Thursday, July 17, 2014




Faith Worship Center of Schuylkill County, PA is starting the Hope Initiative this month. Please click the above link for more info.

It is a program designed to serve the community and educate those affected by addictions and to support the families of those addicted.

The program will bring together local resources such as counselors, local/state/federal government agencies, financial resources, etc. and provide non-profit help and guidance.

This program has already sparked the interest of local TV, radio, and newspapers as well as a church in West Virginia that contacted Faith for more info.

The goal is to design a program that can be a model for other churches and organizations to offer help for the hurting in every community.

Instead of offering ridicule, lets help those in need.
HOPEatfaithchurch.com
The Hope Initiative is a new ministry of Faith Church. We noticed a need in our community and we are responding to it. Please join us to learn more information, help us or get help.

JULY 17 Chp 62 v 11 v 12 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS


God hath spoken once; twice have I heard this; that power belongeth unto God. Also unto thee, O Lord, belongeth mercy: for thou renderest to every man according to his work.


STEP 10- Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it .



What goes around comes around ! Karma ,or as I like to put it you reap what you sow . Fourteen years sober and some of the stuff I did in the past still comes back to bite me on the butt . Whatever you dish out according too the Psalm will come back to you .Step ten is so important because it will prevent you a lot of trouble down the road. Owning your crap and taking responsibility for your mistakes is called maturity and it is a must for any successful recovery . It will not be easy though , I still struggle with doing and saying the right things.



Ephesians 4:22 ;24 To put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness
By Joseph Dickerson

      The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc.PRO-ACT
                                                  and
          Pennsylvania Recovery Organization --
     Achieving Community Together (PRO-ACT) 
Recovery in Our Communities
July 15, 2014
    
Like us on Facebook                                   www.councilsepa.org                       Follow us on Twitter

Information and Recovery Support Line 24/7: 800-221-6333
"Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing at all." Helen Keller
 
PRO-ACT'S PUBLIC POLICY SPEAKER 
ON WHYY'S "RADIO TIMES"
Heroin Overdose Policy in NJ and PA

New Jersey has embraced new laws that permit good Samaritans to call 911 without fear of arrest and allow first responders, friends and family to carry the overdose reversal medication Narcan. Pennsylvania has been slower to enact similar measures. In this hour interview on Radio Times, Noni West, The Council's liaison to PRO-ACT's Public Policy Committee and Family Education Programs, discusses heroin policy, usage in the region and potential solutions. Also featured is Roseanne Scotti, the Drug Policy Alliance's State Director in New Jersey.   

Listen to the full interview on WHYY's Radio Times.
A DIFFERENT PATH FOR 
FIGHTING SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS
A Growing Wing Of Treatment Rejects Strict Abstinence

Columnist Gabrielle Glaser of the NY Times explains different paths for some people with a substance use disorder, particularly the young. "When their son had to take a medical leave from college, Jack and Wendy knew they - and he - needed help with his binge drinking... He had a disease, and in order to stay alive, he'd have to attend A.A. meetings and abstain from alcohol the rest of his life, they said.  But the couple... resisted that approach. Instead, they turned to... a growing wing of addiction treatment that rejects the A.A model as the sole form of recovery... Instead, it uses a suite of techniques that provide a hands-on, practical approach to solving emotional and behavioral problems, rather than having abusers forever swear off the substance - a particularly difficult step for young people to take." Read the full article on "A Different Path To Fighting Addiction."

This thought-provoking article raises important questions on the meaning of "substance use disorder" and the role of "harm reduction." The chronic disease of addiction is complicated on several levels, including its self-management component. The Council therefore strongly supports The Recovery Bill of Rights, which includes the right to be fully informed of the many pathways to recovery.     

