Psychotherapy With Group

When selecting a psychotherapeutic approach for a client, you must consider the unique needs and characteristics of that particular client. The same is true when selecting a psychotherapeutic approach for groups. Not every approach is appropriate for every group, and the group’s unique needs and characteristics must be considered. For this Assignment, you examine psychotherapeutic approaches to group therapy for addiction.

In a 3-page paper, address the following:

  • Identify the psychotherapeutic approach that the group facilitator is using and explain why she might be using this approach.
  • Determine whether or not you would use the same psychotherapeutic approach if you were the counselor facilitating this group and justify your decision.
  • Identify an alternative approach to group therapy for addiction and explain why it is an appropriate option.
  • Support your position with evidence-based literature.

PLs use this references with any additional one of ur choice

References

Wheeler, K. (Ed.). (2014). Psychotherapy for the advanced practice psychiatric nurse: A how-to guide for evidence-based practice. New York, NY: Springer.

Chapter 16, “Psychotherapeutic Approaches for Addictions and Related Disorders” (pp. 565–596)

Laureate Education (Producer). (2013d). Levy family: Sessions 1-7 [Video file]. Baltimore, MD; Author.

Allyn & Bacon (Producer). (2000). Motivational interviewing [Video file]. Mill Valley, CA: Psychotherapy.net

00:00 CARLSON: Welcome to our program on addictions. 00:03 Today we’ll be talking to William Miller about 00:06 Motivational interviewing. 00:08 Judy, what kind of a contribution has this approach 00:11 made to the field of addictions? 00:14 LEWIS: It’s only revolutionized it, that’s 00:16 all-I think because as counselors as therapists we’re 00:20 accustomed to working with clients in a way that’s 00:23 respectful, collaborative we’re used to the idea of 00:27 working with clients to agree on what should be the goals 00:32 and the treatment plan. 00:33 And now I think, finally, people feel as though they 00:36 have permission and some backing to use these same 00:39 kinds of attitudes when they’re working with 00:42 addictions clients. 00:43 And so many people just use this at the beginning- this 00:46 empathy, respect. 00:49 Dr. Miller’s approach uses these conditions and focuses 00:52 on these conditions throughout the treatment process, and 00:55 really helps people move from this ambivalent state into the 01:00 state of really wanting to bring about self-change. 01:02 Yeah, exactly. 01:03 Let’s bring out Dr. Miller, and learn about this approach. 01:05 Bill, welcome. 01:11 LEWIS: Hi. 01:13 Bill, could we start out getting a general overview of 01:18 your revolutionary approach? 01:21 MILLER: I don’t know that it’s revolutionary, but often, in 01:26 the addiction field, the model has been you need to put 01:28 something into the person, or change them, or convince them, 01:32 or confront them and this is more of a 01:34 drawing-out-of-the-person approach. 01:36 And you mentioned ambivalence just a moment ago-it’s a place 01:41 where people get stuck. 01:42 They want to, they don’t want to. 01:44 And they have trouble moving off that space. 01:46 This is a way of helping people to resolve that 01:49 ambivalence and move on toward behavior change. 01:53 It’s both client-centered and directive, which is an odd 01:57 combination in some folks’ minds but very interested in 02:01 the person’s own perspective very concerned with how they 02:04 understand things and what they want with their lives. 02:07 And at the same time, it’s not just following the person it’s 02:10 moving the person along in the direction of change. 02:15 LEWIS: So you do have an idea about where you hope the 02:19 person will go? 02:21 MILLER: Yes, and that’s the sense in which it’s directive. 02:24 When you’re sitting with a person who’s using crack 02:26 cocaine, you do have an idea about where you’d like them to 02:29 go which is away from that direction. 02:31 That may or may not be where they are at the moment. 02:34 This approach starts with the person where they are but then 02:39 moves them in a direction of healthy change. 02:41 So you hope they’ll move toward healthy change, but you 02:44 recognize that if you try to convince them to move in that 02:47 direction, it wouldn’t be productive. 02:49 It may even do the opposite. 02:51 When a person is ambivalent, they have inside them both 02:55 arguments in a way-the argument toward health, the 02:58 argument toward continuing what they’ve been doing. 03:00 And if you as a counselor take the side of health you leave 03:04 the client the role of arguing against it. 03:06 And the client may indeed talk him- or herself into 03:09 continuing the behavior rather than changing. 03:12 And what we do is almost the opposite of that- is to draw 03:16 out of the person their own motivations for change, their 03:19 own desire for health, their own interest in doing 03:22 something different. 03:23 CARLSON: So there is an assumption that people really 03:26 do, at some level, want to be healthy. 03:29 MILLER: Absolutely, yeah-that that’s inherent in the person 03:32 and that they have in them the resources to do that. 03:35 It draws on the person’s inner resources rather than assuming 03:38 that I, as the therapist have the wisdom I need to give them 03:42 to fix them. 03:43 So it’s very democratic in the fact of, given a choice, 03:47 people can find their own best way. 03:49 And that that’s the natural way. 03:51 It’s almost if we don’t get in the way of changing, people 03:54 will move along naturally in that direction. 03:57 CARLSON: How do you conceptualize 03:58 the addiction process? 04:01 MILLER: It’s an interesting one to put together with this 04:02 because addictions are fundamentally ambivalence. 04:06 What are they? 04:07 It’s doing something that’s pleasurable or in some way 04:10 reinforcing even though it’s having adverse consequences. 04:14 And that’s the diagnostic definition of what addictive 04:18 behavior is about, whether it’s gambling or drug abuse or 04:21 whatever it is continuing to do something that’s in one way 04:25 enjoyable and in another way destructive. 04:28 And people who are engaged in those behaviors know both of 04:32 those things. 04:32 It’s not that they don’t know there are negative 04:34 consequences to what they’re doing. 04:35 They’re ambivalent. 04:36 They’re caught in this place of ”I want it and I don’t 04:41 want it,” and that’s where they get stuck. 04:43 Traditional approaches that have been more confrontive 04:47 about addictions have assumed that part of addiction is 04:54 denial and that you need to confront that 04:57 and break it down. 04:58 So you’re seeing the assumptions that we make about 05:01 addictions, I think, a little differently. 05:04 And that grew out of my own experience, really. 05:06 I started working in the addictions field without 05:08 knowing that that was the way you’re supposed to do it, and 05:13 after a couple of years began hearing about this confrontive 05:16 model and I thought, ”Gee, that’s not my experience with 05:18 the people I’ve been working with.” Looked at the research 05:22 on personality and there really is no consistent 05:25 personality associated with addictive behaviors. 05:27 So people don’t walk through the door with all the same 05:32 personality. 05:34 So if the clients in my office are all behaving the same way 05:37 it’s not because they came through the door that way. 05:40 It’s something about the interaction. 05:41 And so it focused me very much on motivation as something 05:45 that happens between two people as a kind of dance in 05:48 which two people engage. 05:50 LEWIS: So what you are saying is that something that the 05:53 counselor or therapist was doing was feeding into this 05:59 sense of the client being in denial. 06:02 MILLER: And the opposite is true, too. 06:04 I mean, I know how to behave as a therapist if l want my 06:07 client to be very resistant and denying and backing away 06:10 from change and that’s to be very directive, very 06:14 confrontive, very teaching. 06:16 If you take a more client-centered approach and 06:19 listen reflectively you find that resistance goes down. 06:23 And there even has been research with counselors 06:25 changing their style every 12 minutes within a session and 06:28 you can see client denial going up and 06:30 down within a session. 06:31 So denial really isn’t a client problem-it’s a 06:34 therapist or an interaction problem. 06:36 CARLSON: Are there some principles or some guidelines 06:40 or steps that underlie your practice. 06:42 MILLER: Well, as a matter of fact, there are five of them. 06:45 And empathy is the first one that Steve Rollnick and I have 06:50 emphasized in that it’s very important to do the very 06:54 things that Carl Rogers was talking about-to listen to 06:58 understand the person’s perspective, to be interested 07:00 in how they see it and to try to get inside that. 07:03 And the skills of reflective listening are very 07:06 much a part of that. 07:07 So that’s one of them. 07:08 So you have to express the empathy-you just can’t be 07:10 there and be empathic. 07:12 It’s got to be fed back some way? 07:14 It’s not a feeling. 07:15 This is a behavior. 07:16 And it’s something that you do. 07:19 And the skills of reflective listening that so many of 07:21 Rogers’ students have talked about are exactly the thing 07:24 that one does there. 07:25 You must be good at that to do Motivational Interviewing 07:28 really can’t do it without that reflective skill. 07:31 So that’s one. 07:31 That’s one. 07:32 And then developing discrepancy is the second one 07:35 where- What does that mean? 07:37 What you’re hoping is that you’ll develop in the client’s 07:40 mind a growing discrepancy between where they are and 07:44 where they want to be. 07:45 So it’s coming to understand what their hopes and goals and 07:48 desires are and then saying, ”How does that fit together 07:52 with crack use or with alcohol use” So many clients really 07:58 think that they are where they want to be until they really 08:00 think about it and realize that there is a real 08:02 discrepancy? 08:03 Until they start talking about it. 08:05 What often happens is a client will think of one reason pro 08:08 and one reason con, and sort of stop thinking about it. 08:11 And this has the person follow the thoughts of, ”What is 08:15 this costing me and why would I want to change” And it’s 08:20 also as much going toward something as 08:21 going away from something. 08:23 Just stopping everything you can do with general anesthesia 08:27 but people are wanting to move toward something. 08:30 And so it’s bringing to life the thing that the person 08:33 wants to move toward and then putting that together with 08:36 their current behavior and saying, ”How does that fit?’ 08:39 It’s goal directed. 08:40 It’s very goal directed, and you’re hoping that in the 08:42 client’s mind, the discrepancy is growing. 08:44 And the more the client describes the difficulties and 08:48 describes what it’s costing them to continue the addiction 08:52 and describing where they would rather be instead the 08:54 more that discrepancy begins to open up. 08:57 CARLSON: Okay. 08:57 What about the third one?

