Monday, January 21, 2013


Tell Your Story      JANUARY 21 2013
Today's Scripture
"Now that I've put you there on a hilltop, on a light stand—shine! Keep open house; be generous with your lives. By opening up to others, you'll prompt people to open up with God, this generous Father in heaven." -  Matthew 5:16 MSG
Thoughts for Today
Appropriate self-disclosure can be a useful tool in a helping relationship. Sharing your own personal experiences and insight may help your friend understand how to deal with a life-controlling problem. Keep the conversation positive, telling about your mistakes but focusing on how God helped you and the things you learned through the process. A word of caution—don't overuse self-disclosure by talking too much, shifting the focus of the conversation toward you and away from the person you want to help.
It is also important that while sharing with others, you do not talk down to them, making them feel as though you are treating them like a child or an inferior person. Your self-disclosure should have a clear goal of providing insight your friend does not appear to have and moving him or her toward healing. Try to stay at the level of insight relevant to the person's need.
Consider this … 
Freedom from a life-controlling problem is a process. Pray that God will help you disclose all that will assist your friend in that process, but not so much as to produce confusion. And pray that God will use what you say to help set your loved one free.
Prayer
Father, help me be generous with my life and share with my friend those things that will hasten deliverance and healing. I pray that my self-disclosure will be an encouragement to my friend to open up to you. In Jesus' name …
These thoughts were drawn from …

Understanding the Times and Knowing What to Do
 by Dr. Jimmy Ray Lee. This book offers biblical strategies for ministry to our family and friends. Contemporary issues and needs faced by society are addressed with biblical principles that are timeless. Ideal for small group leaders and Sunday school teachers who want a better understanding of ministry in an addictive culture.
Would you like to have these devotions appear daily on your church or ministry website? Learn More
 
 
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Sunday, January 20, 2013

    

COA Needs You!

City of Angels NJ, Inc. is a non-profit corporation that runs entirely on volunteers. All COA Board members, Directors and helpers volunteer their time to a cause they believe in....do you have a few extra hours you could spare?
  
At 6:30 pm on the 4th Thursday of every month at the Dwier Center (392 Church Street, Groveville, NJ), COA holds volunteer meetings to discuss volunteer opportunities and match people with those opportunities. Volunteers are particularly needed to help with Rockfest in June 2013 and a major new event in September. This informal get-together is also a great way to meet new people, learn more about COA and enjoy a pleasant pizza dinner with friends. 

The next volunteer meeting will be held on Thursday, January 24, 2013. Pizza will be provided by Family Nest Italian Restaurant. For directions to the Dwier Center, click here.
  
If you are interested in volunteering with COA but can't attend the dinner, please contact Volunteer Director Lynn Cranstoun at lcwolflady@optonline.net.
Recovery Coach Training - There's Still Room!
As of today, 25 people are registered for the Recovery Coach Training Academy at City of Angels. This training was developed by the Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) and has been provided to more than 2,000 people worldwide. There are still a few spots open but we are filling up quickly...
If you would like to register for this groundbreaking program - or just learn more about it - click here.

This training is invaluable for anyone who lives or works with people in recovery from drug addiction - including counselors, healthcare professionals, group leaders, teachers, parents, spouses and other family members.
Speakers at Tonight's Spirituality Meeting

Tonight's Spirituality Meeting will include speakers from U-Turn for Christ in Tennessee. U-Turn for Christ is a faith-based facility for the treatment of drug and alcohol addiction. It offers a highly structured, no-frills program that is incredibly affordable and effective. Over the past 18 months, COA has sent more than three dozen young men and women to U-Turn - don't miss this opportunity to learn more about how and why it works so well.
 
The Spirituality Meeting begins at 7:00 pm at the Dwier Center (392 Church Street, Groveville, NJ).

 Tidbits 
 COA hosts support group meetings for both addiction sufferers and their families every day of the week at the Dwier Center (392 Church Street, Groveville, NJ). This includes 12-step meetings, a Sunday night Spirituality Meeting and the popular Sunday morning family support group, The Breakfast Club. To check out our online calendar, click here.
 
 
For directions to the Dwier Center, click here. 
 
 
The COA website now offers an Addiction News Feed with the latest studies, reports, new and other info on addiction. It's updated in real time with top 30 articles. To read the feed, click here. 
New videos are up on the COA YouTube channel. To watch, click here.
    


Join COA's Pinterest community! To visit the boards, click here.
 
   
  
Keep current on COA activites - join the COA group on Facebook!  COA news is posted first on Facebook, and this page often has photos not available elsewhere. Click here to visit.
 

City of Angels NJ, Inc. is a non-profit organization that provides many services to addicts and their families including interventions, recovery support, Family Program, counseling services and more. All of our services are provided at no charge.

  

Recovery Connections: We Will Recover Photos By: Katie Satorius

Recovery Connections: We Will Recover Photos By: Katie Satorius

Recovery Now Episode 4

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Researchers Say MRI Could Help Predict Success of Drug Addiction Treatment

Scientists at the University of Pennsylvania say MRI scans may be able to predict which patients will succeed with certain addiction treatments, and which ones will relapse, according to the Philadelphia Daily News.
Researchers at the university’s Center for Studies of Addiction are watching how regions of the brain react to drug-related photos, such as pictures of a heroin needle or a crushed pill. They hope to use this research to develop more effective treatments. One day, they hope that treatment could be tailored to a person’s mental strengths and vulnerabilities. These factors are influenced by genetics, life experiences and drug use, they say.
“We’re interested in seeing if, among the people that do better, their brains are different now,” Teresa Franklin, who directs nicotine and marijuana MRI studies at the university, told the newspaper. “This is not something that gets better in 12 weeks of treatment. This is a lifelong process where the brain has to be retrained. Just as if you have diabetes or high blood pressure or a heart condition, you have to change your lifestyle and you may need medication.”
She said her group thinks if a person’s “stop” regions of the brain, which deal with consequences, are not working well, and are not communicating well with regions that say “go” and drive the motivation for rewards, then it is likely that person is going to do poorly in treatment.
The group’s research show that in a person who is addicted to drugs, the brain’s reward region will light up in an MRI scan, even in response to subliminal cues, such as an image of crack rocks that flash on-screen for a few milliseconds while the person looks at a photo of a neutral object, such as a stapler.
“If we can manipulate that response with medication or behavioral therapy, that’s our goal,” Franklin said.