Some Upcoming Events
Events
July 16, 2014: Meet The Council Open House8 - 9 am at 252 West Swamp Road, Bailiwick Office Campus, Unit 12, Doylestown, PA 18901
September 12, 20147:05 pm. Recovery Night at the Baseball Game, Phillies vs. Marlins, Citizens Bank Park. Click here for tickets. 
September 20, 2014PRO-ACT Recovery Walks! 2014, Great Plaza, Penn's Landing, Philadelphia. Click here to register and get more information. Sponsorship deadline is August 1.
Employment OpportunitiesPlease click here
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DONATEDonations help us to reduce the impact of addiction for more individuals and families. The Council is a 501(c)(3) organization.

Commentary: Parity and the Path to Change the Treatment of Substance Use Disorders
July 16th, 2014/



The Treatment Research Institute recently welcomed The Honorable Patrick J. Kennedy, one of the major architects of parity legislation, and a tireless advocate for improving substance abuse care through better policy, to our hometown of Philadelphia. His important insight about how the Parity Law will transform substance abuse and mental healthcare is certainly worth talking about some more.

Recent legislative changes in the healthcare organization and financing through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the Parity Act will end the past 40 years of separate and unequal resources for the treatment of substance use disorders. This legislation, combined with new knowledge from basic, clinical and health services research over the past two decades, has set the stage for a new public health-oriented approach to managing substance use disorders with the same insurance options, healthcare teams, clinical goals and clinical methods presently used to manage other, similar chronic illnesses such as diabetes, asthma or chronic pain.

These changes are much needed. Contemporary addiction treatments are based upon outdated concepts about the nature of addiction and, in turn, the nature of the care needed to bring about recovery. Virtually all existing treatments for addiction are “programs” – every patient gets the same care, regardless of the type of addiction or the other medical and social problems that coexist with addiction. Because everyone gets the same care, there has been no need to evaluate other influences including medical, employment, drug, legal family and psychiatric problems that could affect the course of change and recovery. Insurance coverage that has been built to service programmatic care has always been time or session limited. The financial limitations on insurance coverage have restricted the range of treatment components (tests, medications, therapies, family support services, etc.) that could be provided within any treatment program. The interim goal of treatment for virtually all existing treatments – residential or outpatient – is “program completion” with traditional symptom and function outcomes (drug use, employment, health, etc.) typically measured 6 – 12 months following completion.

These traditional features of treatment design and financing are no longer legal. With the passage of the Affordable Care Act, care for addictions is now required to be similar in content, structure and patient burden as care for other chronic illnesses. This will be a very substantial change in the concept, type, amount and evaluation of addiction treatment.

We believe recovery is now an expectable outcome and a new standard for high quality addiction treatment.

Representative Kennedy discussed the importance of leveraging the current innovations in research, treatment, policy and public education to take advantage of every opportunity to change the way addiction and mental illness are perceived and cared for and to move toward a chronic care model of treatment for addiction.

The Treatment Research Institute is working on methods to offer individualized approaches to illness management for individuals suffering from alcohol and other addictions. The ultimate goal of these efforts will be sustained, patient-managed recovery – specifically, sobriety, personal health and good social function. Patients are transitioned through a system of care that is coordinated with all other aspects of their health to anticipate and intervene promptly to help patients prevent relapses, reduce emergency department visits and hospitalizations and subsequent poor health outcomes.

We also want to ensure that promises of the Affordable Care Act and Parity are fulfilled through effective implementation; and that a chronic care model can exist for addiction. Working with our partners at the Legal Action Center, the Parity Implementation Coalition and Truven Health, we are tracking and analyzing the impact of implementation; informing and educating purchasers, payers, and other stakeholders; and documenting the impact of successful prevention and early intervention programs. We are assisting states, counties and health plans to implement the ACA and Parity legislation in a cost-effective manner that maximizes outcomes for patients and providers. This is a core priority for our organization and for our field.

It is through the work of Patrick J. Kennedy and the efforts of many others that we are at a watershed moment in behavioral health. Public awareness about addiction and mental illness is growing thanks to outlets such Join Together. We are starting to see the legislative advances bring us closer to integrated care, and the research base is expanding so that we can better address the social and biological determinants of these disorders. Like no other time in our history, we have an enormous opportunity to significantly impact the way in which these illnesses are perceived and managed in our society.