 

09:00 MILLER: Avoiding argument is a piece of that. 09:04 And I alluded to that earlier, that the one thing you don’t 09:07 want to do in this approach is be in the position where 09:10 you’re arguing for change and the client is 09:12 arguing against change. 09:14 It’s a script that any counselor can write. 09:16 Been there, done that. 09:18 That’s right. 09:19 You know how it goes, and you can write the client’s lines 09:22 that are counterarguments. 09:23 So don’t get yourself in that position of arguing with and 09:26 pushing against the client because it actually takes you 09:29 in the other direction. 09:31 MILLER: In the wrong direction, that’s right. 09:33 CARLSON: And what’s the final one? 09:36 MILLER: Well, there are two more, actually. 09:37 One is roll with resistance. 09:39 So rather than arguing or pushing against, when you meet 09:44 what we call resistance and I think actually it’s not a good 09:46 term, I’d like to find a better way of talking about it 09:48 but when the client begins arguing against change, you 09:51 don’t push against that. 09:53 You don’t try to overwhelm it or come up with a brilliant 09:57 counterargument to it but roll with it in very much the 10:00 manner that Satir and Haley and other people have talked 10:03 about in family therapy, and to use the momentum of that to 10:07 then redirect the person in the direction of change. 10:11 And then the last of them is to support self-efficacy which 10:14 has a lot to do with optimism. 10:16 Because if you’ve developed a discrepancy and you’ve caused 10:19 the person to feel like they’re in danger but they 10:23 don’t see anything they can do about it, you really haven’t 10:26 taken them anywhere. 10:27 You’ve just made them distressed. 10:29 So an important piece of it is that it’s possible to change, 10:33 and to hold up that hope. 10:34 CARLSON: So that hope-it seems like that’s a 10:36 real important element. 10:37 MILLER: It is. 10:38 So that’s the five things that we’ve talked about that come 10:41 together to form Motivational Interviewing. 10:44 So you’re hopeful, and ideally the client will be more 10:50 hopeful and have a greater sense of self-efficacy about 10:54 being able to resolve the issue. 10:57 You need to have the hope in you for the clients. 10:59 It’s very contagious. 11:00 There’s a wonderful experiment from 20 years ago in which 11:04 therapists were caused to be particularly optimistic about 11:07 certain clients, who, as it wound up, 11:10 were chosen at random. 11:12 And those clients for whom the therapists had particular hope 11:15 and belief got better at a much higher rate 11:18 than the rest did. 11:19 If we see in the client the possibility of getting better, 11:23 it’s contagious, and it actually draws 11:26 it out of the person. 11:27 CARLSON: That would seem to be so important in this field. 11:29 It is. 11:30 So many of the people who come to us are down and out. 11:32 Yes. 11:33 We see them as down and out. 11:35 They need to borrow your hope for a while. 11:37 In a way, haven’t we sometimes done the opposite of what we 11:41 need to do around self-efficacy? 11:42 MILLER: I think so often, working with addictions 11:45 clients, therapists will focus so much on the negative of the 11:51 problems that are part of the person’s life that they move 11:57 the person away from a sense of self-efficacy 12:00 instead of toward it. 12:01 I think it’s very useful to focus on the positive-on the 12:05 person’s strengths on what they want in their life, on 12:09 the direction that they feel, on their future on what’s been 12:13 good about their past. 12:15 The negative is true enough and most clients know it well 12:18 enough, that they don’t need to be beaten with it. 12:20 MILLER: Yeah. 12:21 Now, the client in this approach is really in charge 12:24 of his or her treatment plan, finally with the therapist 12:29 being an expert consultant at helping with that, but then 12:33 the client is really in charge of deciding on what the 12:37 outcome of the interview should be, right? 12:40 Well, and of course, how could it be otherwise’ We really 12:43 delude ourselves if we say, ”Well, you can’t let a client 12:46 make choices.” Who are we that we can’t let 12:51 someone make choices? 12:52 In the end it is what the client decides to do that 12:55 makes the difference. 12:56 And this simply acknowledges and respects that fact. 12:59 CARLSON: Do you hope for abstinence as your goal? 13:01 Is that your outcome or the outcome that you hope for? 13:04 MILLER: Well, it’s more important for some clients 13:07 than others, certainly. 13:07 There are good data on people for whom abstinence seems like 13:11 the way in which they’re going to make it in the long run, 13:14 and that’s information I share with people. 13:16 So given what I know about them, if they’re hoping for a 13:20 non-abstinence goal and the data tells me they don’t have 13:23 a very good chance of that, I’ll share that information. 13:26 That doesn’t mean that makes the decision for them. 13:28 And I’ll work with them where they are and at least move in 13:31 the right direction. 13:32 The emphasis on harm reduction these days is wise I think-to 13:36 move to less dangerous drugs and less dangerous routes of 13:39 administration. 13:40 So even if they’re not willing to go all the way to what I 13:42 would hope for them I’m willing to help them take 13:45 steps in that direction. 13:47 It’s common for therapists and clients not to 13:50 have the same goal. 13:51 CARLSON: How does this approach work with clients who 13:54 come in with dual diagnosis they have a psychiatric 13:58 problem as well as an addiction problem? 14:02 MILLER: Well, most people with addictions 14:04 have multiple problems. 14:05 I don’t personally care a lot for ”mentally ill” 14:12 dual-diagnosis terms. 14:14 But when you’re heavily involved with alcohol or crack 14:18 or heroin, you’ve got a ton of problems. 14:20 So it’s never as simple as just treating the drug problem 14:23 itself which is one reason why I really encourage mental 14:26 health professionals to be involved in primary treatment 14:31 of addictions, because the very skills that you learn in 14:35 the process of becoming a health professional are 14:37 exactly what you need in the process of treating this. 14:40 This is not a special, secret club that you must be 14:43 initiated into. 14:45 The problems are very much interrelated and interwoven 14:48 with everything else in the person’s life. 14:51 LEWIS: I once heard somebody who was working with both 14:53 mental health clients and addiction clients say that the 14:56 difference in how he approached them is if it was 15:00 any other client he assumed the client was telling the 15:02 truth until he learned he was lying but if it was an 15:05 addiction client he assumed he was lying until he made sure 15:09 he was telling the truth. 15:11 MILLER: Yeah, what’s wrong with this picture’ When you 15:14 look at the way addiction treatment was done 20 years 15:16 ago, at least, it was very harsh confrontational 15:20 therapy-hot seats and so forth. 15:21 We wouldn’t do that to anybody else. 15:23 And that’s not a part of the way in which you would treat 15:26 depression or battle with distress or anxiety disorders. 15:29 We’ve somehow reserved the very harsh treatment believing 15:32 that was necessary for this population and in fact if you 15:35 treat people like they’re going to lie to you, they do. 15:37 Yeah. 15:38 And if you treat people as if they are trustworthy they tend 15:42 to be trustworthy. 15:43 It doesn’t mean you’re never lied to, but- 15:44 CARLSON: So you’re bringing the person back into 15:46 treatment, aren’t you? 15:47 Rather than just seeing them as this drunk. 15:50 LEWIS: See, I told you it was revolutionary. 15:54 MILLER: Of course. 15:57 LEWIS: What about when you’re working with clients who might 16:01 benefit from participation in a 12-step group Alcoholics 16:05 Anonymous or one of the other self-help groups? 16:08 Are you able to integrate this approach with that work? 16:11 MILLER: Absolutely. 16:12 We’ve used Motivational Interviewing in programs where 16:17 the whole heart of the program was 12-step. 16:19 And one of the nice things about this respectful 16:21 client-centered approach is it seems to fit pretty well 16:25 whether your treatment orientation is 16:27 cognitive-behavioral or 12-step. 16:29 If you read the Big Book and the way in which Bill W. 16:33 talked about working with alcoholics it wasn’t harsh and 16:36 confrontational. 16:37 It wasn’t argumentative. 16:38 It was very respectful, very patient, very person centered. 16:43 So I find this entirely consistent with the 12-step 16:46 approach at least as it’s understood in 16:48 the original writings. 