapy trying to change behaviors, discussing why you are coping with life via your ED, identifying unhealthy aspects of your career and relationships, etc.  However… how much time do you spend talking about what you’re missing?

And for awhile, this is the point.  Maybe something in your life is not okay.  Maybe there is too much on your plate, maybe you are in a bad relationship, maybe you do need to change your job, maybe you are killing yourself trying to please everyone else in your life–whatever.  One of the best things about residential (I think) is that you don’t have to deal with the real world while you’re in treatment.  I can just focus on myself and what I need to be doing without the constant stress and anxiety of bills, relationships, responsibilities, work, money, and the list goes on.

However, I am not new to treatment, and neither are several of my friends.  And while I do worry about their health and their symptoms, what really makes me sad is what the ED takes away from them.  For one friend, it takes away time and energy that she would rather be spending with her children.  For another, it limits her career because work has to be planned around the ED and ED treatment.  Another friend has to put relationships, summer plans, and a lot of the life that she has created in the past year on the side right now to get more intense help.

All of these friends are making the right choices to work on the eating disorder and to get the help that they need!  Absolutely.  Friend #1 can’t take care of her family if she isn’t taking care of herself, Friend #2 won’t be able to put the energy and concentration into the job that career that she really wants until she is healthier, and Friend #3 won’t be able to maintain that life if she doesn’t do intensive treatment.  My point is, though, that what saddens me the most about these friends is not their concerning ED symptoms, but all the things that they are missing out on in their lives.  They’re such wonderful people and are meant to do so much more in the world than they can with this eating disorder.  They deserve so much more out of life than this eating disorder, and that’s why I hope they can get better.

It's not about what you are doing

July 11, 2009

Since I have a serious Dr. Drew Pinsky addiction (irony intended), I was really sad when his podcast was cancelled.  Thankfully, Celebrity Rehab 2 and Sober House came out shortly after the podcast ended, so I was able to watch those repeatedly for awhile. When VH1 stopped running CR2, I read his books.  Now, having exhausted all of those Dr. Drew resources, I am listening to Loveline.  This kills me a little bit, for several reasons:

  1. It’s called Loveline
  2. Half of it is sex talk
  3. I have to pay $5 a month for it!

Still… It’s Dr. Drew, so I have to do it.  There are calls about addictions and psychological issues, and listening to his responses to those questions is worth my $5.

Dr. Drew had a particularly great quote today:

“It’s not what you’re doing, it’s what you’re missing – and you deserve better.”

The quote was not in relation to alcoholism or eating disorders, but it really hit home with me.  Yes, you need to get better because it’s important to take care of yourself, people care about you, you should care about you, you want to be healthy, it’s pathological, etc.  But also, when you are wrapped up in the ED you are missing life.  Maybe that’s semi-intentional; maybe you’re avoiding life.  You might think you’re just coping with life in an unhealthy manner, but you really are missing it.

You’re missing:

  1. Close relationships with friends
  2. Many normal social situations (getting pizza, going out for lunch, meeting for a drink, getting ice cream for no reason)
  3. Good experiences (as well as bad experiences) that shape you as a person

I can think of a lot of things that I “missed”

  1. Close relationships with HS friends
  2. Trying anything new (for most of my life)
  3. Getting ice cream with friends
  4. A lot of summer cookouts
  5. Trips I wouldn’t go on because there would be too much food or b/c I was depressed & wanted to stay home
    (okay, this is a depressing list so I’m going to stop here)

I think that eating disorders are as much about avoiding life as they are hurting yourself.  First there is all the time that you spend wrapped up in the disorder.  You’re isolating, avoiding events with food, and spending 90% of your day thinking about food and weight.  You have no idea what is going on around you.  And then there’s treatment, which takes up even MORE time… because along with the continuing disordered behavior (it’s not going to go away overnight), you now also have a dietitian, a therapist, a doctor, a psychiatrist (and this is assuming that you don’t really put your life on pause to go to a residential or partial hospitalization program).  You are spending your free time in treatment.  And I don’t know about you, but when I’m working on tough stuff in therapy, I have a harder time dealing with the rest of life.  When I’m upset about whatever my therapist said two hours ago, the last thing I want to deal with is a presentation that’s due tomorrow.  So yes, even in recovery, you are avoiding / escaping / missing (whatever you want to call it) your life.