We look forward to sharing more details about these projects in the months ahead. In the meantime, we invite you to watch Patrick J. Kennedy’s presentation here. If you are interested in learning more about our efforts, please check out the Parity Tracking Initiative document and other impact projects on our website.

Mady Chalk and Abigail Woodworth

Mady Chalk, Ph.D., MSW, has more than 30 years of experience in addiction and mental health treatment, policy and research. In the federal government she was Director of the Division for Services Improvement in the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment in SAMHSA, and was Director of its Office of Managed Care. Chalk is an expert in the organization and financing of treatment systems in both the public and private sectors – and in the policies that govern treatment delivery, including strategies for quality and performance improvement. She was an architect of the Target Cities and the State-wide Screening, Brief Interventions and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) programs. With the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation as a partner, Chalk provided Federal support for the development of the Network for Improvement of Addiction Treatment, the first national initiative to promote better treatment access and broader service availability through implementation of best practices. She was also responsible for linking the Addiction Technology Transfer Centers with NIDA and creating the Blending Program to foster dissemination and adoption of evidence based practices in the treatment field. Prior to moving to the Washington, DC area, Dr. Chalk was a clinician and clinical administrator at Yale University School of Medicine for 15 years.

Abigail Woodworth, Vice President for Strategy and Public Affairs supports TRI’s overall strategic growth, including creation of partnerships and alliances that enhance mission value, the communications and public outreach efforts of the organization, and its products and services. Ms. Woodworth has extensive experience managing organizational development within non-profit and public health organizations. From 2004 until her appointment at TRI, she occupied senior management positions at the University of Pennsylvania as well as Johns Hopkins, developing and directing external relations efforts for mental health and substance abuse programs. In addition, she has served as co-chair of the Public Policy Committee for the National Network of Depression Centers, representing 20 leading academic Departments of Psychiatry. Prior to her work in mental health and substance abuse, Ms. Woodworth founded and ran a non-profit community arts center in West Philadelphia. She earned both her BA in Psychology and her MS in Social Policy from the University of Pennsylvania.

Study: Counseling Via Telephone Could Cut Prescription Painkiller Use
July 16th, 2014/





A new study finds people with chronic pain who received counseling from a nurse over the phone were able to reduce their dose of pain medication. The researchers say the findings suggest “telecare” could reduce the risk of prescription drug abuse and accidental overdoses.

The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, included 250 veterans with chronic pain. Half of the veterans received traditional pain care from their primary physician, and half received counseling from nurses via telephone and internet,NBC Los Angeles reports. The nurses’ goal was to reduce patients’ pain medication doses, and in some cases to have them stop taking painkillers altogether, the article notes.

Telecare consisted of automated symptom monitoring and pain management counseling by a nurse care manager. Patients in the telecare group received interactive voice-recorded phone calls or online messages asking them about their pain, their reaction to medication and whether they wanted to speak with a nurse. They met with the nurse once in person, and then received phone counseling from the nurse throughout the study.

“Nearly twice as many that had the telecare intervention got better in terms of their pain over the course of the year,” said study co-author Dr. Kurt Kroenke of the Roudebush VA Medical Center in Indianapolis. “On the other hand, twice as many people in the control, usual care group got worse during the course of the year.”

HealthDay reports that after one year, more than half of the patients receiving telecare reported at least a 30 percent improvement in pain, compared with about one-quarter of those receiving usual care. Patients receiving telecare were about half as likely to experience an increase in pain after six months.

About three-quarters of patients receiving telecare rated their prescribed painkillers as good to excellent, compared with only half of patients in the usual care group.

Text Messages Can Help Reduce Young Adults’ Binge Drinking
July 16th, 2014/
0

Receiving text messages about binge drinking after visiting the emergency room can help young adults reduce their hazardous alcohol consumption by more than 50 percent, a new study suggests.