16:50 CARLSON: One of the questions — 16:52 This all sounds good but does it work? 16:55 Is there a research base for this model? 16:58 MILLER: Well, that’s one of the things that’s kept me 17:00 going in this area because I’ve been frankly very 17:03 surprised at how well this has worked. 17:06 There are about 20 controlled trials now, not just in 17:09 addictions there’s some in diabetes management, 17:11 cardiovascular rehab, and so forth. 17:14 And 20 years ago l would never have believed that in a single 17:17 session which is the way this is usually done, you could see 17:21 such behavior change. 17:22 It boggles the mind. 17:24 But very consistently, we’re finding both an additive 17:28 effect that is, when you put a session of Motivational 17:31 Interviewing at the beginning of a treatment program, you 17:33 get much better outcomes. 17:34 And you get much better participation in treatment 17:36 along the way. 17:37 Over time, too. 17:38 Over time. 17:39 And also as a freestanding approach, when you’re just 17:42 doing Motivational Interviewing compared to 17:45 nothing- compared to no intervention you also get a 17:47 substantial behavior change. 17:49 So the studies have been predominantly positive. 17:52 There’s only been one negative trial so far. 17:54 And the strength of that effect is just amazing to me. 18:01 CARLSON: In a couple minutes we’re going to watch you work 18:04 with a young man named Mike. 18:06 Can you help our viewers just to focus on what it is that 18:13 they might be looking for in your work some of the 18:16 techniques or some of the strategies that 18:18 you might be using? 18:19 MILLER: Yeah. 18:20 Well, besides the principles that I talked about before the 18:25 way that one usually opens a session like this is with an 18:28 open question one that invites the person to tell you about 18:32 themselves. 18:33 And not just one of those, but a series of open questions. 18:36 I try not to ask closed-ended questions very often, but to 18:42 give a question where the client can move around a bit, 18:46 and then follow with reflective 18:48 listening, very much. 18:49 You and I were talking how easy he makes this look, so 18:52 it’s important that the viewers know that there are 18:56 really strategies that you’re using. 18:57 Oh, yes, and it does take a while to learn this. 19:01 Also, in what I’m reflecting and Rogers did this too 19:06 although he wasn’t aware of it- I’m differentially 19:10 reflecting back the client’s own statements that are moving 19:13 in the direction of change acknowledging the other side 19:16 as well, but helping the person move along. 19:21 There’s acknowledgment of the person’s freedom to choose, 19:25 and respect for that position. 19:28 But listening for the person’s own motivation, for their own 19:33 goals, for their own desire to change and reflecting and 19:37 encouraging and moving that along as we go and providing 19:40 the encouragement and the hope that that can happen. 19:43 LEWIS: And this client was very ambivalent, wasn’t he? 19:46 MILLER: Yeah, and that’s not uncommon. 19:48 For some reason we pathologize that in the addiction field, 19:51 but ambivalence is very human and in fact is a normal part 19:55 of the change process-that when you go from not thinking 19:57 about change to beginning to think about it you must pass 19:59 through a period of ambivalence. 20:01 And it’s just that that’s where people get stuck. 20:04 And this is a particularly interesting case because he’s 20:06 very aware of being there and very aware of how 20:10 uncomfortable it is to be at the ambivalent place and very 20:13 aware that he has to move one way or the other. 20:15 He has to move forward and resolve the ambivalence by 20:18 changing his behavior or move backwards and resolve the 20:22 ambivalence by shutting down and saying it 20:24 isn’t really a problem. 20:25 Well, since ”I’m not sure” are three of my favorite 20:28 ambivalent words l’m looking forward to watching this. 20:32 CARLSON: So let’s watch your work with Mike. 20:33 MILLER: Okay. 20:35 MILLER: So, fill me in a little bit. 20:38 What is it that brings you here today? 20:40 MIKE: Well, actually I’m doing a favor for a friend of mine. 20:44 MILLER: Uh huh. 20:45 MIKE: And he told me about a study you guys were doing, and 20:47 so I figured I’d participate in it, and they told me you 20:50 were basically an addiction counselor, and he thought I 20:53 might be an interesting subject. 20:55 MILLER: Uh huh. 20:56 MIKE: Okay? 20:56 MILLER: Okay. 20:57 Well, tell me about where you are now with the addictions 21:00 that you?ve been? 21:01 MIKE: Well, what do you want to know in particular? 21:05 MILLER: Well, are you in recovery now, or 21:07 MIKE: No, I’m not. 21:08 MILLER: Okay. 21:08 Alright. 21:09 So what are the drugs or what it is you struggle with? 21:13 MIKE: Well, honestly cigarettes. 21:15 MILLER: Okay. 21:16 MIKE: That’s the biggest. 21:17 MILLER: Okay. 21:17 MIKE: Alcohol to a degree, but I think I’ve had more of a 21:21 problem with that two or three years ago, you know, it seems 21:24 to have gone down to a degree and probably simply because of 21:29 the environment. 21:30 MILLER: So That’s kind of settled down. 21:31 MIKE: Well, not all that much. 21:34 Okay, but enough, it’s gone down simply because I’m 21:38 getting too old to do this stuff anymore if that make any 21:41 sense to you. 21:41 MILLER: It does. 21:42 You can’t keep up with it anymore. 21:43 MIKE: I don’t think I can. 21:44 I really don’t think I can. 21:46 MILLER: And then the cigarettes are still a real 21:48 addiction for you? 21:50 MIKE: Yeah, I really do. 21:51 I think they are worse. 21:51 In the past I’ve done cocaine. 21:54 I’ve even done crack cocaine. 21:56 I’ve heard That’s one of the most addictive drugs around. 21:58 Quite frankly, from my own personal experience, I don’t 22:01 find it addictive at all. 22:02 MILLER: Yeah, it’s interesting how it is different for 22:03 different people. 22:04 MIKE: Yeah. 22:04 MILLER: Yeah, but for you it’s tobacco and alcohol. 22:07 MIKE: Yeah. 22:08 Yeah, and coffee. 22:09 MILLER: Yeah. 22:09 MIKE: I mean if we want to get that specific. 22:12 MILLER: How far do you want to go there’ 22:13 MIKE: How do you want to go? 22:14 I got a lady That’s supposedly addicted to Chapstick. 22:21 MILLER: It gets used for almost anything these days. 22:24 MIKE: Right. 22:24 MILLER: Yeah. 22:25 Well, how might you like things to be different? 22:27 I guess That’s a good place to start. 22:31 MIKE: Well, basically, you know, I don’t, 22:33 see That’s my problem. 22:34 I don’t think I’m really all that committed to making 22:36 things all that different because I’m not seeing that 22:38 much harmful benefit. 22:40 I was told that you are not able to slow down. 22:42 It’s progressive. 22:43 You get worse and worse and worse and worse, and that just 22:45 doesn’t seem to be the case with me. 22:47 Okay? 22:48 I think that there are certain things in my lifestyle that 22:50 just preclude me not using, okay? 22:52 MILLER: Right. 22:53 MIKE: And that, and smoking has become a problem because 22:56 I’m starting to play soccer, okay? 22:58 MILLER: So you can’t breathe. 22:59 MIKE: So I can’t breathe. 23:00 The kinds are younger and younger. 23:02 They are half my age, twice my size. 23:04 I’m having a problem with it. 23:05 MILLER: You are noticing it. 23:06 MIKE: Okay. 23:06 Yeah. 23:09 MILLER: So, I mean the message that you shouldn’t use at all 23:11 is like somebody out there telling you that, but that 23:13 doesn’t fit your experience. 23:15 MIKE: I don’t know. 23:16 Use at all. 23:18 What does that mean? 23:19 What do you mean by that? 23:21 MILLER: Well, I guess maybe I misunderstood you. 23:22 I thought you were saying people tell you that you can’t 23:27 use or shouldn’t use or whatever. 23:29 MIKE: Oh yeah. 23:29 Yeah, they’ve told me that before, you know. 23:32 I’ve been through, I guess you know nothing about me do you? 23:36 MILLER: Nothing at all. 23:37 MIKE: Okay, I’m sorry about that. 23:38 I though at least they filled you in on some 23:40 MILLER: No, I asked not to be. 23:42 MIKE: Okay. 23:43 Well, no. 23:43 Alright, here’s what happened. 23:44 I got a DUI a while back. 23:46 I think it was back in ’93, and I had one prior to that in 23:49 ’85 and went though some counseling. 23:52 It was mandatory, state-driven. 23:53 Basically you go through the counseling, and after you 23:58 successfully complete it, you are rehabbed. 24:01 Actually rehabbed. 24:03 MILLER: Right. 24:03 MIKE: Then you get your driving privileges back. 24:05 And I guess what I’m trying to say is that I’ve had some bad 24:07 experiences. 