We never think about dependency or mental health issues and their destructive nature without holding in mind the essential creativeness of recovery and wellbeing.
Recovery reunites the person with their authentic self, allowing them to freely experience themselves as they really are. Recovery is also something to be enjoyed rather than endured.
As a container, the Clinic is an important contributor to the therapeutic experience, and we therefore give a great deal of thought to the healthy operation of the Clinic as a whole.
The particular therapies we have at our disposal have been selected for good reason for the genuine contribution we know that they can make to recovery.
Your principal therapist will be your guide and support throughout your stay, drawing on the rest of the team as necessary to ensure you receive the most appropriate help. During these sessions you will identify where other available therapies may be of help to your recovery.
Relationships are important. They can enrich our lives, give meaning to our existence, and bring us both joy and pain. Sometimes they go wrong, and we may not understand why.
When we embark on recovery, we have the opportunity to reflect on our relationships in a different way. This is where therapeutic relationships can be most useful.
What is a therapeutic relationship?
It is a relationship with a specific focus on helping you to understand yourself, to recognize what you need to change, and provide you with the opportunity to put those changes into practice.
Usually, it will be with a therapist or other healthcare professional.
In a therapeutic relationship, you can rely on the other person to be focused on your needs. You will not have to worry about them. Their priority will be to help you have a different experience of relationships where you can be authentic. It may be that you need help to understand what that means.
What does this mean in practice?
It certainly doesn’t mean that they will simply agree with everything you say or avoid commenting on your attitudes and behaviors that may be self-defeating or self-destructive. However, they will address these issues with compassion, sensitivity, and empathy.
Because the relationship is with a professional who is bound by a strict ethical code of conduct, you can safely place your trust in them. They will have the necessary support to ensure that they can provide you with what is needed.
Although this is a very different kind of relationship, what you learn about yourself will have the potential to be carried into your relationships outside of the therapeutic setting in your everyday life.
For the therapeutic relationship to be effective, you will need to be willing to participate and take responsibility for your thoughts and behaviors.
If you can do this, there is much to be gained.
Reformulation is a process facilitated by the therapist working with you that will help you to understand how the thoughts and behaviours developed in the past as a coping mechanism may now be unhelpful and self-defeating in the present.
We may have come to see things in a fixed way from only one perspective. Reformulation offers another way of looking at these aspects of life that not only helps makes sense of things, but opens the possibility of positive change.
Sometimes words just don’t do it for us. Or we can’t find the right words. It may be that we don’t know what it is that we want to say or how to say it. We may not even know what it is we are feeling so we can’t express it. This is often where we end up in our addiction and this is when Art Therapy can help.
Creating a piece of art, whether it’s a drawing, painting or sculpting can enable us to discover something of ourselves which may otherwise stay out of our awareness. It can help us to access feelings, thoughts and insights that need to be integrated into our understanding of who we are. It can help us to fully join up parts of ourselves internally.
The Clinic Les Alpes Art Therapy studio provides an environment where the kind of creative thinking that enhances our recovery can be stimulated and facilitated by our highly qualified Art Psychotherapists.
Creativity is an important part of recovery. You could say that recovery is itself a creative process, taking us from the rigid and circular patterns of addiction into the potential of the unknown.
As with the creation of a piece of art or music, we may draw on our past experience to create a framework, but ultimately we are making something new that has not existed before.
Recovery is about change, and it requires that we do things differently.
Think about what is involved in creating a piece of artwork or creative writing. The blank page or canvas can invoke feelings of anxiety or fear about not knowing exactly what the process will involve and how things will turn out.
This is an intrinsic part of creativity, and tolerating these feelings is the price we must pay in order to access the benefits.
We will need to move away from the familiar, letting go of our preconceptions and embracing our fears and anxieties. For us to be successful in making something new, we will need courage, imagination, and commitment.
Where do we start?
In treatment, we can engage in creative activities such as art therapy and creative writing. These enable us to access thoughts and feelings which otherwise may remain out of our awareness.
The creative process can be a liberating experience of exploration and discovery, and being able to reflect on what we have created allows us to gain new insight and understanding.
