Sunday, June 25, 2017


Need Help For Drug/Alcohol Dependence? Contact The RIR Media Partners 

We Are Not A Treatment Program or Advocacy Group  - Rockers In Recovery® - Radio & Productions (RIR) is a addiction recovery media based organization with the sole purpose to provide prevention and education information to anyone who suffers with drug addiction/alcoholism. We do it through music, news, events,festivals taking place within and not limited to the clean and sober community and our Recovery Media Partners. 

RIR invites you to contact each RECOVERY MEDIA PARTNER and see who you're most comfortable with. The list of providers can be found @ Corporate Partners & Detox and Treatment Services.


STAY CONNECTED
Like us on Facebook    Follow us on Twitter    View our profile on LinkedIn    
Rockers In Recovery® - Media, 9301 NE 2nd Ave, Miami Shores, FL 33138
Sent by lori@rockersinrecovery.com in collaboration with
Why You Shouldn't Use the Word "Addict"
compassion in addiction

Addiction is a disease.

It's important that we use language that frames it as a health issue and shows respect to people with an addiction and to their families who are impacted. Just like we would with any other disease, like diabetes or asthma.

A person shouldn’t be defined or labeled by his or her disease or illness, it is something they have. For example: Instead of calling someone a “diabetic,” it’s preferable to use person-first language and say “someone with diabetes.” The same goes with the word “addict.”

We have a choice when we communicate. We can use words that perpetuate the negative stigma around substance use – words that label people with an addiction in a negative, shameful and judgmental way. Or we can use words that are compassionate, supportive and respectful – words that helps others understand substance use disorder as the health issue that it is.

By choosing to rethink and reshape our language, we will allow people with an addiction to more easily regain their self-esteem and more comfortably seek treatment, allow lawmakers to appropriate funding, allow doctors to deliver better treatment, allow insurers to increase coverage of evidence-based treatment and help the public understand this is a medical condition and should be treated as such.

The Associated Press recently took an important step to stop using stigmatizing language toward people struggling with a substance use disorder, recognizing that words have power. We invite you to do the same.

We've assembled a brief list of words and phrases to avoid and words to use in their place. Together, with a unified language, we can help reshape the landscape and end the negative stereotypes and stigma of addiction. And by doing so, we can remove barriers that continue to hold back too many people from the lifesaving treatment they need.
Read the List of Words to Avoid



Image
Parent Toll-Free Helpline1-855-DRUGFREE
drugfree.org

© Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
352 Park Ave South | 9th Floor | New York, NY 10010
 

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Jonathan Shaw on the Redemptive Power of Storytelling | The Fix

Jonathan Shaw on the Redemptive Power of Storytelling | The Fix: 'I remember a sponsor handing me a pencil early in my recovery and telling me, 'Say hello to God.' We had no idea that would eventually spawn over ten published books.'

Ten Harrowing Music Videos About Addiction | The Fix

Ten Harrowing Music Videos About Addiction | The Fix: Henley's 'The Boys of Summer' video reminds me that sometimes we’re best at remembering things we’d rather forget.

The Parallels Between Synthetic Opiates and High Fructose Corn Syrup | The Fix

The Parallels Between Synthetic Opiates and High Fructose Corn Syrup | The Fix: Like corn syrup, is the structure of synthetic opioids as much to blame for their consequences as the large-scale promotions behind them?

New Grateful Dead Documentary Examines Jerry Garcia's Relationship with Heroin | The Fix

New Grateful Dead Documentary Examines Jerry Garcia's Relationship with Heroin | The Fix: '[Jerry was] a complicated, creatively talented and unconventional person...he had an equal proclivity for transcendence and self-destruction.”

Eight Was Too Much: The Tragic Legacy of a Hit Sitcom | The Fix

Eight Was Too Much: The Tragic Legacy of a Hit Sitcom | The Fix: Is Hollywood to blame? For even the healthiest young person, the combination of too much money and too much fame can be toxic.
Image
TAKE ACTION

TAKE ACTION: Sign the Petition to Ensure Coverage for Addiction Treatment
Bill WIlliams2
“What became William’s fatal overdose occurred four days after his being denied in-patient detox as ‘not medically necessary.’ Would obtaining Parity Act intervention immediately upon his denial have resulted in a lifesaving admission? We’ll never know.”
Margot Head and Bill Williams tragically lost their son, Will, to an overdose in 2012. They, like millions of families, struggled to get insurance coverage for treatment. And those same families, at a time of crisis, are uncertain of their rights and coverage available to them under the 2008 Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.
Families are being denied coverage, including medication for treatment and individualized care, which they are entitled to under the law. Families face roadblocks at every turn in navigating the treatment process. Help us change this broken system and save lives.
Sign the Petition Today


Image
Parent Toll-Free Helpline1-855-DRUGFREE
drugfree.org

© Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
352 Park Ave South | 9th Floor | New York, NY 10010
 
New Guided Meditation CD is Now Available!
Experience the power of being guided on a walk through the WFS 13 Statements. You will be led through a series of visualizations that will strengthen your understanding of each affirmation. After this session it will be easy to apply the statements to your own life. You will receive a visual treasure to associate with each of the foundational statements of WFS and the New Life Program. Your life will be Transformed!
Recorded in 2017 by Ginger Rathert.
[1 Hour in length]
$14.95 for one...
2 for $25.00
3 or more: $10.00 ea.
Women for Sobriety, Inc. | P.O. Box 618Quakertown, PA 18951-0618
Unsubscribe recoveryfriends@gmail.com
Update Profile | About our service provider
Sent by contact@womenforsobriety.org in collaboration with
Trusted Email from Constant Contact - Try it FREE today.
Try it free today