24:08 Not bad experiences with the counselors, but I found them 24:11 to be not less than professional but just very 24:16 rigid in their approach. 24:17 MILLER: Okay. 24:17 And that didn’t work for you, that didn’t fit. 24:20 MIKE: It didn’t fit at the time, and at the time I don’t 24:23 think I was really all that committed to quitting, and 24:26 then I was, but at another time, but the other time was 24:29 because I was earning $40 an hour, and I was working ten 24:33 hours a day five days a week, so guess what? 24:36 You’re not supposed to be able to quit, you see. 24:39 That’s what those counselors told me. 24:41 That was strange that I was, wasn’t it? 24:43 So I mean, I guess what I’m saying is that I do probably 24:46 have a rather negative attitude about some of the 24:48 things I’ve been through as far as the 24:50 state program is concerned. 24:53 I don’t know how I could explain that more, 24:55 or if you have any. 24:57 MILLER: Well, I think I’ve got it. 24:58 It sounds like your experience doesn’t match what you were 25:01 being told. 25:02 MIKE: No. 25:03 MILLER: They are telling you this is how you are, and you 25:05 look at yourself and say, no. 25:07 MIKE: Yeah, That’s not necessarily true. 25:09 And then there too you are supposed to say well I’m an 25:13 alcoholic and I’ve always had problems and I have to quit 25:16 and I can never drink again and this, that, 25:17 and everything else. 25:18 And you had to really say that, see. 25:20 Or else you weren’t fitting in the role they 25:23 wanted you to play. 25:24 Without fitting in the role they wanted you to play you 25:27 could not get your license back. 25:28 So, you know, I played the game basically, and I went to 25:31 AA, and I also found that just to be a little bit on the, you 25:36 know, it didn’t work for me. 25:37 It’s bumper sticker therapy. 25:39 Fake it till you make it. 25:41 Wow, how profound. 25:43 Man, you guys are deep, you know. 25:46 MILLER: Alright. 25:47 MIKE: And you know, yes seriously, I’ve been there and 25:49 these guys didn’t do anything all day, but they 25:52 didn’t drink that day. 25:53 You know, I would rather, let’s say, lift weights, maybe 25:57 build a patio, maybe program R base, and then drink instead 26:01 of just not drink and do nothing else. 26:03 I just, I found that you know, certain aspects of it I like, 26:10 but I think you have to have a deep seated religious belief 26:15 for it to work for you. 26:17 MILLER: Well, and it sounds like you want to have an 26:19 active life. 26:20 Not drinking is not doing something, it’s doing nothing. 26:23 MIKE: Yeah, it’s doing nothing. 26:24 MILLER: So, for you the question is what am 26:26 I going to be doing? 26:27 How do I spend my time’ Playing soccer, and 26:30 MIKE: Yeah, That’s good. 26:31 Actually I was thinking myself the way I can best quit 26:37 smoking is not by quitting smoking but playing soccer 26:40 three times a week. 26:41 Okay? 26:42 Now, I’m going for something, okay? 26:44 MILLER: That’s right. 26:45 MIKE: And then all of a sudden I’m having a problem 26:46 breathing, okay? 26:48 So guess what? 26:49 You’re gonna quit smoking. 26:50 You’re not going to say I gotta quit smoking, you know. 26:53 But to me that doesn’t work for me. 26:56 MILLER: It might even less than not work. 26:59 It might make it less likely. 27:01 MIKE: I think it’s less likely. 27:02 I quit smoking before for about four months. 27:06 Then I blew out my knee, and you know, I went down to see 27:10 my brother, and boom, right back to it. 27:12 And you know, it’s the same thing with drinking. 27:14 I think I was actually more, how shall I say, I seem to 27:20 have more of a craving when I was going through counseling. 27:24 MILLER: Right? 27:24 MIKE: Then when I wasn’t, okay? 27:26 So, it’s like okay, reverse effect. 27:28 Guys you really helped me a lot, you know. 27:31 MILLER: Well, I wonder if it isn’t being told you can’t or 27:34 like being in prison in a way. 27:36 MIKE: Yeah, it could be just immaturity on my part. 27:39 You know, if you tell me I can’t do something, I’m going 27:40 to do something. 27:41 MILLER: Right. 27:42 MIKE: You know, maybe what they should say is you better 27:44 drink every day goddammit. 27:45 I want you to drink a fifth before noontime. 27:48 Then maybe I’d say “Screw you guys,” you know. 27:51 I don’t know. 27:51 Maybe there is something about my personality 27:54 that is like that. 27:55 So, you know, what shall I say? 27:58 One size doesn’t fit all. 28:00 MILLER: Yeah, exactly. 28:02 MIKE: One size doesn’t fit all. 28:03 MILLER: And for you what matters is having something 28:05 that you are going toward, not something you run away from. 28:08 MIKE: Right, right. 28:09 MILLER: And one of those things is soccer. 28:11 MIKE: Yeah. 28:11 MILLER: What else? 28:13 MIKE: Well, tennis. 28:14 How about backpacking. 28:16 You know, how about just waking up clear-headed. 28:19 MILLER: Yes, That’s right. 28:21 MIKE: I mean, don’t you think That’s kind of… 28:23 MILLER: That’s great. 28:23 MIKE: …pleasurable, sometimes, you know? 28:26 MILLER: So just getting up in the morning and being able to 28:28 think clearly. 28:30 MIKE: Yeah but I’m telling you one thing right now. 28:32 You know, sometimes I won’t drink four, five, six days. 28:35 If I smoke two packs of cigarettes, I 28:37 wake up with a hangover. 28:39 I thought it was the booze, but it isn’t. 28:42 MILLER: Even without the booze. 28:43 MIKE: Oh, yeah. 28:44 It’s carbon monoxide, man. 28:45 You got no oxygen in your system. 28:48 So. 28:48 I guess That’s my real problem right now is the cigarettes. 28:54 MILLER: Uh huh. 28:55 MIKE: So. 28:55 MILLER: It sounds like you are not that worried 28:56 about alcohol really. 28:57 MIKE: No, it’s bad, but it’s not as bad. 28:59 MILLER: Not causing you problems 29:01 MIKE: Well, it is. 29:02 It will cause anyone problems. 29:04 MILLER: Hm, how so? 29:06 MIKE: Have a six-pack of beer, wake up, try 29:08 to program a computer. 29:09 MILLER: Okay. 29:10 MIKE: And so, have a six-pack of beer, wake up, find out how 29:13 alert you are for the first two hours of the day. 29:15 MILLER: Right. 29:16 MIKE: It’s going to cause anyone problems. 29:18 You know, have a six-pack, have a twelve-pack, try to 29:21 play soccer the next day. 29:23 MILLER: Right. 29:23 MIKE: Okay. 29:23 It’s 29:23 MILLER: It’s amount and the after-effects of that. 29:27 MIKE: Right. 29:28 Right. 29:28 And I think my tolerance is up so high that it takes me too 29:31 much to get the same buzz, and unfortunately, the recovery, 29:37 it’s getting to the point where it is just not worth it. 29:40 If I could get like a 12-pack high on three beers, then I 29:45 only have three ounces I’ve got to process. 29:47 If it’s taking me 12 to get the same which I got three on, 29:51 now I got 12 to process you see. 29:53 MILLER: Yep. 29:54 MIKE: So we are at a balance point where we are getting 29:57 diminishing returns on ever expanding, how shall I say, 30:00 quantities. 30:02 MILLER: Like the slot machine doesn’t 30:03 pay off so much anymore. 30:05 MIKE: Well, you know, it’s addictions, so you’re stupid, 30:07 so you keep on playing it, you know. 30:09 MILLER: It is amazing. 30:10 How long you keep going. 30:12 MIKE: Yeah. 30:13 MILLER: But you’re, with alcohol, you are kind of 30:16 hitting a point where this isn’t worth it anymore. 30:19 MIKE: Yeah, yeah. 30:20 But it is not because anybody is telling me from the 30:24 outside, because I’m being forced to do that. 30:27 It’s just because I gotta wake up in the morning, and I know 30:32 how I feel. 30:33 Period, Okay? 30:34 And I think what has happened is before I used to drink all 30:39 the time, and I was always drinking. 30:42 And then I stopped and found out how good I felt, okay? 30:46 Now I have a compare and contrast whereas before I 30:49 never had a compare and contrast. 30:51 MILLER: Now you know. 30:51 MIKE: Now you know. 30:52 Now you know, hey wait, wasn’t it a lot better when I was 30:54 clear headed then when I was, so, and to me then it does 30:59 become a problem because now at least you have something 31:01 you can you know, you can relate to. 31:04 You can say this is how I am without it. 31:06 This is how I am with it. 31:07 This is my performance without it. 31:08 This is my performance with it, you know. 31:11 MILLER: It’s only when it’s a problem for you, really, that 31:13 it matters. 31:13 MIKE: Right. 31:14 MILLER: If somebody else is telling you 31:16 MIKE: Yeah, it doesn’t work. 31:18 MILLER: Or worse. 31:19 More likely you back away from it. 31:21 MIKE: Well, then why is the approach the opposite? 