The study included 765 young adults seen in the emergency room, who had a history of hazardous drinking. The study participants were divided into thirds. One third received text messages for 12 weeks that prompted them to respond to questions about their drinking. They received texts in return that offered feedback on their answers, News-Medical.net reports. Another third received text messages asking about their drinking, but received no feedback. The remaining third received no text messages.

Participants who received both text message questions about their drinking and feedback said they decreased their binge drinking by 51 percent, and the number of drinks per day by 31 percent. Those who received only text messages or no text messages increased the number of days they engaged in binge drinking, which is defined as five or more drinks in one sitting for men and four or more drinks for women.

The study is published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine.

“Each day in the U.S., more than 50,000 adults ages 18 to 24 visit ERs and up to half have hazardous alcohol use patterns,” lead researcher Brian Suffoletto, M.D., of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said in a news release. “More than a third of them report alcohol abuse or dependence. The emergency department provides a unique setting to screen young adults for drinking problems and to engage with them via their preferred mode of communication to reduce future use.”

A recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found excessive alcohol use accounts for one in 10 deaths among working-age adults ages 20-64 years in the United States.

Almost 90,000 ER Visits Annually Due to Bad Reactions to Psychiatric Drugs
July 16th, 2014/
0

Almost 90,000 emergency room visits each year in the United States are due to adverse reactions to psychiatric medications, according to the Associated Press. The findings come from a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Anti-anxiety medications and sedatives were the drugs most likely to cause adverse reactions, the study found. Most of the ER visits were for side effects or accidental overdoses, the CDC researchers report in JAMA Psychiatry. Almost 20 percent of ER visits related to psychiatric medications resulted in hospitalization.

The sedative zolpidem tartrate, found in sleeping pills including Ambien, was involved in almost 12 percent of all visits to the emergency room, and one in five visits for older adults.

Last, year, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved label changes for zolpidem products, because of the risk of next-morning impairment with these drugs. The FDA warned patients who take zolpidem extended-release (Ambien CR) not to drive or engage in other activities that require complete mental alertness the day after taking the drug, because drug levels can remain high enough the next day to impair these activities.

According to the CDC investigators, previous research found ER visits for adverse reactions to zolpidem rose 220 percent from 2005 to 2010. They advised doctors to recommend that patients try other insomnia treatments, such as developing better sleep habits and using behavior therapy, before trying zolpidem.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014



JULY 15 Chp 91 v 11 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS

 
For He shall give His Angels charge over you ,To keep you in all your ways .



STEP 11 Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.



Wow what a promise and a comfort to know that Gods army of angels are being dispatched on your behalf . Gods big book (Bible ) was written two thousand years ago and it is still the number one best seller in the world , I mention His book because its true and you can rely on Gods word . So when God says your not alone , and He will never leave you or forsake you , Hes not playing . Too think angels watching over us guarding our steps watching every move we make . Now if we could only get this truth and belief way deep down into our hearts then fear in our lives would be powerless . Most people say or believe we have a guardian angel but God says Angels .Plural meaning more than one a whole Army without number . So stop stressing so much when God tells you I got this He aint playing .



Matthew 18:10 “Then the devil left him, and behold, angels came and were ministering to him.”

Another word for Devil is Addiction !

By Joseph Dickerson
myrecovery.com

Daily Quote

"The beginning of love is to let those we love be perfectly themselves, not to twist them to fit our own image. Otherwise we love only the reflection of ourselves we find in them." - Thomas Merton


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Sunday, July 13, 2014



JULY 13 v 2 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS


How long must I struggle with anguish in my soul,
with sorrow in my heart every day?
How long will my enemy have the upper hand?


STEP 2 - Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity !


