I could give you a technical definition of
addiction, a theoretical one, one which might satisfy someone who writes
dictionaries … or I could stay on the side of artists. Keats wrote about
addiction, I could say, or Lou Reed, Sylvia Plath or Clarice Lispector.
I could
offer you some thinkers: Derrida? Avital Ronell? Or maybe you’d like to talk
about how somebody could become addicted to TV, Facebook, buttons, stamps,
clothes, pets? We could talk about the
Buddha or Simon Cowell.
What exactly is addiction?
Somewhere between
the sublime and the banal I’d think there was an answer. Perhaps that’s why we addicts
have our highs and lows, doing the same thing twice and always expecting a
different result. No. Addiction’s a grind, a killer, a slow drawing out of one
last breath. Addiction is stepping off a cliff and imagining I might fly, only
nothing as dramatic as that. It’s sitting in a room that never pleases me, the
walls contracting, like being in a bad dream.
In addiction there are similar moves. If you
know it you can watch the same game play out with different players. I watch a
football match in London or in Tokyo and I know straight away it’s the same
kind of thing. The differences, of course, are the reasons I might keep
watching. I work with addicts because of the people involved. I work with addicts
because of a disease that runs through us, between us.
Addiction is the relationship you’re stuck
with. Needles, bottles, high heels, cards, lipstick. Is this starting to sound
glamorous? It usually does, in the beginning. Fear, obsession, denial, deceit,
expectations, projection, isolation, compulsion, control, self-centredness,
shame and resentment. Are you living in that?
It’s a repetition - and everything starts with repetition, from learning to tie
my shoelaces to writing my name. But what if I can’t let go of the lace or stop
signing my name, everywhere, on everything. Because I can’t.
So, what do you make of addiction?
About Tom
Tom Tomaszewski- Clinical Director at Charter Harley Street BA (Hons), PGCE, PGDip Psychotherapy (Kent), Grad Cert Group Analysis (IGA Birkbeck), MBACP, FDAP(accred), ISPS member . Tom has worked as a counsellor and psychotherapist at CHARTER for the
last four years. He is an experienced group therapist and holds a
Graduate Certificate in Group Analysis from the Institute of Group
Analysis in addition to post graduate diplomas in Psychotherapy and Education.
Charter Harley Street ....Recovery For Life
15 Harley Street, London W1G 9QQ
+44 (0) 207 323 4970 info@charterharleystreet.com
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