31:24 That’s what I, I don’t mean to be belligerent toward 31:27 addiction counseling, but I can’t help but be. 31:29 Why, sometimes I wonder if these people didn’t do more 31:33 bad than good 31:33 MILLER: It doesn’t make any sense to me. 31:35 It’s human nature to push against something when they 31:39 push against you. 31:40 MIKE: Well, I always heard in AA too, is the dumbest things 31:43 I ever heard. 31:44 Some of the comments I heard that were 31:46 just god awful stupid. 31:48 And these people were just complete idiots. 31:50 We alcoholics don’t like to be told what to do. 31:54 I’m thinking wait. 31:55 We alcoholics. 31:56 What are you some special breed of people’ No one likes 31:59 to be told what to do. 32:00 You know what, I really got tired of that kind of like 32:04 we’re special because we have this disease or come feel 32:08 sorry for us because we have a disease. 32:10 And quite frankly, the more I read about alcoholism, no one 32:14 knows what the hell it is. 32:15 So I’m not going to say I am cause until there is a 32:18 definitive area that we can agree on, you know, I could 32:24 say alcohol dependent. 32:25 Now that makes sense. 32:25 It’s a bit more clinical 32:26 MILLER: That you can understand. 32:28 MIKE: Yeah, That’s understandable, but that’s one 32:30 of the things I didn’t like about AA is they 32:35 wore it like a badge. 32:37 It’s nothing to be proud of, but it’s nothing 32:40 to be ashamed of. 32:41 But you certainly don’t do some reverse pride on it, and 32:44 you know, we’re special because we’re this. 32:47 We’re different. 32:48 I didn’t see any difference between those people and 32:50 normal people. 32:51 MILLER: It seems to work for some people, but that’s not 32:53 going to help you. 32:54 MIKE: Well, who do you think it works for? 32:56 Apparently highly religious people who believe in higher 32:58 powers and miracles and some deity is going to come down 33:02 and save them anytime they have problems. 33:05 I’m not that type of person. 33:07 MILLER: That’s not you. 33:09 And for you it has to be some reason that you see that 33:13 persuades you, okay, it’s time. 33:16 MIKE: Yeah, a little bit. 33:18 MILLER: A little bit. 33:18 MIKE: A little bit more realistic, okay. 33:21 No nonsense, no bumper sticker stuff. 33:24 MILLER: And not being able to breathe on the soccer field is 33:26 no nonsense. 33:26 MIKE: I think that’s kind of, I don’t know if you can get 33:29 too much more guttural than that you know, and so that’s 33:31 where it is. 33:33 MILLER: So, it’s having something to pursue, having 33:35 something to live for really. 33:38 MIKE: Yeah, yeah. 33:39 That’s it in a nutshell. 33:41 I’ve read a couple of books, and the one thing I really 33:44 enjoyed was the book Positive Addiction. 33:49 You know, having been a runner before, being cross-country, I 33:53 can see exactly how that worked. 33:54 Basically, this guy was saying what had happened is he was 33:58 under the suspicions that a lot of people running were 34:00 actually, had drinking problem and ran 34:03 themselves out of those. 34:04 Now I think that is actually true because after I run, I 34:10 have about this much desire to drink, and I have about that 34:13 much desire to smoke. 34:15 MILLER: Yeah. 34:16 MIKE: You got endomorphins, you feel good, you are alert. 34:19 MILLER: Yep, yep. 34:20 MIKE: Why would you want to pollute yourself, you know? 34:23 MILLER: Makes sense to me. 34:23 MIKE: So, That’s my deal on that. 34:28 My read on who I am. 34:30 But am I committed? 34:31 No. 34:32 Total abstinence? 34:34 No. 34:34 Not at all. 34:35 MILLER: Oh, to total abstinence. 34:35 Okay. 34:36 Because I am hearing a lot of commitment in what you are 34:39 saying, that it’s worth it to me to, in order to be able to 34:46 breathe on the soccer field… 34:47 MIKE: Right. 34:47 MILLER: ..to do something about cigarettes. 34:49 MIKE: Yeah. 34:49 MILLER: To quit smoking even. 34:50 MIKE: Yeah. 34:52 MILLER: So there I was hearing some commitment. 34:54 MIKE: Yeah, I think there is. 34:55 You see when I quit smoking, I quit drinking, too, you know. 34:58 MILLER: Is that right? 34:59 MIKE: Well, you have to. 35:00 Well, I mean at least I have to. 35:02 MILLER: Uh huh. 35:02 MIKE: Cause I can’t like drink. 35:05 If I drink I’ll have a cigarette. 35:07 MILLER: Okay, they are that tied together. 35:09 MIKE: Yeah. 35:09 MILLER: You do them together so many 35:11 MIKE: Well you 35:12 MILLER: tens of thousands of times. 35:13 MIKE: Yeah. 35:14 Well, even coffee. 35:15 You know coffee, cigarette, just association. 35:18 Yeah, I think like when you drink, you lose your judgment 35:21 and your willpower just goes down. 35:22 I don’t know if you call it willpower. 35:23 I think its just judgment. 35:24 MILLER: Whatever it is. 35:25 MIKE: You are going ? “Oh a cigarette sure would taste 35:27 good now.” Oh, yeah, okay. 35:28 MILLER: That happens with cocaine too. 35:32 I mean people, drinking is the most common reason why people 35:37 go back to using cocaine when they really wanted to stay 35:39 away from it. 35:40 MIKE: Oh, really? 35:40 MILLER: Yeah. 35:40 So That’s exactly what you are talking about. 35:42 MIKE: There is such an association between the two? 35:45 MILLER: Well, whatever it is. 35:46 Or it just kind of dulls down your judgment. 35:49 MIKE: Yeah. 35:49 MILLER: Enough that you say, “Oh that would feel nice.” 35:51 MIKE: Should I ask if you drink? 35:54 MILLER: I do. 35:54 Yes, I do. 35:55 MIKE: Well, you know how the judgment goes. 35:56 And let’s face it, it goes. 35:58 It goes on everyone, you know. 36:00 They always say oh we alcoholics are different. 36:02 No, no, no, no. 36:03 You feed someone six beers and their judgment 36:06 is going to go down. 36:07 MILLER: It’s going to have that effect. 36:08 MIKE: It’s a physiological reaction to a toxic drug. 36:11 You know, let’s face it. 36:12 MILLER: Yep. 36:13 MIKE: So, it is. 36:15 MILLER: So, you really would be talking about stopping 36:18 cigarettes and alcohol then. 36:20 MIKE: Well, yeah. 36:21 MILLER: In order to breathe. 36:21 MIKE: But I don’t want to think about it. 36:23 Huh? 36:23 What’s this? 36:24 MILLER: Oh. 36:24 MIKE: I don’t want to think about that. 36:26 MILLER: Meaning you just want to do it and not think about 36:27 it, or you don’t want to get serious? 36:28 MIKE: Well, I would rather do it and not think about it. 36:32 MILLER: Yep. 36:33 Not much point in thinking about it. 36:34 MIKE: Well, I mean, is there’ 36:36 MILLER: No, no. 36:37 MIKE: Do I think about working out every day? 36:39 Do I think about brushing my teeth? 36:40 If I did I wouldn’t want to brush my teeth. 36:42 I gotta brush my teeth tomorrow. 36:44 That’s going to be pretty bad, you know that. 36:46 I gotta brush my teeth. 36:47 You know what I’m saying? 36:48 MILLER: I do. 36:48 MIKE: I think That’s what happens when people do that, 36:52 and I see more procrastination because it is worse to think 36:55 about having to go to the gym and work out. 36:58 My god it’s going to hurt and oh I’m going to do those curls 37:01 and my biceps are going to kill me and then I have to 37:04 wake up and brush my teeth. 37:06 I think that when you think about stuff like that, I think 37:09 it actually is more counterproductive than just 37:12 saying, oh screw it. 37:13 Just do it. 37:14 MILLER: Thinking about going to sleep. 37:16 MIKE: Yeah. 37:16 MILLER: As long as you are doing that you are not going 37:18 to be going to sleep. 37:18 MIKE: You’re not going to sleep, no. 37:20 I hope that makes sense to you. 37:21 MILLER: Oh, it does. 37:22 No, it wasn’t what I had meant by think about it, but I see 37:25 exactly what you mean, that if you are thinking about 37:29 something or like trying. 37:30 In other words if you are trying to do it, you 37:31 are not doing it. 37:32 You either do it or you don’t do it. 37:34 But you don’t try to do it. 37:36 You don’t try to go to sleep. 37:37 You just go to sleep. 37:39 MIKE: You just go to sleep. 37:40 MILLER: So what would be great is if that was just natural. 37:43 You’re not thinking about it. 37:45 It’s just natural to do it. 37:46 MIKE: I mean, what do you think? 37:47 I’m thinking basically the thing I could best do it just 37:52 start running again and just start really 37:56 substituting habits. 37:57 I don’t think, I think substitution of habit and 38:00 making habits so counterproductive or 38:03 contradictory I should say maybe which you just replace 38:09 one habit with another habit rather than just try to get 38:12 rid of one habit. 38:13 I think it kind of comes up to a vacuum state. 38:16 Now what do I do? 38:17 I got rid of this habit. 38:18 Now what do I replace it with? 38:19 You know, so 38:20 MILLER: Well, you are clearly telling me That’s 38:22 what works for you. 38:23 That’s what is going to do it. 38:24 MIKE: Well, That’s what has done it in the past. 38:26 That’s what’s done it in the past. 38:28 Actually I got to join another soccer team. 38:30 I can play with even better people and that way I will 38:34 really get pissed off at myself, you know. 38:38 So. 38:39 MILLER: And That’s what worked for you before’ 38:42 MIKE: Mm hm. 38:42 MILLER: Good indication. 