My enemy was Addiction ! The enemy turned my life into a inescapable wasteland with not an ounce of joy too be found anywhere in anything . They say in recovery one of the most important parts of us that does not get addressed or gets fixed is our souls. Recovery should be mental , physical and spiritual ! In my personal journey through addiction and sobriety , I discovered I was a lost soul desperately trying to fill a void in my life , and no matter how many drugs I did or barrels of booze I drank nothing ever seemed to satisfy. I realize now what I was missing was God ! Only God and His son Jesus can truly fill the emptiness you have in your heart . Relationship with your creator who knows all things and misses you and always has loved you and always will love you unconditionally . The search is over you know where to find fulfillment and you have a certain set of steps and if your willing to work than you can have it . It does not have be a struggle anymore .Let Go and Let God friend !



Jerimiah 29 ;11 - For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the LORD, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end.




By Joseph Dickerson



Unhappy Camper—Joe Sober Strikes Again
The continuing adventures of AA cliché Joe Sober. This installment—Joe gets into self-service with a smile!
inventory this! 







07/09/14







Its 4:20 am on a misty morning out here on the edge of everywhere. I’m standing outside the old, rundown church where we hold my 4:30 am meeting. I’m smoking a Nat Sherman Menthol and watching all the rough boys sheepishly walk out of their CMA meeting. Less sober than me but live and let live, right?


CMA is kind of like SA and just as bloody. I had a cousin in MA that led him to OA and he wound up in PA at a state mental hospital. I like to keep it pure and ultra-classic with my AA. Except today; because I’m the boss at this 4:30 am meeting, I’m going to start calling our group the Smug Solutions. 'Come on down to the SS for some hardcore sobriety' is what I look forward to everyone in town—and particularly in LA—saying to each other. There’ll be a line to get into my meeting! It’s going to be a hit. I’ll be king of AA. You wait right there and see.




Most of the guys at my meeting are what we in AA call “old timers”—which is AA speak for “almost dead.”


A bunch of the dudes gave me a “Hey Joe,” and I gave them that "What’s up? I’m cool with you being a meth head" nod in return. That’s just the power of my sobriety at work. Well that and the sexual power of the insanely hot military inspired jacket I’m wearing over my fitted mauve polo tee, along with my tight indigo denim pants that drape over my brown brogue leather boots in a saddle tan color.


“We have a real meeting in here at 4:30! So clear out but don’t nod out!”


I love that last part. I made it up right there on the spot. Finally that improv class I made my dead sponsee pay for was rocking the house. I hope somebody in TV heard me.


Now comes the tough part—setting up. I always get someone less sober than me to do this fingernail work. Mainly because it’s good for their sobriety to put up my signs the way I like them and make my coffee the way it should be made. The other reason is that most of the guys at my meeting are what we in AA call “old timers”—which is AA speak for “almost dead”—so they get all cranky and stuff when I ask for their help. They sit there reading their newspapers. (What kind of dumb ass Coulter still reads a newspaper?) Wait until all the folks in LA hear about my meeting. Then they'll all fly here on their jet packs to attend. All those famous people that aren’t sober yet, will be made sober by me. It’s all in the 12th step. Bet you haven’t even read it yet. I’ll bet you can’t even read. Getting sober may not make you smart but it will most definitely make me a movie star!




So I’m banging my gavel and I start telling everyone that this is AA but that now we’re going to call it Smug Solutions


My favorite old timer is Dirty Sanchez. He is definitely the Emperor to my much better looking Darth Maul. He has told me stuff that has blown my mind. If I drop something he says “pick it up,” or if I want to talk to him about how I’m afraid of girls, he says something like “Kid, get the fuck away from me.” I know what he really means is something else because he was loving me even before I came in the rooms! He was loving me while I was in my Ma’s womb. Because I’m special and I stick with the winners like Dirty Sanchez! In AA all the old timers always mean something different than what they say if you really, really, really think about what they say. So much wisdom have they passed on to me. I’m grateful that I figured that out. Now I’m as wise—but will be that much more wise when I’m finger nailing in my pants. If you're new, think about that sentence a lot, it will make sense in a really profound way when you least expect it.


Ka boom!


