Path to Ambivalence
People who are stuck in life, are often ambivalent. They want two things, but can’t have both. They are in conflict. But this broken path, or cross-roads
paralysis can so easily lead to real failure in life – failure to become happy
and fulfilled, to achieve life purpose, to do the things most important and
stop doing those things that block pursuit of one’s core values. It’s kind of like an addiction.
Ambivalence and Addiction
One of the most problematic issues confronting our society, most every society in
the world, is addiction – a clear path to personal, social and spiritual
breakdown and failure. Addiction may be
defined and understood as a relatively compulsive pattern of behavior, which
may or may not include substance use, that is both self- and other-destructive,
and appears to reflect a loss of personal control and free choice. Yet, most all addicts would tell you that
there is an important part of them that doesn’t want to be under the control of
a substance or uncontrollable behavior.
They are just plain stuck.
When we think of addiction, we picture hard drugs, like heroin, cocaine, and
methamphetamine, but cannot forget alcohol.
Then there is the costly “war” on drugs, many believe unwinnable, that
we have been waging for so many years.
So many lives lost or ruined, families destroyed, accidents caused,
could have been prevented. Or could
they?
Some believe that when the drug takes over, so to speak, in a person’s life and
body, that he or she loses control, loses will power, the ability to choose to
use or not. Out of this kind of thinking, personal responsibility has passed
over a threshold. They can no longer be held completely accountable. For example, it is common to hear the alcohol
dependent person, the “alcoholic,” to declare that he has a disease (indeed it
is a dis-ease) and cannot really be held responsible for what he does when
drinking or drunk, or even for this ability to stop drinking after just a
single drink. This is called the loss-of-control hypothesis.
We see the same sort of thinking around many “behavioral addictions” such as
gambling, smoking, eating, and pornography.
Similarly, the “loss of control” hypothesis is tapped to explain
personally harmful behavior here as well.
But is it true? Considerable clinical
research as well as anecdotal evidence suggests the answer is a qualified
“no”. It seems that it is not that a
person actually loses personal control, can no longer choose their behavior or
exert will-power after a certain point in their behavior or drug intake. Rather, the individual may lose the ability
to predict their subsequent behavior. In
other words, the drinker may sometimes be able to only have a drink or two one
time as planned, but another time becomes drunk after many drinks. The addictive gambler may only gamble for a
short time on one occasion (thinking she does not therefore have a problem),
but on another occasions, doesn’t seem to be able to stop, and stays all
night.
What to do
For a long time we in the clinical addictions treatment field, were relatively
ineffective in helping (or, better, forcing) them to change. Some of the drugs we tried to use, to break
dependence on certain drugs, caused addiction of their own (e.g. Librium, a
powerful tranquilizer, was first used to treat alcoholism. But then it led to
its own addiction). Hospitalizations
worked during the time the addict was under 24 hour care and surveillance, but
once the person was back home, the addictive behavior all too frequently
returned. Programs were imposed on
people, and even if they worked, when the program was no longer in force, the
addiction was back. In fact, most
addicts relapsed within 30 to 90 days.
It was a bleak picture. It was time for a change, for different approach
maybe.
Motivation the Key
A paradigm shift happened, and is still ongoing, in the addictions treatment
field not too many years ago. We began
to view addictive, and even problematic behavior choices in general, as related
more to motivational rather than to physical or psychological addiction
processes. Research showed that even the
most chronic and severe addicts always retained the power to choose, to decide,
and to change. But they were stuck at
the decision point of: “should I change, do I want to change, do I need to
change, is it important to change, would I like to change, would it be better
to change than to stay the way I am now, who am I?” We found that no matter the problem or
compulsive behavior, or even substance dependence, motivation was the key, and
individuals could be significantly helped by working with them to build up
their own motivational strength and self-efficacy rather than imposing a
program on them. So we began to provide motivational science training (Miller
& Rollnick, Motivational Interviewing, 2002, Guilford Press; www.motivationalinterview.org) to addictions counselors, and now many others
in the helping and life coach/counseling professions who work with those who
are stuck in various life trials and places (e.g. physicians, nurses,
psychologists, marriage counselors, probations and corrections officers, social
workers, ministers, pastoral counselors, business consultants, etc.). The results have been impressive enough in
addictions that this motivational counseling approach is often the treatment of
choice, while very promising results are found in a number of other counseling
areas.
Expansion of Motivational Science to Life Purpose Coaching and Personal Change.
The Path2Success program is a new program for life of purpose coaching and change.
It is the first to employ the same motivational science and application that
has been proven so successful in the treatment and recovery of some of the most
severe addictions. Path2Success4me has
been designed and validated on those who may need to make, or could be
interested in changes in their life paths – who want to find ways out of their
previous life paths that have failed to fully satisfy or fulfill their
desires. As such, Path2Success4me
addresses in a systematic way the places of ambivalence, where the individual
is stuck in life, conducts a deep heart analysis of what he or she really wants
to do, is called or gifted to do in life, creates an efficient and powerful
change/action plan, engages and maintains the new paths and goals through
personal accountability strategies, and ultimately provides training in
leadership to pass these life benefits and strategies on to others in their
lives.
If it Works with Addicts Why Not with Us?
Path2Success4Me is potentially for everyone who wants more fulfillment out of their own life,
who is looking for or needing life purpose transformation. It’s for all of us who have made New Year’s
Resolutions that have been cast into the sea of forgotten or failed attempts,
it is for those adults who want more out of life, for those parents who would
like to introduce their wandering teens or young adults to a program that could
launch them into true life purpose, and even for those retirees who want a new
direction, who aren’t ready to just stop living passionately. It’s for you and me.
Path2Success, Motivation, Purpose-Transformation and Life Change
The Path2Success4Me program is based on a scientifically-validated motivational
interview and life coaching process that promotes powerful life transformation.
As such, it represents a relatively unique process that launches people into a
discovery of an ultimate path to new life potential and purposes, while helping
to answer the question of “how to
change your life.”
But Path2Success is not a “safe” program (though the process is quite safe). It is a program that brings about
change. Especially, life change is
risky, maybe even a bit scary. Indeed,
Path2Success4Me.com will shake things up and shake things loose in a person’s
life and purpose. It starts with a deep
heart examination, which opens up new opportunity for forgotten goals and life
values reformation, greater self worth and self confidence. Individuals who complete the program are
gently guided through their reformed and recalibrated path to achieving new
personal objectives beyond their previously restricted scope and envisioning.
The final stages of this life change process includes strong positive
encouragement and accountability programming, thus enabling participants to
build a daily checklist to manage their life the way they want it to be
fulfilled.