38:44 MIKE: Yeah. 38:44 Well, what hasn’t worked for me is drug addiction 38:47 counselors, sorry to say. 38:49 MILLER: Yeah, yeah. 38:50 No your reaction to that was 38:52 MIKE: Well, you have to realize first off, most of the 38:55 people there, and I’m not trying to be apologist for 38:57 them, but in a way I am. 39:00 They were good people. 39:01 Most of the people there were forced to be there. 39:03 They weren’t there on their own free will. 39:05 So, of course, they are going to be resistant. 39:09 And most of the people there, I mean you are basically, you 39:12 have to talk a certain way, behave a certain way, do 39:16 certain things so they think you are, 39:19 quote, whatever, rehabbed. 39:22 So you learn real quickly how to play the game. 39:24 What are you looking for? 39:25 Okay, what’s this counselor looking for, or what’s this 39:27 person want me to say? 39:28 Okay. 39:29 I’m supposed to feel this way about something because That’s 39:31 the way she’s been told that we define this addiction. 39:35 So what I’ll do is I’ll just play in her bullshit even 39:38 though it isn’t true, and as long as I can do it in a 39:40 convincing way and fool her, boom, whappo, I got it, and I 39:43 got my license back. 39:44 And you know That’s a game that I was playing the whole 39:47 time, and actually, I kind of lost respect for people 39:50 because they were so easy to fool. 39:52 All I did was I read the addiction counseling books. 39:55 I found out what they are looking for, what the traits 39:57 were 39:58 MILLER: Played the game. 39:58 MIKE: Played the game. 39:59 Found out, you know, what they wanted to hear. 40:02 And to me That’s really counterproductive. 40:06 It, if anything, it’s a waste of time, and it might even be 40:10 more harmful than it is helpful. 40:12 MILLER: It sounds like it was for you. 40:14 MIKE: Yeah. 40:15 Does anyone quit anything if they are not committed to it? 40:20 MILLER: My own sense is it’s that internal reason that 40:22 really makes the difference. 40:23 When instead of there being somebody out there 40:26 MIKE: External. 40:27 MILLER: telling you, what’s telling you is something 40:29 inside of you. 40:30 Your lungs or whatever it is. 40:31 MIKE: I think this time it’s my body. 40:33 MILLER: Hey, yeah right. 40:35 MIKE: My brain is saying hey, I’m stupid, but your liver 40:38 doesn’t like you too much. 40:40 Your lungs are a little pissed, you know? 40:42 MILLER: Yeah. 40:42 MIKE: So. 40:43 MILLER: So, what gets in the way of your 40:45 sticking with that? 40:46 What gets in the way of running? 40:48 MIKE: You know, I don’t know. 40:49 I think it may be a fear of failure. 40:51 I really do. 40:53 Could be that. 40:54 Could be just the amount of effort. 40:56 Like I say it’s been going down, going down, going down, 41:00 but I seem to really have a problem totally committing to 41:03 just okay this is the year man. 41:04 Let’s do it. 41:05 MILLER: Yeah, well because it is pretty total. 41:08 I mean, that was what I was picking up earlier. 41:11 At least the way you are thinking about it. 41:13 It means stopping cigarettes and stopping drinking. 41:17 MIKE: Well, you know, it used to be a fear of withdrawal 41:18 with drinking, and when I quit I found out 41:21 MILLER: It’s not a big deal. 41:22 MIKE: It’s not. 41:23 And That’s another thing. 41:25 Don’t tell people about DT?s because quite frankly that 41:27 doesn’t happen all that often. 41:29 MILLER: It’s pretty rare. 41:30 MIKE: I mean, what do you get? 41:31 You get maybe higher energy level and That’s it. 41:34 And you feel better, okay? 41:36 I mean, whoa, you are going to get DT?s, you are going to go 41:39 through withdrawal. 41:39 Oh, you are going to have to have doctor?s supervision. 41:41 By telling someone that you are just scaring 41:43 the fuck out of them. 41:44 You know? 41:45 Excuse my French, but that’s what you do. 41:47 MILLER: That is something that happens to some people 41:48 but not very many. 41:49 MIKE: Yeah. 41:50 Yeah. 41:51 But I’m really worried about the smoking because I remember 41:53 last time I got just violent. 41:55 I mean I was bad to be around for five days. 41:57 I mean really bad. 41:59 I mean I was just blowing up on everything. 42:01 Every little thing I was just, everything was 42:04 just ticking me off. 42:05 And then after five days I was pretty cool, and after two 42:08 weeks I was real cool. 42:09 And I was kind of, yeah, but I’m thinking my god, what if a 42:13 client calls me up. 42:14 What am I going to do? 42:16 MILLER: Like five days in a mountain hut somewhere. 42:18 MIKE: Oh well, you think a kayak trip? 42:22 Just throw me for five days out in a kayak. 42:25 MILLER: That’s a nice idea. 42:26 MIKE: No cigarettes, no booze. 42:28 MILLER: Yeah, the Grand Canyon or something. 42:29 MIKE: Well, you see, that would be very good. 42:31 MILLER: It would. 42:32 MIKE: I mean That’s what I was thinking of doing. 42:34 MILLER: Something physical. 42:34 MIKE: Yeah. 42:35 Do something like that. 42:37 MILLER: You’re committed. 42:39 MIKE: Backpacking. 42:39 100 miles from nowhere. 42:41 And maybe I could reward myself with a cigarette by the 42:45 time I get there. 42:46 By the time I get there it will be ten days and 42:48 I won’t want one. 42:50 MILLER: Well, and the trip itself for you sounds like it 42:53 would be a reward. 42:53 MIKE: Oh yeah. 42:54 MILLER: Doing it would be fun. 42:55 MIKE: Yeah. 42:57 MILLER: So it might be a way to get 42:57 through those five days. 42:59 MIKE: Yeah. 43:00 Yeah, like I say, I’m, how shall I say? 43:05 I’m teetering on the edge where you know I’ve cut down, 43:10 I’ve cut down, I know how it feels to at least not drink 43:13 that much, but now I’m finding out, hey, it’s not the 43:16 drinking That’s giving me the hangover. 43:18 It’s the cigarettes. 43:19 MILLER: Mm hm. 43:20 MIKE: And the drinking only compounds it because when I 43:22 drink I smoke like a son of a bitch. 43:24 And one of the things is I think I’m cutting down on my 43:26 drinking, not because I’m trying to cut down on my 43:28 drinking, but because I don’t want to smoke that many 43:30 cigarettes which is weird, and you’re not 43:32 supposed to be that way. 43:33 Not by the definition of drug addiction. 43:36 MILLER: Well, you are breaking all the rules. 43:37 MIKE: Yeah, I know. 43:38 But I mean, I wish they wouldn’t tell me rules there. 43:41 If they are not sure, I don’t want to hear them. 43:43 MILLER: Uh huh. 43:44 MIKE: You know, I mean it’s like I think a lot of this 43:47 crap is self-fulfilling prophecy. 43:48 You have given people false information and they are 43:52 taking this false information to heart because these experts 43:55 in the field, so called experts, and it’s really funny 43:57 how many different variations of the definition of 44:00 alcoholism we have. 44:02 All of them almost contradictory. 44:05 You get some poor slob That’s going to say well so- and- so 44:08 says this, and they’ve been a leader in their field for the 44:11 last 20 years. 44:12 So, therefore, because they say this, I 44:16 have to be this way. 44:17 And instead of defining themselves as individuals, 44:20 they go into the stupid pattern or whatever type of 44:24 behavior that is supposed to be attached to them, and they 44:26 assume that behavior is theirs. 44:28 And that’s why I don’t like, it’s not, it doesn’t work. 44:32 And I don’t think it ever will. 44:34 I mean, do you agree with me, or am I… 44:39 MILLER: Well, you know more about 44:40 you than I do, obviously. 44:41 MIKE: Well, That’s the whole thing. 44:42 MILLER: I believe you. 44:43 MIKE: Yeah, but I mean how many people have you counseled 44:45 in your lifetime’ I mean you?ve had to see certain 44:48 things works for certain people and certain things work 44:50 for other people, and it’s not going to be one size fits all. 44:54 MILLER: No it isn’t. 44:55 MIKE: It just, it’s not there. 44:57 MILLER: I’ve worked with people who have done really 44:58 well in AA. 44:59 And I’ve worked with a lot of people who have said, “Ah, 45:01 it’s not for me. 45:02 That’s not my cup of tea.” 45:03 MIKE: And I’m not trashing them. 45:04 I mean if it works for you, fine. 45:06 MILLER: There you go. 45:07 MIKE: If it works for you that’s fine. 45:08 And I’ve seen it help a lot of people, and I know the type of 45:11 person it is going to work for. 45:12 It is not going to work for me. 45:14 MILLER: Now, tell me about this 45:14 teetering on the edge business. 