So I’m banging my gavel and I start telling everyone that this is AA but that now we’re going to call it Smug Solutions and some guy has the nerve to interrupt me and tell me that I’m imposing my will by calling it that, so as boss I willed his fat ass right out of the room for “disrupting the meeting.” Dirty Sanchez and Crusty Carl laughed. I’m pretty sure they were laughing with me. 


I start reading the introductory script and as the sound of my voice is reminding most folks in the room of Adele while she sings “Make You Feel My Love,” in comes a guy I’ll call the poet. I call him this out of mad respect for his anonymity and because I can’t remember his frigging name. Peter something or is it Paul … Anyway he comes in all dressed in black, disgustingly overweight and carrying all those character defects that other less sober people call the weight of the world.


The poet starts going on and on about his "pain" and blah, blah his marriage and blah, blah, blah something about suicide. So I did what I do, I gave him a beginner’s packet and spoketh at him all the great slogans like "easy does it," "keep coming back" and "it works if you work it." I was on a roll! Just talking at this guy a mile a minute! It felt awesome. Dementia Carol told him to read page 459 and everyone else spit out page numbers. Then it occurred to me—in a voice as pretty as His must be, only deeper and more cigarette stained sounding—“Take him to the woods,” said the gorgeous, gravelly phlegm soaked voice of the Almighty. So I took the suicidal poet on a sober retreat.


We swung by my crib to pick up my Kelly Yellowstone 4 person tent (I am grateful to Pedophile Terry for willing me the 50 grand!) some more smokes and, of course, my battered copy of the Big Book (aka the Bible) that my sponsor Greg once threw at my puppy. Thanks, Greg! 


It wasn’t so much that I was going to read aloud from the Big Book, it was more about me getting a chance to read this guy my awesome poems that I wrote inside the pages of it during the endless BB meetings. He had that ‘might know some people that could help me’ look that I couldn’t wait to start exploiting! All in the name of sober! Off to the woods we went.


Along the way I played my Sade then I would hit him with some later Jefferson Airplane (the good stuff. After their upgrade). Then Wham!, I played him some George Michael. “This is your higher power speaking to you Pete!" (Or whatever the heck his name was) “Listen closely!” As suddenly as George was crooning, “You gotta have faith!” we arrived at my destination. It’s in those moments that I know the great dictator in the sky is looking at me and only me and those moments are pretty much every moment of every day except for when I masturbate.


It took the poet 10 hours to set up my killer tent. He asked if he could take a rest and I told him no, that his work was just beginning. I told him to write a list of everyone that he knows in the publishing business along with their numbers. And I told him if he knew any movie stars that he should include their info too. When he was finished he should give it to me and then I was to decide whether or not I would help him.


“I don’t understand,” he whined.


“Understand this,” I said in my serious sounding voice. “A monkey’s hands are the same as his feet.” Long sober silence. I am so sober, it’s scary.


After a delightful evening of experimenting with new oils and creams, I remembered another person was with me and since I was kinda tired, I rewarded the poet by making him sleep outside in the nude. "Shut up bitch," I said when he protested. I felt like a kid again which brought up a lot of shame for me so I kicked the poet, but gently, lovingly. In the teeth. It was a quicker way to being sober like me, I told him. These are only suggestions but, just be my Sherpa, sleep naked in the woods, and take a kick in the mouth and you might be well enough for me to start stepping you first thing in the morning. He took all those suggestions and I feel like I could rule the world! 


I had to pee in the middle of the deep dark night (that’s from one of my poems) and I noticed him lying there all covered in dirt and vomit. It made me think how lucky he was to have me looking out for him, and how, most of the time, my hair falls right into place. Then I peed one of those long, heavy pees that truly sober men pee. He woke up suddenly and right away started with his incessant white noise. Listen, I said, if a cat had the face of a dog, would it still be a cat? Don’t answer, I told him, it’s unanswerable. I was glad he didn’t because I don’t know. I do know that this shut him up.


“My Dad” he suddenly whispered, “My Dad has money. He can pay you.”


