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Regardless of the delivery method, all drugs can be dangerous – and some can be deadly. Addiction and the threat of serious legal consequences including prison time are all very real possibilities. If you or someone you love is in the throes of addiction and you need help, call us now at Discovery Place in Burns Tennessee we can help you get your life back. Start now – don’t wait another moment – the risks just aren’t worth it. 
Though celebrating the holidays without alcohol or drugs may sound like a gloomy prospect if you’re still recovering from your addiction, you may be surprised at the many ways you can enjoy the holiday season sober and clean. This is an article by Cathy Crain. Here are a couple of tips to help you enjoy the holidays without drinking alcohol or using drugs:
The top 10 misconceptions about Drug Rehab are not, in fact, true. Misconceptions are numerous. Knowledge and awareness about rehab centers are increasing as the acceptance of addiction as a disease spreads. Discovery Place, in Burns Tennessee, believes stongly in the dignity of the individual. Our one on one, attention is extraordinarily effective. Here are some of the most common misconceptions about rehabilitation facilities:
Being active in your addiction, sets up many trains of thought, attitudes, feelings, and actions that are destructive. Simply removing the alcohol or drugs without changing these underlying factors will produce a ‘dry drunk syndrome’. The dry drunk really refers to a condition and not the person. Dry drunk is a slang expression which describes a person who no longer drinks or drugs but is still behaving in a dysfunctional way.
You may think Thanksgiving weekend in Rehab sounds like a woeful experience. At Discovery place this couldn’t be further from the truth. Guests not only have the certain assurance that they are doing the “right thing” for themselves and their loved ones, but they also have the comfort of being with others who are just like themselves; men who have come to the realization that they can no longer safely consume mood altering substances of any kind.
Deep in Denial: I had been doing better. Not a drop since Labor Day. The family had their hopes up again. My wife and oldest child were witnesses to my diligent efforts not to drink; to “do better”. They were optimistic about Thanksgiving, but my youngest, away at college, remained the family skeptic.
A seemingly unplanned meeting in Akron, Ohio in 1935 between two men, both of whom were termed "hopeless" alcoholics, began a program of recovery that has helped millions find sobriety and serenity. Bill W. was one of those men. In fighting his own battle against drinking, he had already learned that helping other alcoholics was the key to maintaining his own sobriety, the principle that would later become step twelve in the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Society needs to stop looking at addiction as a moral issue, Forrest says. "When friends get cancer, everybody goes on the Internet and tries to find out everything about cancer. But when they have addiction, it's just like, 'Oh, whatever, they need to grow up.'"