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Recovery

Lady in Red

Image by Kopfjäger via Flickr

Make your reservation now!

School has started, the Fall is upon us, we are back at work with questions about just what to do with Impulsivity.

Impulsivity is, without doubt, the most frequent challenge in our daily lives – for mental health professionals, teachers, HR professionals, physicians, and anyone working with administrative challenges. Impulsivity works against administration, works against group order, works against progress – and can be downright embarrassing.

Want a recent example of Impulsivity? Lay your politics aside for a moment, and simply ask yourself this question – was it a productive contribution when Rep Joe Wilson shouted out “You lie!” at Obama’s Joint Session of Congress? No matter what you think of national health care take a look at this guy, and see which side you are on regarding good order.

Affect mismanagement, emotional dysregulation – loosing it - creates havoc in families, work sites and the world, locally and internationally. Someone’s impulsivity has impacted your life. Impulsivity, from anger to suicide, destroys both the self and relationships. Impulsivity is the hallmark of poor management and atypical of balanced leadership – just ask Jack Welch,  or read his book on Leadership.

Was Wilson’s outburst ‘just a quirk?’ Who knows… Was it a problem, you bet! – And no, I will not conjecture about his prefrontal cortex.

Wilson’s interruption, his inappropriate shout during a presidential speech,  is but a small example of a seriously overlooked problem we see everyday in any group setting. So often we write impulsivity off as ‘character,’ or ‘passion,’ or ‘immaturity,’ even with adults!

- Reminds me of a person in advertising who still lives by the adage “You’re only young once, but you can be immature for a lifetime.” He manages to live up to that creed, and has torn up his family in the process. There is a price for immaturity. There is, my friends, a biology for both impulsivity and immaturity.

The Impulsive Brain – Details on exactly what it is, why it is, and how to fix it.

If you live anywhere in the Norfolk, Va Beach, DC or Richmond area, [anywhere on the East Coast] and work in the context of human services you will appreciate this opportunity at Norfolk’s Old Dominion University to look more carefully at new brain and behavioral insights into the problem of Impulsivity.

  • I will be presenting 1 full day of details there on Fri Oct 16th, just around the corner in time.
  • ODU Registration has a discounted rate for groups, and a low fee for these challenging times
  • 6 hr CEU & 6 hr CME,
  • The fix will detail the latest in diagnostic evidence regarding Impulsivity, and
  • Details about the right meds and
  • The new process of actually measuring neurotransmitters to target specific interventions
  • New advances in ADHD treatment
  • New insights into Brain Injury
  • Specific interventions for Bipolar Disorder
  • The Biologic Contributions to Addiction Recovery.
  • Without getting away from bottom line street applications.

If you can’t use it, I won’t be dwelling on it. Translation, street language and concepts are the key to informed intervention strategies.

Please forward this to your colleagues and friends and let’s make a day of it.

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—>Tweet this post below! For ADHD Medications: Download complimentary white paper Precise Solutions now, – and get ready for the complete version of ‘The Patient’s Guide’ details to follow. Get Neurotransmitter Details Here

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Tambo RiverImage via WikipediaRecovery is about running the RAPIDS – and getting unstuck.

If you are interested in the recovery process [drugs, alcohol, relationships, 'workaholism'] or if you simply are interested in adult development on any level, you may be interested to better understand your own life's river running, and your own reaction to ever changing reality.

I recently finished an article on river running – short form – from a RAPIDS chapter of my book Deep Recovery published in '92.  More in a minute-

Truth be known, I wrote Deep Recovery in the process of trying to figure myself out – after a very disappointing work experience with an insecure boss with a completely vertical management system: He lead meetings by repeatedly screaming "I'm the boss!!" Does that sound vertical?

Shortly after that debacle I found myself midst many drug addicts and and alcoholics [where I worked on the unit!] – with counselors who essentially shouted the same vertical management axioms – "You're nothing but an alcoholic!!" – 'spirituality' run amok.

You already know I hate reductionistic – time-bound labels as they encourage limited thinking – and no matter what else we do as professionals, we cannot suffer any health delivery process that bonds on reductionistic thinking, label madness. Yes, labels are helpful, but humans are more complex.

The article is over here at: Recovery, Living and Reality – Shooting the RAPIDS of Life

Enjoy,
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—>Tweet this post below! For ADHD Medications: Download complimentary white paper Precise Solutions now, – and get ready for the complete version of ‘The Patient’s Guide’ details to follow. Get Neurotransmitter Details Here

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Watching Your Brain Leave: A Neuroscientist Reports on Her Stroke

April 9, 2008 Brain/Body Evidence

Taylor “had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke.

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John O’Donohue: Irish Poet Interviewed by Krista Tippett

March 23, 2008 Deep Recovery

Spring Perspectives: Listen to Krista Tippett of NPR Discuss Time and Change with Irish Poet John O’Donohue, one of his last interviews

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PsychoTherapy Networker & IITAP: From Isolation to Connections

March 19, 2008 Brain Injury

Two Meetings, both with similar themes and with many innovative new directions: International Institute for Trauma and Addiction Professionals in Scottsdale – hosted by recovery luminary and international addiction expert Pat Carnes PhD, and his remarkable team – and Psychotherapy Networker >3000 attendees at the Shoreham in DC – hosted by Rich Simon PhD, editor and hundreds of dedicated volunteers…. Both echoed a common theme: the evolution from isolation to connections and real relationships within the treatment community.

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The Neuroscience of Sexual Addiction: Carnes Leads the Way

March 1, 2008 Beyond ADHD

Patrick Carnes and Team Raise the Bar for Addiction Medicine and Recovery: Brain Evidence Enters the Evaluation and Recovery Process

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Every Brain in Any Recovery: Another Reportable Oversight

January 19, 2008 Beyond ADHD

Everyone here at CorePsych knows that brain function is often overlooked – and nowhere is it more frequently overlooked than in the recovery process – not just recovery from drugs and alcohol, but from any addictive, compulsive, repetitive process, from food to sex.

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ADD/ADHD Treatment Notes: More on Vyvanse

November 12, 2007 Beyond ADHD

Vyvanse offers considerable benefits over the best seller Adderall, but you have to know just a few points to get it right.

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Deeper Recovery: Time, Beyond Labels

March 7, 2007 Deep Recovery

Codependency: Has limited Useful Applications. Let’s go a bit deeper.
Been around the recovery crowd so long, I get a bit tense about labels. The reason is simple, but complex:
Labels [almost always] do not honor the concept of *applied time.* Time brings in the larger concept of *function* [over time] and tracks change and direction. Recovery, [...]

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Deep Recovery: Beyond Labels

March 5, 2007 Deep Recovery

Recovery is a workable and understandable process, a grid to leave behind drugs, alcohol, and dependent relationships. Yes, I may carry on about managed care, the FDA, and the misuse of psych meds, but little drives me up to the bullhorn as quickly as the subject of recovery. Ironically the recovery process remains one of [...]

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