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"Dr. Butkins played an integral part in my recovery from alcoholism and drug addiction. He provided me with knowledge about the disease of addiction and taught me how to overcome the triggers that would lead me to go out and use or drink. Dr. Butkins is a very knowledgeable, respectable, and professional counselor. He truly cares for his clients and you can tell from the minute you first meet him that he is a man who has genuine concern for the addict and is willing to do what it takes to help you. I am forever grateful to Dr. Butkins for teaching and giving me the tools necessary to maintain my recovery from alcohol and substance abuse." John - Orlando, FL January 2009
“I met Dr. Butkins when I went to a counseling session with my alcoholic husband about 2.5 years ago. He is a highly skilled professional and is very knowledgeable on the disease of alcoholism and its affect upon the families of alcoholics. When we met, I was sick with worry and fear, angry, and unhappy. Living each day in fear of what awful thing would happen next, both my mental and physical health were beginning to suffer. When my husband went off to a rehabilitation center, I continued to see Dr. Butkins. As he challenged my thinking and attitudes and encouraged me to recognize and deal with my feelings, my mind began to open and allow me to look at life situations and the disease of alcoholism in ways that would never have occurred to me on my own. He sent me to Al-Anon where I found other people affected by a loved one’s alcoholism that were working the 12 Steps and willing to help me in my recovery. Today, there is less worry and fear in my life and more serenity. I know that Dr. Butkins’ skill, wisdom, and compassion guided me to this better way of living. I will be forever grateful.”Karen, Lake Mary, Florida
"Dr. Pete probably saved my life 7 months ago when I came to him in October, 2005. He has a great talent in evaluating problems and making you aware of them. He has helped me turn my life around and helped me see things about myself that I have been able to work on; he also helped me help others. It is the best money I have spent in many years. Thank you for being there for me." Richard A. March, 2006 "Dr. Butkins has been treating me since I was in middle school; later on at 19, (he helped me again) I had to see someone I felt comfortable with. He talks to me like a friend, not a doctor. I choose him over any other (counselor) because I look forward to seeing him; he’s just like one of my own friends. He’s very real, but not in your face;he doesn’t sugarcoat, but he’s very understanding and kind. He will help you make progress through anything and leave you feeling better than when you came in." Jerry K. April 2006 "Dr. Butkins is the best thing that ever happened to me. I would have been dead a long time ago if it were not for him. I drank way too much and wanted to die. He has brought me through a lot; because of him I can handle anything and I love myself today." Janie D. April, 2006
"Dr. Peter Butkins has provided much needed support and direction during emotional turmoil in my life." Ken H. - Longwood, FL April, 2006
"Dr. Butkins is an amazing guy. He has helped me so very much. When I first came to him I was ready to give up on life. With his help and guidance I pulled myself up. I’m now accepting a full paid scholarship to Stetson. Dr. Butkins saved my life. Thanks for everything." Ann A. - Orlando, FL April, 2006
How to Help Your Teen - Drugs and/or Alcohol Drinking
Written by bob Butkins
Monday, 09 October 2006 02:49
When Your Teen Wants Help- How You Can Help Them!
Good recovery is characterized by recognition of the drug problem and a commitment to abstinence. The best vehicle is a twelve-step program,such NA. These can be found in almost any community in the USA today. Remember you can't get him or her sober. The shift in parental thinking has to be to provide good parenting but let the child benefit from others' successful recovery. You will see the change in your child as you change and begin to develop via YOUR meetings and involvement in YOUR program of recovery. As parents, we are committed to helping our chilren. When drugs are involved the rules change. We have to allow them to get out of denial, a long process to accomplish fully, and then heal and become redirected. The damage done by the drugs usually affected all areas, mental, emotional, physical, family, relationships, legal, career, and financial to some point. It may take quite a bit of time to see this once the person is abstinent.
It will take time to get on a spiritual path and this is usually a path that is the opposite of the former path - the drug path. Your child will have a civil war going on with conflicting drives to both stay clean and recover and also go back to using. Accompanying this are triggers, cravings and peer pressure within a drug society. You may hope beyond hope and not see the return to using because you desperately want to see him or her be successful. Your attendance will keep you out of denial and help you to cope with your pain. You and the family are up against a unified force and must be equally unified. You can lead the way but you can't force anyone to get clean and sober. Choose your battles. Don't try to change every behavior all at once. Let the child get into good enough recover and with motivated peers in recovery so that his motivation will come back.
Choose about three behaviors - no drugs, curfew, and home chores. These are examples and also the ones I suggest. You have to tolerate behaviors that are almost unacceptable and realize that your child will make better decisions eventually if you model good sense, tolerance and patience with him or her. School, cleanliness in his or her room should be secondary to drug freedom. A good foundation is necessary to continued recover. This involves a simple yet clear approach from the parents. Enforce consequences, let them/encourage them to attend recovery meetings - the most important being NA. You can tell if your child is progressing when the family is attending their meetings and the child can communicate with you, is drug free as seen from a urinalysis, wants to attend NA, has recovering friends, has the recovery books (AA's Big Book, NA's Text...) and reads the literature, attends recovery functions and talks recovery. The old behaviors mean that he or she is probably using - sneaking out, having a consistent sarcastic, angry attitude, not caring, legal problems, lying... Realize that there is a three-year period that must pass and that will let you know that the teen is on the right path. This is enough time to turn things around and develop the thinking and habits that will maximize the chances for continued good recovery. It's not about abstinence only. Good actions and a positive lifestyle characterize good recovery, being family and community oriented and spiritually fit. This is also true for the family. You can lead your child to this level of recovery. You can't do it for him or her. One of the greatest benefits of NARanon is to realize that you can't control your child but you can parent. The need for control is strong in most human beings, especially when things are so out of control. This does not mean that you have to be out of control. Learn what you can control and what you can't. Twelve-step meetings help us to cope with the powerlessness when we see relapse or seeming failure. Watch that you don't act out on this anger, disappointment or feelings that you have failed. Remember that recovery is a process and takes time. The key is to be strong parents and enforce those three clear and simple rules (always go back to this model) when behavior returns to drug behavior. Avoid the position that you have to do instruct, nag, preach, become preoccupied, be right or have the last word. Target only three behaviors (rules) and enforce these all the way. Let the other issues go unless they are life threatening. Remember that dramatics are part of the family dynamic. Try to minimize this. That mind set is too controlling. This takes a team effort. Strengthen your team. However, you can do it with him or her. This means going to your twelve-step meetings and leading the way to higher development, not in the sense of "fixing" them but to resolve your pain - the disappointment, anger at the teen and your spouse or other children or in-laws... The answer lies in family recovery. Be strong and confident enough to realize the feelings that have accumulated and be committed to heal. Follow a twelve-step path because it was designed for you for this purpose. Try/commit to the path that has worked for hundreds of thousands. All of those people can't be wrong. You are your child's role model. Model common sense and good recovery.
Last Updated ( Monday, 03 November 2008 16:55 )
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