Now if I told him that I would be his sponsor and that I wouldn’t charge him a dime because of all that tradition crap, it wouldn’t be a selfish program. Right? If I told him that I had a spiritual awakening and that it was my spiritual duty to carry the message to other alcoholics without a profit incentive, then I would have not been a very good businessman. Seeing how not being a very good businessman is one of my character defects, I decided that I would take his father’s money.


“Where does your dad live?” I asked.


“Malibu,” he said and at or around the same time some kind of woods bird type thing made a sound. That was my higher power speaking to me and saying, "Take this man’s money and get him to take you to freaking MALIBU and charge him like $2000 a day, only he said it in a woodsy bird kind of way. I’ll take him through the steps very slowly. One a year!!!! One a decade!!!! Oh boy oh boy oh boy! God is making me a sober companion! And a very connected future poet/movie star that one day hopes to direct! 


By the time I got to my car I had a very sober boner. I told the poet to turn away and I prayed that my higher power that I choose to call the squealing baby Jesus was looking at Uganda for those next 32 seconds.


I'm pretty sure it would be a cat.


Joe Sober is a pseudonym for a member of Alcoholics Anonymous. He last wrote about why he is more sober than you.

For Comedian Jessica Kirson, Staying Sober Is No Laughing Matter
Speaking exclusively to The Fix, comedian Jessica Kirson opens up about the struggles of staying sober while on the road, performing in venues where alcohol is flowing and what keeps her grounded through it all. 



07/11/14






Jessica Kirson has developed a reputation as one of the most respected comedians in the business. No less of an authority figure than Louis C.K. has branded the New Jersey-born performer as one of his favorite comics. Throughout her career, she’s performed on numerous television shows including The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, The View,Last Call with Carson Daly and seasons 2 and 3 of Last Comic Standing. She also recently made her big screen debut in Nick Cannon’s School Dance, which also stars Jim Breuer and George Lopez.

But in order to achieve this level of success, she had to get sober first. When fairly standard teenage drug experimentation during high school developed into a major problem in her mid-20s, she checked herself into rehab. After a pair of relapses in the beginning stages of her sobriety, she has now been clean and sober for 15 years. Speaking exclusively to The Fix, Kirson opened up about the struggles of staying sober while on the road, performing in venues where alcohol is flowing and what keeps her grounded through it all. 

When did your drug use first begin?

I started using at 12, but it was always pot and alcohol at that point. I began experimenting more in high school and moved into trying cocaine, ecstasy and mushrooms. But my drug use kept progressing and getting worse and worse. 

In college, I thought I was just being wild and crazy because everyone else was partying as well. I was never the kind of person to have one drink because I didn’t see the point. It was always to get wasted.

When did you get to the point where you knew something had to change?

That didn’t come until my mid-20’s. It sounds weird, but I got myself to that point on purpose because I knew there was a problem. I was doing cocaine and wasn’t even enjoying it, but needed to reach that bottom so that things could change. I eventually sent myself to rehab when I was 24.

A lot of what they taught me in rehab went into my head, but I wasn’t fully ready at that point. I used again, but it never got to the point that it had before. In the past 20 years, I’ve relapsed twice.

Do you still work a program these days?

Absolutely. I work a very strong program. The times I’ve relapsed were when I wasn’t working a program. I tried to do it my way and, speaking only for myself, it just didn’t work.

And after all of these years, the meetings still help for me. I’ll hear something that sticks with me at every meeting I go to. Addicts have what we call built-in forgetters. We forget where we were and where we came from. There’s a lot of denial. It’s important to talk to people who can set me straight because left to my own devices, I don’t always make the right decisions. Even last night, I felt a lot of stress after a show and the first thing I did was call some friends who are in recovery because they’ve been there and they get me.

Personally, I know that I can’t do it alone. I need the help because I have a tendency to isolate. I can hate myself or think I’m the greatest thing ever. Most people can understand obsession in some form whether it’s over a guy or a job, but addicts obsess over everything. A huge point of the meetings is to have people relate to you and make you realize that they’ve felt the same way. You feel crazy otherwise.

