Dealings,
I would make sure you have 6 months to maybe a year of "sobriety" before I'd file. And remember there are several things you need to keep in mind here:
1.) You do need to get to the "underlying" cause ... most likely there are many and most likely this is a never-ending journey. There usually is no one cause. There are probably many--from genetics and brain functioning to family issues and emotional underdevelopment.
2.) You also just need to stop even before you fully heal from the "underlying" cause .... because
3.) With a long-ingrained habit, getting at the "underlying" cause doesn't mean you have beaten or undermined the addiction/compulsion. One cause of addiction is years of indulging the addiction! The ingrained habit is its own cause. That's why addictions and compulsions are so horrible. It's not that if I revisit some childhood injury, I can beat this; it's more like you revisit a childhood issue/trauma and you get at why you started the addiction, why you were vulnerable to it.
4.) I want to enourage you--you can beat this damaging and destructive habit, but I don't want you to underestimate the work involved. One bit of faulty (though seemingly reasonable) logic is to think that once you address the abuse/pain/suffering/deprivation, etc., you can beat the habit. Not that simple.
5.) And yes, I speak from experience.
I would make sure you have 6 months to maybe a year of "sobriety" before I'd file. And remember there are several things you need to keep in mind here:
1.) You do need to get to the "underlying" cause ... most likely there are many and most likely this is a never-ending journey. There usually is no one cause. There are probably many--from genetics and brain functioning to family issues and emotional underdevelopment.
2.) You also just need to stop even before you fully heal from the "underlying" cause .... because
3.) With a long-ingrained habit, getting at the "underlying" cause doesn't mean you have beaten or undermined the addiction/compulsion. One cause of addiction is years of indulging the addiction! The ingrained habit is its own cause. That's why addictions and compulsions are so horrible. It's not that if I revisit some childhood injury, I can beat this; it's more like you revisit a childhood issue/trauma and you get at why you started the addiction, why you were vulnerable to it.
4.) I want to enourage you--you can beat this damaging and destructive habit, but I don't want you to underestimate the work involved. One bit of faulty (though seemingly reasonable) logic is to think that once you address the abuse/pain/suffering/deprivation, etc., you can beat the habit. Not that simple.
5.) And yes, I speak from experience.
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