The process of creative thinking can be incorporated into our recovery, our relationships, and our wider approach to life. It can help us to solve problems, seize new opportunities, and become who we want to be.
Being able to use our imagination and vision in this way can take us closer to achieving our aims and feeling good about who we are.
If we are willing to take the risks inherent in being creative, we will open ourselves to a world of hope and opportunity.
Group therapy offers participants the opportunity to better understand themselves through their relationships with others. It allows us to compare our own view of ourselves with how others see and experience us. The difference between these perceptions provides the potential for learning and for change. We can discover our “blind spots” that keep us trapped in our familiar self-defeating and self-destructive behaviours. We can also reconnect with the parts of ourselves which addiction has subjugated: creativity, intimacy and the ability to love and be loved. Participation in group therapy has many positive effects for recovery and will be encouraged.
Anyone considering group therapy will want to know what it has to offer and how it can enhance recovery. However, it is not unusual to feel anxious about engaging with a group. Trepidation, or even fear, can be viewed as the “normal” response to participating in an activity with the potential for us to feel exposed within a group of strangers. It may be tempting to dismiss the group as merely a talking shop for other people’s distress, and while it may be reasonable to be skeptical, it is worth thinking about what group therapy has to offer the recovering person.
Addiction
Addiction has a powerfully destructive effect on relationships, changing the way we understand ourselves, the way we relate to others, and ultimately, our capacity to experience intimacy. As addiction becomes our most important relationship, our ability to engage with others in an authentic and spontaneous way is curtailed and replaced by an insular and isolated view of our place in the world. We can end up playing out relationships in our head, imagining what others might be thinking and responding to them on that basis. This can leave others feeling confused, rejected, and hurt. Ultimately they may become disinterested or rejecting, leaving us feeling isolated and rejected.
Why are relationships important?
We all have a relationship with ourselves, an inner dialogue between different parts or aspects of our self. These can be soothing, encouraging, reassuring, and loving but can also be negative, critical, shaming, and rejecting.
These internal conversations are shaped by our early experience of relationships. We receive messages from others about who we are and who we should be. The distance between these views can be the source of self-doubt and emotional pain. Feeling that we are somehow not what we should be can become the base from which we relate to others. It can be difficult to maintain healthy relationships from this position.
As addiction is established and our relationships become more dysfunctional, we are more likely to want to hide our perceived inadequacies from others.
We arrive at a place where it may feel too risky to reveal our authentic self, and we may attempt to construct a false self, one that we think is more acceptable or attractive to others. Over time we may become adept and successful at projecting this false self. However, the more successful we are and the more convincing it is to others, the more we are trapped into maintaining the façade, feeling anxious about being exposed as inadequate, weak, or unlovable.
Why are relationships in recovery important?
Addiction corrupts the relationship we have with ourselves, replacing self-honesty with self-delusion. It is not to be trusted, for it will always serve its own purpose rather than what is best for us. Its message is extremely seductive and powerful, promising a way of avoiding all that we find difficult or painful in relationships. Like our most trusted and reliable confidante, we come to rely on its direction and guidance.
But addiction is self-serving and does not have our best interests at heart. What we need are relationships with others who understand how addiction works and with whom we can be authentic.
How it works
Thankfully, it’s quite simple. All that is needed is a willingness to attend and participate in the group sessions. If we can be open and honest with our fellow group members and be respectful of their feedback, all well and good.
However, if we are not comfortable with this, we are likely to fall back on our familiar ways of behaving which keep us stuck. This is not a problem because group therapy can help us understand the relationship problems we experience in the “outside world” which have the potential to be recreated within the group.
These are often defensive in nature, intended to keep us safe from what we fear. These defenses may have at some time served the purpose of keeping us safe. However, over time they may have lost their effectiveness or relevance and become redundant. In group therapy, they can be recognized as self-defeating and self-destructive ways of relating that are no longer effective or necessary. Letting go of a defensive behavior that doesn’t work is the precursor to being able to have intimate relationships.
“But how can others possibly understand the complexity of my life and all of my relationships?”
There are two answers to this question.
One is that regardless of our differences, there are common aspects of being human that we all share. We have all experienced emotional pain, have dreams and aspirations, and want to love and be loved (even if we find that difficult to acknowledge).