It’s kind of ironic when you think about it.  You spend so much time in therapy trying to change behaviors, discussing why you are coping with life via your ED, identifying unhealthy aspects of your career and relationships, etc.  However… how much time do you spend talking about what you’re missing?

And for awhile, this is the point.  Maybe something in your life is not okay.  Maybe there is too much on your plate, maybe you are in a bad relationship, maybe you do need to change your job, maybe you are killing yourself trying to please everyone else in your life–whatever.  One of the best things about residential (I think) is that you don’t have to deal with the real world while you’re in treatment.  I can just focus on myself and what I need to be doing without the constant stress and anxiety of bills, relationships, responsibilities, work, money, and the list goes on.

However, I am not new to treatment, and neither are several of my friends.  And while I do worry about their health and their symptoms, what really makes me sad is what the ED takes away from them.  For one friend, it takes away time and energy that she would rather be spending with her children.  For another, it limits her career because work has to be planned around the ED and ED treatment.  Another friend has to put relationships, summer plans, and a lot of the life that she has created in the past year on the side right now to get more intense help.

All of these friends are making the right choices to work on the eating disorder and to get the help that they need!  Absolutely.  Friend #1 can’t take care of her family if she isn’t taking care of herself, Friend #2 won’t be able to put the energy and concentration into the job that career that she really wants until she is healthier, and Friend #3 won’t be able to maintain that life if she doesn’t do intensive treatment.  My point is, though, that what saddens me the most about these friends is not their concerning ED symptoms, but all the things that they are missing out on in their lives.  They’re such wonderful people and are meant to do so much more in the world than they can with this eating disorder.  They deserve so much more out of life than this eating disorder, and that’s why I hope they can get better.

In tune with each other

April 10, 2009

I’ve been reading Dr. Drew’s book, “Cracked: Life on the Edge in a Rehab Clinic.” There are a million things that I could talk about concerning this book, so don’t be surprised if it’s referenced several times in future posts. Tonight, the following quote really caught my attention:

“Most believe [addicts] connect around a common experience of pain and powerlessness without the fear of exploitation. Their pain is so raw and tender that getting them to start the process requires them to be convinced that their pain will be understood. They’re all people with extreme trust issues, and the only people they’ve ever trusted are other addicts. They understand each other. (Interestingly, doctors have discovered that survivors of torture have similar reactions to treatment. They don’t open up unless they’re around others who’ve been through similar horrors, as though the pain of being misunderstood would be too great of a risk.)”

If you’ve ever been in ED treatment (or addiction / trauma treatment, I assume), you know that there’s something very different about the relationships that you form with other ED patients. You know all about their relationship issues and what they are / aren’t eating — but don’t know their last name. They might be thirty years older (or younger) than yourself or living a totally different lifestyle. Maybe they are completely opposite of the type of people that you usually hang out with, and if you met them in any other context you probably wouldn’t hit if off. But… despite all these differences, just their having an eating disorder makes it easier to talk with them than non-ED friends that you’ve had for years.

I have good friends, but the closest friends that I have are all people that I met in treatment. I just can’t open-up to other people in the same way that I can with them. Some of it is their ability to understand me — that definitely is a large part. My non-ED friends cannot relate to my frustration over food rituals. But I think it’s more than just their ability to empathize. Because they have an eating disorder (and were in treatment), it means they are the kind of person who you CAN talk to about this stuff. They have issues, too. I don’t know how some of my “regular” friends will respond to the stuff that I tell them… however, I do know that these ED friends are not going to invalidate my struggles. They aren’t going to think that I am ridiculous, and I don’t have to feel so ashamed. Dr. Drew explains it so well — “the pain of being misunderstood would be too great a risk.”