45:17 MIKE: Don’t know. 45:17 I think it’s, like I said, I think it’s fear of failure. 45:19 I think on my part it’s a fear of failure, and it’s also the 45:22 fear of withdrawal, especially from nicotine. 45:24 Because I know how I get. 45:28 MILLER: Mm hm. 45:30 MIKE: And I’m committed and then I’m not. 45:32 It’s this ambivalent feeling. 45:33 MILLER: Yeah. 45:34 MIKE: And I can’t seem to, you know, and 45:38 that’s where I’m stuck. 45:39 That’s where I’m stuck. 45:41 I’m stuck in that ambivalence which I guess is a 45:46 good thing in a way. 45:47 I mean, it’s better than just being not committed at all. 45:49 MILLER: Well, That’s exactly right. 45:50 It’s a step forward. 45:51 MIKE: Yeah, it’s a step forward, but it’s still 45:53 MILLER: Becoming ambivalent is the first step toward change. 45:55 MIKE: Yeah, but let’s face it, That’s cognitive dissonance. 45:58 The ambivalence I really want to get over it, but I can’t 46:01 seem to, I can’t seem to just say okay, today’s the day. 46:05 This is it. 46:06 MILLER: Right. 46:07 MIKE: So maybe, I don’t know. 46:09 See I don’t know even what to do, quite frankly 46:14 MILLER: Well, you mentioned a couple of things. 46:16 MIKE: Yeah, see I’m thinking I could cut down slowly. 46:19 See, look it, if I quit cigarettes, 46:23 drink is going to go. 46:24 It’s going to have to go. 46:25 MILLER: Mmm hmm. 46:26 MIKE: Okay, so then That’s it. 46:27 That’s out. 46:27 Now that I know isn’t that hard. 46:30 MILLER: Right. 46:30 You’ve done that. 46:31 MIKE: Yes, but the nicotine, ooooh, That’s a scary thing 46:34 for me, man. 46:35 MILLER: And you’ve done that before also. 46:37 Yes? 46:38 MIKE: Playing. 46:39 Yeah, I was playing around. 46:40 I was playing two games a week. 46:42 MILLER: Okay. 46:44 MIKE: Now I would have to start running every day, an 46:47 hour a day five days a week. 46:49 I would have to gradually cut down, okay? 46:52 And then I would have to set a date, and I guess go on the 46:55 patch, and I would have to stay away from anyone that 46:59 wants to have a beer with me, because if I 47:02 have one beer, boom. 47:03 Right back to smoking. 47:04 Now I’m telling you what happened with smoking. 47:07 What was it, four months? 47:09 Whatever it was, blow out the knee. 47:11 As soon as I started again, now this is, as soon as I 47:14 started again, I was back up to two packs within a day. 47:19 MILLER: That’s scary isn’t it? 47:20 MIKE: Within a day. 47:21 It wasn’t like this gradual, “Oh I’ll just have one.” It 47:25 was just like boom, and I was just right back in there, and 47:29 then I feel the lungs quit on me, yeah I 47:31 guess a fear of failure. 47:32 I don’t know. 47:33 Maybe it was fear. 47:33 I don’t know what it is. 47:34 Maybe it’s fear of failure. 47:35 I don’t know. 47:36 MILLER: How confident are you that you can do it? 47:38 MIKE: That’s the problem. 47:39 I don’t know. 47:40 MILLER: You’re not sure. 47:41 MIKE: I’m not too sure. 47:42 I’m really not too sure. 47:45 MILLER: It’s not so much the wanting to do it as, “I don’t 47:48 know if I could if I make the decision.” 47:49 MIKE: Right, right, right. 47:50 MILLER: Mm, okay. 47:52 MIKE: It’s confidence probably. 47:54 MILLER: Well, and That’s what would help. 47:55 Something that you could really be confident in. 47:59 Like the way you lit up when we talked about the Grand 48:02 Canyon or something. 48:03 Like I could get through five days that way. 48:05 I could do that. 48:07 MIKE: Am I supposed to spend maybe a year out there? 48:10 MILLER: No, I’m just using that example. 48:12 MIKE: Wait a second, if I made a lot of money, that would be 48:15 a good 48:16 MILLER: How long would it be’ Well, the first five days you 48:18 said are the tough ones. 48:19 MIKE: Yeah, the first five are tough. 48:21 But really what it is, what basically what it really is 48:23 just not hanging around Chris because Chris will come over 48:26 and he’ll want a beer. 48:27 I don’t care if he has a beer, but if I have a beer, boom. 48:30 I’m going to light up. 48:30 I’m going to have to stay away from Bogden. 48:33 That’s another guy on my soccer team. 48:35 It would have to be like really staying away from a lot 48:38 of people I know. 48:40 You know, maybe I’m just making excuses for myself. 48:42 I don’t know. 48:43 I don’t know. 48:43 But I would have to do that, and then I would really, I 48:48 would have to watch myself and not let myself talk to any 48:51 clients for five days. 48:52 Because I know how I get. 48:54 MILLER: Oh that five day period. 48:55 Yeah. 48:55 MIKE: Yeah, I don’t know. 48:57 I don’t know. 48:57 I’m still ambivalent. 48:59 MILLER: Well, that clearly is where you are. 49:01 And you are right that That’s a normal 49:03 place people pass through. 49:04 You are saying, “Well let’s get through,” you know. 49:06 MIKE: I still want to 49:07 MILLER: It’s an unpleasant place to be. 49:09 MIKE: Yeah. 49:09 MILLER: You either want to go back to not being able to 49:11 MIKE: Which is more comfortable. 49:12 Let’s face it. 49:13 Which is more comfortable. 49:14 And I’ll tell you that right now. 49:15 That’s a hell of a lot more comfortable saying, “Ah, I’m 49:17 not going to quit smoking.” That’s more comfortable. 49:20 MILLER: Either side is more comfortable. 49:21 MIKE: Either side is more comfortable than the 49:22 ambivalence. 49:23 The ambivalence is the hell. 49:25 MILLER: It is. 49:25 MIKE: That’s the hell. 49:26 Okay, cause well I know I shouldn’t but I will and I 49:29 don’t know if I should. 49:30 Here’s what it is. 49:32 It’s knowing that you are taking a carcinogen, a known 49:34 carcinogen, and you are putting it in your lungs. 49:36 You know that it’s upping your blood pressure. 49:38 You know it is increasing your chance of lung cancer. 49:40 You know it’s really screwing up your soccer. 49:42 It’s that, it’s doing that is pissing me off. 49:46 It’s knowing that you are taking a poison, a poison 49:48 called alcohol. 49:49 You know the second drink your judgment is 49:51 going to go to hell. 49:53 And why am I doing this? 49:54 Let’s just bang that head against that brick wall some 49:57 more too please. 49:59 And That’s what pisses me off. 50:00 I mean if I was stupid, I could forgive myself for it. 50:04 If I define myself as an addict, you know, and I think 50:08 a lot of people do, then they can forgive themselves for it. 50:11 But that’s, no. 50:14 MILLER: That is not a way out of you. 50:15 MIKE: No. 50:15 That out doesn’t work. 50:17 That’s a cop-out. 50:18 I mean, and see I wish I was stupid and I could just say, 50:24 didn’t know any better. 50:25 MILLER: And you could sit back here and 50:27 MIKE: Yeah. 50:28 MILLER: be comfortable. 50:29 MIKE: Yeah, right. 50:30 MILLER: Now the place where you are is real uncomfortable. 50:33 MIKE: Yeah. 50:33 MILLER: And moving either way from it is more comfortable. 50:35 MIKE: Of course. 50:35 Of course. 50:36 Moving up or back. 50:39 MILLER: But staying in the ambivalence, because you are 50:40 conscious of it, you are conscious of taking in the 50:43 poison or the carcinogen or whatever it is 50:44 MIKE: That’s the problem. 50:46 MILLER: Boy. 50:47 MIKE: That is, what are you doing this for? 50:50 You know, what are you doing this for? 50:52 And 50:53 MILLER: And That’s the teetering then. “Which way am 50:55 I going to move off of this” 50:55 MIKE: Right. 50:56 MILLER: “because I don’t want to stay here.” 50:57 MIKE: And not only that. 50:58 You know the guys at soccer they always kill me. “Hey, you 51:03 smoking again” Oh yeah. 51:05 You’re stupid, man? 51:06 So I got a little peer pressure going there. 51:08 MILLER: So they are not all pulling you into 51:10 drinking and smoking? 51:10 MIKE: Oh, no, no. 51:11 They wouldn’t, well it all depends. 51:14 This is the Polish soccer team. 51:19 Most of these guys are right off the boat, okay? 51:21 And they do drink a lot, so 51:24 MILLER: They just give you a hard time about smoking? 51:25 MIKE: Right, and they don’t smoke. 51:27 MILLER: Oh, okay. 51:28 MIKE: And I say, “Well listen, you know, hey, if you want me 51:31 to quit smoking, I’m going to have to quit drinking.” “Oh no 51:34 you could.” “No,” I says, “I can’t.” It doesn’t work that 51:37 way for me. 51:38 And then having never done it they don’t know. 51:40 So I’m going to have to like, if I do this, I’m going to 51:43 have to stay away from them at least long enough to establish 51:46 some type of 51:47 MILLER: There you go. 51:49 People who make it through change usually do it, I mean 51:52 you’ve got it. 51:53 Usually do what you are saying which is for a while avoid the 51:58 valley of the shadow of death, you know. 52:00 I mean avoid the difficult place. 52:02 And then it gets more okay. you’ve got to not rush too 52:05 quick back in there, but it gets to be okay. 52:07 You don’t then have to stay away 52:09 MIKE: Forever. 