The other is that as addicts, we are subject to the self-delusion that addiction brings and in recovery, we need to trust others who understand the problem.
Group therapy offers a dynamic opportunity to identify and change the way we are in relationships. We can find a way to be authentic, without the need for a false self, able to remove the obstacles keeping us from achieving our goal of a satisfying and sustainable recovery.
The transformational power of group therapy lies in the experience. It may be tempting to view the group as separate from “real life,” not relevant to what we face in the outside world. The reality is that it is likely to be the most “real” experience of relating to others that we have had in a long time, if ever.
What we are able to learn in group therapy is available for us to use in recovery, in all our relationships beyond the group.
Although not officially a therapy, Clinic Les Alpes is situated in an area of outstanding beauty with pure alpine air and there will be available to the patients a wide range of many outdoor activities, depending on the season. At a height of 1200 meters, Clinic Les Alpes has many winter themed activities, such as snow shoeing in the forests and sledging, while in summer, hikes in alpine meadows and forests, along with excursions to lake Geneva and picnics in the wild flower meadows.
While Clinic Les Alpes will draw upon the principles of the Minnesota Model, which in turn developed as a professionally delivered treatment based on applying the principles and practices of Alcoholics Anonymous, it will provide a treatment programme that is sufficiently adaptable to enable an offering of individualised treatment and care. The option to participate in group activities and therapies will always be available and, indeed, encouraged.
For those patients who want to understand the possible benefits of mutual aid and peer support such as offered by the anonymous 12-Step fellowships, we provide information and guidance as well as helping people to engage in these fellowships and their practices.
It is likely that you will have heard something about the 12 Steps, the 12-Step programme, or the 12-Step meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous, or perhaps many of the other anonymous fellowships.
It may have been through your own experience, media articles, references made to it in films, television programmes, or from personal contact with someone in recovery.
Some of it may have been positive, some of it not.
Or you may know little or nothing about it.
The aim of this overview is to provide you with some information that will help you to evaluate (or re-evaluate) the potential benefits for you of a 12-Step approach to recovery.
Background
The principles of self-help, mutual aid, and recovery from addiction formed the basis of the 12-Step recovery programme developed by the originators of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) in 1930’s America.
In the intervening years, it has spawned a worldwide fellowship of men and women, with over two million members, whose shared aim is to support each other in maintaining recovery.
Starting with the idea of one addict helping another addict, it grew into a network of support for those seeking sustainable recovery.
The 12 Step programme of Alcoholics Anonymous has been further developed to address addiction in its many and varied forms, leading to the creation of many other fellowships focusing on different substances and addictive behaviors.
Although from a wide variety of backgrounds, they are a collection of like-minded people with the common aim and commitment of recovering from addiction. Their aim is to be collectively more powerful than addiction.
Anonymity
Members use only their first names, and there is no record of who attends fellowship meetings. This provides a safe environment, where members can be confident that who they are and what they may reveal remains confidential. It can also help to reduce the stigma and feelings of shame associated with suffering from addiction.
Another important aspect of anonymity is the idea that irrespective of status or position in the world, in the fellowship, everyone is equal.
Whether you come from the highest echelons of society or from the lowest of positions, everyone has an equal right to be there and an equal responsibility to participate and contribute to the process.
Abstinence
The idea of abstinence from all addictive activity is central to the 12-Step approach. It is based on the experience of addicted people finding themselves unable to control their use of substances or behaviors; often when attempts to try “controlled use” following a period of abstinence lead to relapse.
For those who have lost control, abstinence is probably the only viable option. In 12-Step recovery, addiction is not seen as “cured” or “removed” but an ever-present risk.
Relapse is a very real threat for addicts without a strategy for sustaining recovery.
Higher Power
Recovery is about finding a way to live without the need for addictive behavior, and the experience of the 12-Step fellowships is that it cannot be achieved alone. This is linked to the idea of needing help from outside of oneself. That is what is meant by a “higher power”.
Some of the 12 Steps and related texts specifically refer to this higher power as “God”. It is acknowledged in the fellowships that this was very much a reflection of the context in which the program was created in 1930’s America.
