Siberian Psychologists Whip Addicts Clean
The bizarre beating "treatment" doesn't enjoy mainstream support—but some recipients swear by it.
01/07/13
Siberian psychologists are taking a hardline approach
to helping people with addiction: literally beating it out of them. The
practitioners claim that lashing addicts on the buttocks with a willow
cane can help those for whom more conventional methods have failed.
Practitioners Dr. German Pilipenko and Professor Marina Chukhrova say that their
treatment is grounded in science: "We cane the patients on the buttocks
with a clear and definite medical purpose—it is not some warped
sado-masochistic activity," insists Professor Chukhrova. The pair say
that addicts suffer from a lack of endorphins, and that pain can
stimulate the brain to release the feel-good chemicals, "making patients
feel happier in their own skins." Mainstream doctors dismiss the
practice, saying that exercise, acupuncture, massage, chocolate or sex
are all better at stimulating endorphin secretion. Dr. Pilipenko admits,
"we get a lot of skepticism...but so do all pioneers." The Siberian Times reports
that "the reaction of most people is predictable: to snigger, scoff or
make jokes loaded with sexual innuendo." And one recipient of the
treatment, 41-year-old recovering alcoholic Yuri, says
his girlfriend accused him of simply visiting a dominatrix. But he adds
that although "the first strike was sickening...Somehow I got through
all 30 lashes. The next day I got up with a stinging backside but no
desire at all to touch the vodka in the fridge. The bottle has stayed
there now for a year."
Natasha, a 22-year-old
recovering heroin addict with several months clean, says, "I am the
proof that this controversial treatment works, and I recommend it to
anyone suffering from an addiction or depression. It hurts like
crazy—but it's given me back my life." She receives 60 strokes of the
cane per session (drug addicts get double the dose of alcoholics), at a
cost of about $100. Her "therapy" is hardly for the faint-hearted: "With
each lash," says Natasha, "I scream and grip tight to the end of the
surgical table. It's a stinging pain, real agony, and my whole body
jolts." But she also insists, "I'm not a masochist. My parents never
beat me or even slapped me, so this was my first real physical pain and
it was truly shocking. If people think there's anything sexual about it,
then it's nonsense." Professor Chukhrova stresses that care is taken to
ensure clients' safety: "The beating is really the end of the
treatment. We do a lot of psychological counseling first, and also use
detox. It is only after all the counseling, and heart and pain
resistance checks, that we start with the beating." The doctor adds that
the willow branches used are "flexible and can't be broken nor cause
bleeding." And the practitioners are also at pains to deny any ulterior
motives: "If any patients get sexual pleasure from the beatings, we stop
immediately," says Professor Chukhrova. "This is not what our treatment
is about. If they're looking for that, there are plenty of other places
to go."
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