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EasterJoy
Guest
What I am saying, though, is that while a drug may give a desired result - i.e. the patient keeps appoints and does what he is supposed to do - that doesn’t mean the drug is good nor does it mean that the person could not have come to do those things without it. I am not talking just pure will power here. I am talking a person realizing their need for God, their inability do it themselves and their need for grace. What you describe sounds more like a fallen human being than a person with a mental disorder.
And AA does realize this in calling each person to recognize their need for a “high Power.”
Pax Christi tecum.
What I am saying, though, is that while a drug may give a desired result - i.e. the patient keeps appoints and does what he is supposed to do - that doesn’t mean the drug is good nor does it mean that the person could not have come to do those things without it. I am not talking just pure will power here. I am talking a person realizing their need for God, their inability do it themselves and their need for grace. What you describe sounds more like a fallen human being than a person with a mental disorder.
And AA does realize this in calling each person to recognize their need for a “high Power.”
Pax Christi tecum.
I don’t think you understand what psychiatric drugs are intended to do. A lot of people don’t, including some people who try them.But you’re taking about the will here and at times moral decisions. If a person continually fails in what they should do, we shouldn’t necessarily say they need a drug. They may need to persevere, work on understanding God’s mercy more and work on growing in their spiritual life. If you were talking about only confused thoughts, hearing things, etc. then I can see but when we start to talk about moral issues or just decision making, I wonder…
Pax Christi tecum.
There isn’t a drug that makes you want to get out of bed and go to work every single day of your life. There isn’t a drug that will keep you from turning on the ballgame when what you should be doing is cleaning out the garage.
There are drugs that will allow you to see that your life is worth living, when you were in a physical state where you could no more see that than you could see through walls. Having the ability–not the experience, but the ability–to see that life is worth living is the normal functioning of the human body. It is totally desirable that there be medications that can restore the physical component of that ability when it has been lost.
There are also drugs that can take a person with ADD and give them the ability–not the desire, the ability–to focus on a task. You cannot give a person with ADD a drug that will cure them by itself. It only provides the physical basis they need in order to learn how to pull off the activities of daily life in a reliable manner. They still have to actually decide to do it, by an act of will, just like everybody else.
Again…a person who has these problems cannot assume their problem is physical. It may not be. But if the problem has not responded to sustained and honest effort, if, for instance, a child has been placed in a structured environment, given not just the tools that a normal child needs but the extra structure that a person with ADD needs, and still they can’t get it together enough to learn–then there comes a time when the option of psychiatric intervention is worth exploring.
Don’t get me wrong. Prescription medications have side-effects and draw-backs. If they can be done without, so much the better. But they do have their place, and they’re not a crutch or an excuse. A patient who thinks they are is in for a rude awakening.