Nowadays, it is widely accepted that each member finds their own personal interpretation of their higher power.
For some, it may be God, but for others, it will be however they wish to conceptualize a benign power that has their best interests at heart. For many, this power lies in the collective membership and wisdom of the fellowship.
Fellowship meetings
There are thousands of regular 12-Step meetings around the world. They are free, with the only requirement for attendance being a desire to stop drinking, using, or acting out addictively.
The primary aim of these meetings is to provide support and guidance for those addicted people seeking recovery.
The meetings will differ in format; sometimes focusing on specific steps or themes or involving a speaker talking about recovery. However, there will always be time allocated for members to talk and hear others.
It is important for those members who have already established recovery to be able to help newcomers and to share their experience of being able to overcome challenges and problems without resorting to addictive behavior. It offers a valuable way of staying in touch with the reality of addiction and its consequences, guarding against complacency and the danger of relapse.
While initially for the newcomer it may be about receiving help and support, in time they will be also able to offer their help and support to others.
For many addicts who enter recovery with low levels of self-esteem, feeling that they have nothing to offer, this opportunity to help others can be the source of new feelings of being useful and worthwhile, and assisting in building self-esteem.
Evidence shows that being connected with others who are supportive of recovery increases the likelihood of success.
In addition to attendance at scheduled fellowship meetings, there is an opportunity to build a supportive social network with other members. This can be invaluable for those who have been isolated or whose social network is not supportive of recovery.
Sponsorship
The fellowships have devised a system of individual support and guidance through sponsorship. This involves an established member with a significant period of recovery making themselves available as a resource to newer members outside of formal meetings. This will involve helping them with day-to-day problems and to guide them through the individual steps of the program.
The 12 Steps
The steps are designed to address all aspects of addiction and to support the recovery process.
Steps one and two are focused on recognizing the power of addiction, understanding its impact on oneself and others, and recognizing the need for help.
Step three is about being able to let go of control and utilize help from outside of oneself.
Steps four, five, six, and seven are about fully understanding who you are, freeing yourself from negative thoughts and behaviors, and embracing and utilizing your strengths.
Steps eight and nine are about recognizing how you may have harmed others and where appropriate making amends.
Steps ten and eleven are about maintaining the work of the program on a daily basis and developing a spiritual approach to life.
Step twelve is about being able to pass on what you have learned to others seeking recovery.
A second part of this document offers the presentation of the steps in more up-to-date language.
With the patient’s consent, families are invited to participate in the treatment process by attending family conferences but we also respond to the needs of families in their own right.
We have characterized addiction as an all-consuming relationship with a substance or behavior that is driven by a conscious or unconscious urge to feel something different, which becomes self-perpetuating despite a range of harmful consequences.
It is clear that you do not have to be addicted to a substance or behavior to suffer from addiction.
As a family or family member, you can find yourself in a similarly consuming relationship. This too is based on an urge to experience something different. In this case, it is to be achieved by somehow getting the addicted person to change; to stop their addictive behavior and therefore all the harm associated with it.
Families can live on what has been called “hopium”; the belief that they can find that one thing which will bring about change in the other.
As with an addiction to a substance or behavior, life can begin to reduce to obsessive, consuming preoccupation with what is happening with the addicted person. This is a struggle. It is the family version of trying to control the uncontrollable.
Families come to feel disempowered but rather than facing up to this and what it means, very often the struggle is intensified. This may be borne of desperation – understandable in many ways given the nature of addiction and its potential fatality.
Families and family members experience chronic stress with a measurable effect on their psychological and physical health.
They may experience anxiety, depression, emotional volatility, and low self-esteem. They may experience a loss of mental capacity, be distracted and be involved in conflict. There may be physical manifestations such as aches and pains, nervous tension, energy loss, stomach upset, injuries, and the immune system may be compromised.
Families and family members find ways of coping either as individuals or as a system. Very often the ways of coping are counterproductive. Addiction becomes the organizing dynamic, re-setting and determining the norms of behavior within the family.
“Coping” may include denial, cover-up, and even collusion. Families can experience shame much like the addicted person, especially given the hold that stigma still has over addiction in the public mind. It may also include twisting out of shape to accommodate the demands of addiction with an increasing inattention to the family’s own needs, individually and collectively.