Did you get sober before starting stand-up or were you still using in the beginning?

When I started stand-up, I was in a relapse and was smoking pot every day and drinking. I’ve never done a show high, though. I did one open mic after smoking pot and had a breakdown on stage because I was so paranoid. I was wondering why everyone was laughing at me. [Laughs]. But thank God I never did a show high. I know a lot of people in the business who have had a hard time staying sober because they felt like they had to be high when they were on stage. 

Does performing in places where alcohol is flowing and the crowd is often drunk complicate things at all for you?

Personally, the obsession to use has been lifted. Occasionally if I’m stressed out, I’ll think that it would be nice if I could have a drink. Or if I’m with a group of comics and they’re all drinking, it’s like a small party. I’ll sometimes wish that I could be that person who could just have one drink. But for the most part, it’s annoying to be the sober one around people who are wasted and don’t have boundaries. It’s actually turned me off to it a lot of times. 

Do you find it any harder to work the program you have when you’re on the road?

It’s very hard sometimes. I’ve been in meetings on the road all over the country, but the times when I don’t go, I sit in the hotel room and I’m miserable. When you’re on the road, you can feel alone, bored, tired. You feel out of touch with everything and isolating is one of the worst things that addicts can do. I have to make an effort to see friends because there are times when I could easily just sit at home and not talk to anyone.

We’ve lost so many talented comics over the years like Mitch Hedberg, Greg Giraldo and John Belushi due to drugs. Why do you think that addiction is so prevalent in the comedy industry?

I think that a lot of times, addicts are smart, creative people. And a lot of humor comes from pain and tragedy. You have to laugh at those things. It makes sense that a lot of addicts do comedy. 

But being in the business, the highs and lows of it, can exacerbate an addiction. Being sober is really hard in this business. When people’s careers take off, they think they’re okay and don’t need to stay sober. They forget where they came from and what happened and you can never forget that. Personally, I have to remember other people’s stories. It’s a very dark place to be in when you relapse.

Is there any kind of camaraderie or support system amongst other sober comics in the business?

I’m aware of who most of them are. A lot of them are sober, but don’t work a program. I was talking to a comic who has 25 years sober, but hasn’t been to a meeting in four. That’s what we call a dry drunk. You may not be drinking anymore, but your behaviors haven’t changed and you’re just white-knuckling it. Personally, I’ve found that a lot of people who white-knuckle it and don’t go to meetings are miserable.

The problem is that most people don’t see this as a disease. If you have diabetes, you take medication. Doing things like having a sponsor and helping other people is my medication and if I don’t do it, I get sick.

Is doing stand-up part of your way of helping others and being in service?

It is in a way, but if I perform at a recovery show and get paid for it, then it’s a fine line. I think that service can be something as simple as helping someone carry bags to their car. My sponsor told me that just smiling to someone and saying “have a nice day” is all part of that. Whenever I help other people, I get out of myself and am 100 percent happier.

We spoke last year with comedian Mark Lundholm, who said that comics who weren’t in recovery typically didn’t do well performing in recovery shows. Do you feel the same way?

I’ve seen people not in recovery do very well at those kinds of shows. I don’t think it’s impossible, but the material has to be tailored. Obviously talking about getting drunk wouldn’t be good. But when it’s an addict performing, it’s often funnier because they get it and can relate to the audience from their own perspective. 

But I truly do believe there’s no better audience than people in recovery because they really just need to laugh. You have to laugh at your past. It’s traumatic at first, but then you go, “that was fucking ridiculous. I used to look out of a peephole for six hours when I was on cocaine.” But when people come up to me after those shows and say something like, “I just got sober and I haven’t laughed that hard in so long,” that’s what I love. It’s an amazing feeling.

McCarton Ackerman has been a regular contributor to The Fix since 2011. He last wrote about Bad Grandpas.