At Clinic Les Alpes, we recognize the needs of families and individual family members. They will have an important part to play in the treatment of their family member and, subject to the agreement of the patient, will be invited to participate in the treatment process. This will include Family Conferences where the members of the family get a chance to explore and understand how addiction has emerged and taken hold and how they might help each other and the family system as a whole to recover.
Also, we recognize the need for families and family members to be offered help in their own right rather than simply in relation to the patient with the addiction. It is usually the case that so much focus has been placed on the family member with the addiction and often in a counterproductive way that the needs of others become neglected. They suffer as a consequence. We help them to retrieve and recover themselves from addiction, restoring their health and wellbeing in the process.
Clinic Les Alpes has a Family Therapist available to the family members, and the Clinic offers a specially designed six or ten-day program for family members, including a residential option.
Interestingly, when family members begin to turn their attention to looking after themselves, the addicted person often benefits. They may find the space they need to take responsibility for their own recovery.
The NeuroAffective Relational Model (NARM) is a somatically based psychotherapy that addresses nervous system dysregulation, distortions of identity and the interplay between the two that result from adverse childhood experiences (ACE’s) and complex trauma (C-PTSD).
The NeuroAffective Relational Model (NARM) is a cutting-edge biopsychological therapeutic treatment model to treat C-PTSD, relational trauma and ACE’s (Adverse Childhood Experiences). It is used by specifically trained and certified therapist practitioners at Clinic Les Alpes.
The fundamental principal embraced in our work with NARM is that there is a driving force in all of us which is a spontaneous movement towards connection, health and aliveness. No matter how withdrawn or isolated we have become – whether through addiction, mental health issues or relationship problems – no matter how serious the trauma we have experienced - on the deepest level, just as the plant spontaneously moves toward sunlight, there is in each of us an impulse moving towards connection and healing. This organismic impulse is the fuel of the NARM approach.
NARM uses four primary organizing principles to address relational, attachment and developmental trauma. These are (a) Supporting connection and organisation (b) Exploring Identity (c) Working in present time and (d) Regulating the nervous system.
In our one to one therapeutic and relational work with our clients, we recognise that there are five organizing developmental themes that are essential to healthy development:
When basic needs are met in these five areas we experience regulation and connection. When these basic needs are not met we develop survival styles to try to manage the disconnection and dysregulation. While what happened in the past for our clients is significant, NARM holds that trauma or adverse childhood experiences (ACE’s) alone doesn’t create the symptoms we experience as adults. Continuing to rely on survival mechanisms that have outlived their usefulness creates ongoing disconnection from our authentic self – our bodies – our emotions and others. No matter how serious the trauma we have experienced, the spontaneous movement in all of us is towards connection and health.
NARM resource-oriented techniques work with subtle shifts in the nervous system which is fundamental in disrupting the predictive tendencies of the brain. This in turn helps dissolve distortions of identity such as low self-esteem, self-rejection and self-hatred. Using techniques that increase connection with the self as well as others is instrumental in supporting effective re-regulation
The overall intention of working with NARM with our clients is to support the possibility of increasing their internal freedom – which in effect means them having choices and more possibilities. By embodying adult consciousness, more opportunities are provided for the client to become less dependent on the environment (or the substance in the case of addiction) for their internal well-being. This means that the client begins to experience the freedom to trust in themselves.
Self-acceptance, compassion and kindness function as solvents for old identifications (while shame, self-rejection and self-hatred binds them).
In NARM we hold that it’s not what happened in the past that drives the symptoms that people have (like other psychological models) but rather it’s the way our relationship to our own self and our world has been distorted through what happened in the past. We develop these distorted identifications, identities and relationships which cause profound physiological dysregulation and this is the part of the adaptation to the trauma.
Our orientation in NARM in supporting our clients in their healing and recovery is beautifully expressed by these two great quotes :
“Your task is not to seek love, but only to seek and find all the obstacles within yourself that you have developed against it”. (Rumi)
“There is a space between stimulus and response. This space contains our strength to choose a response. Inherent in our response resides both our growth and our freedom”. (Viktor E. Frankl)