52:10 MILLER: Right. 52:10 So it’s not forever and ever. 52:12 But for a while you are probably right. 52:13 MIKE: Yeah. 52:14 MILLER: Or, somehow, get them to, say, “Help me out guys.” I 52:17 mean, if they won’t do it, then you are right. 52:20 MIKE: No, it’s not like they are bad guys. 52:22 They just don’t know. 52:23 See, they’re not 52:25 MILLER: Haven’t done it. 52:26 MIKE: You know, they don’t know. 52:29 I mean I think if you don’t smoke, you don’t smoke 52:34 cigarettes, you don’t know. 52:35 You’re not going to know. 52:37 And how could they possibly help it? 52:40 MILLER: Well, I only meant that if they could get it in 52:44 their heads that what you are saying is right 52:45 MIKE: Yeah, right. 52:46 MILLER: That if they want to help you stop smoking, they’ve 52:48 gotta also not encourage you to drink. 52:51 MIKE: Don’t come over with the 12-pack and want something. 52:54 MILLER: Yeah. 52:55 MIKE: You know, come on. 52:56 MILLER: So if you could ask them to do that, help you out 52:58 that much, then 52:59 MIKE: They’re guys. 52:59 They’re guys. 53:00 MILLER: They won’t 53:01 MIKE: These are guys, okay? 53:02 They’re guys. 53:03 I’m single you see. 53:04 If I was married I could blame it on my wife. 53:06 In fact, I’m thinking of getting married, 53:09 well I’m just kidding. 53:10 But I’m thinking of a rent-a-wife situation. 53:13 See you rent a wife and you tell all your guy friends, 53:15 “Hey, I’m a married man. 53:17 My wife will kill me if you guys come over.” Then you get 53:19 to get then the hell out of your place. 53:21 If you are a bachelor, they’re trying to get away from their 53:23 wives, guess who they come over and hang around with? 53:25 You. 53:26 MILLER: Yep. 53:26 MIKE: And guess what. 53:27 That excuse doesn’t work. 53:28 The only thing they understand is some bitchy lady with a 53:32 skirt, okay? 53:34 MILLER: That would work. 53:34 MIKE: And then you could clear them out of the place. 53:36 Otherwise, you can’t clear them out, man. 53:38 See, then you have no excuse but to do what 53:41 they want to do. 53:41 MILLER: Yeah. 53:42 MIKE: That’s the way guys are. 53:44 At least the guys I know are that way. 53:46 MILLER: So, you are right. 53:46 You would have to stay away from them for a while. 53:48 MIKE: Right. 53:48 Right. 53:49 I hope I’m not babbling here. 53:51 MILLER: No, no. 53:51 MIKE: I seem to be all over the place here. 53:53 MILLER: I mean you are giving me a real good 53:55 sense of who you are. 53:56 MIKE: Yeah. 53:56 MILLER: I mean I love to read a book to the end, and I’d 53:58 love to know which way you are going to go from this place. 54:00 MIKE: I would like to know myself. 54:01 I don’t even know. 54:02 You know, I don’t even know. 54:07 Like I say, I’m still at the ambivalent stage, and it’s 54:11 getting to the point where I’m going to have to make 54:14 MILLER: It’s too uncomfortable. 54:16 MIKE: Well, yeah. 54:16 But what do you want to go back? 54:18 I mean, where’s back? 54:19 Where’s back going to take you? 54:21 MILLER: Yeah. 54:22 You know. 54:23 MIKE: Yeah. 54:24 Yeah. 54:25 MILLER: But it’s that “Can I do it?” obstacle. 54:27 MIKE: Well, that’s, it’s a confidence problems. 54:30 MILLER: So something that would 54:31 help you be more confident. 54:32 MIKE: Yeah, well, yeah, yeah. 54:36 MILLER: To be able to look at it and say, “I could do that. 54:39 I can see myself doing that.” 54:41 MIKE: Well, yeah, but what’s that going to do? 54:43 MILLER: I’m not sure. 54:45 MIKE: It’s going to have to be internal if it’s 54:46 going to work for me. 54:47 MILLER: Mm hm. 54:47 MIKE: It can’t be anything external. 54:49 I can’t deal with cheerleaders. 54:51 I can’t deal with, Oh you can do, it you can do it. 54:56 Hey, come on. 54:56 I’m a little too old for that. 54:58 MILLER: There is certainly nobody pushing you. 55:00 MIKE: Well, you know, I’m going to have to figure out 55:02 that I can do it myself or just not going to 55:05 be able to get done. 55:06 And That’s just, the long and the short of it is That’s what 55:08 it’s really going to take. 55:09 MILLER: That’s the bottom line. 55:10 MIKE: Yeah. 55:10 I mean for a person like me, that is the bottom line. 55:13 And it has to be important enough. 55:16 But I think it is important enough now or else I wouldn’t 55:19 be thinking about this in the first place. 55:20 MILLER: That’s how it sounds. 55:23 MIKE: You know, as far as I’m concerned, I don’t care if I 55:25 die tomorrow. 55:26 This is not about my health. 55:28 MILLER: Mm hm. 55:30 MIKE: Boy I can’t stand, if I’m not the fastest guy out 55:33 there, I have an identity crisis, okay? 55:36 It’s my arrogance, okay? 55:38 It’s my conceit. 55:40 It’s my pride, okay? 55:42 So I am using all the negative stuff you’re never supposed to 55:45 have in AA to help me 55:47 MILLER: Challenge. 55:47 That’s what will get you through. 55:51 Sheer cussedness. 55:52 MIKE: Yeah just sheer, you know, if anything, arrogance. 55:58 If anything, probably That’s all it is. 56:00 And it really has nothing to do with health. 56:02 It really doesn’t. 56:03 I mean I hate to admit it, but as far as longevity and life, 56:07 I don’t really care about it. 56:09 High quality of life’ Well, everyone dies. 56:11 Everyone makes such a big goddam deal out of it. 56:13 I’m so goddam tired of these people who, “Oh I eat these 56:16 healthy food, and I do this, and I know go out in the sun,” 56:19 and yeah, yeah, you’re 400 pounds overweight, 56:21 you don’t work out. 56:22 You know, don’t give me this live forever, but live what? 56:26 MILLER: We’re all going to die anyhow. 56:27 MIKE: We’re all going to die anyhow. 56:28 What are you going to do? 56:28 Just never go out in the sun? 56:30 MILLER: But while you are here, you want to be the best. 56:32 MIKE: Well, you know, it would kind of be nice to wake up, 56:34 you know, and feel healthy and be able to do 56:37 what you like to do. 56:38 MILLER: It is. 56:40 MIKE: Uh, well, yeah, if you could do what you like to do 56:42 forever, hey. 56:43 I would like to do that. 56:44 But I know That’s not going to happen, and I accept that, and 56:47 to me it’s not so much a longevity issue as it is a 56:51 quality of life issue. 56:52 And so That’s the deal. 56:56 MILLER: You know the funny thing is it sounds to me like 56:57 you have made up your mind. 56:59 MIKE: Possibly. 57:00 MILLER: Maybe. 57:01 MIKE: Yeah. 57:01 I think I’m swaying. 57:03 MILLER: Leaning just a little. 57:04 MIKE: Swaying. 57:05 I hope it’s not a pendulum, you know. 57:08 MILLER: I don’t know though. 57:09 It’s kind of back there. 57:10 MIKE: Yeah, back there is more comfortable. 57:11 At least it’s known. 57:12 It’s known. 57:13 See That’s 57:14 MILLER: It’s predictable. 57:14 MIKE: That’s all it is. 57:15 It’s known. 57:15 MILLER: It is predictable. 57:16 MIKE: That’s all it is. 57:18 It’s known. 57:21 Yeah, someone told me and it made a lot of sense. 57:23 Bang your head against a brick wall, you start to miss that 57:27 brick wall when you quit banging your head against it. 57:29 You know, I think That’s what everything is. 57:33 Not just smoking, not just drinking, not just doing 57:35 whatever, cocaine or anything else, but everything else. 57:37 I think bad relationships are like that. 57:39 MILLER: Mmm, hmm. 57:41 MIKE: I think bad jobs are like that. 57:42 I think living in bad areas of town are like that. 57:45 I think, it’s familiar. 57:47 Because it is familiar it is predictable. 57:49 MILLER: Right. 57:50 MIKE: You are comfortable with it. 57:51 It’s not that terrible change, you know, 57:54 That’s a scary thing. 57:56 And you know, maybe That’s what it is. 57:57 So. 57:58 MILLER: What if you stopped smoking and drinking and you 58:00 still couldn’t keep up with the young guys? 58:02 MIKE: Oh, I don’t think that is going to be a problem. 58:04 MILLER: That’s alright. 58:06 MIKE: I already can. 58:07 That’s the thing. 58:10 It’s just that you know I’m getting older, and this is not 58:14 going to last forever. 58:15 I put a lot in a bank account. 58:16 I had a scholarship, marathon scholarship, when I went to 58:20 college which I didn’t take. 58:21 Ran a 4:32 mile, always been fast. 58:23 MILLER: Really. 58:24 MIKE: But I always had, the way I’m looking at it, I 58:26 always had a bank account, and I put a lot in that bank 58:28 account, that cardiovascular bank account. 58:30 Well, I’ve been drawing off that bank 58:31 account for a long time. 58:33 Now it’s just about 58:35 MILLER: Balance is getting low. 58:36 MIKE: Balance is getting low. 58:37 So I have to kind of start filling it up again. 58:39 And 58:41 MILLER: That’s a nice image. 58:42 MIKE: Well, I think That’s exactly what’s going on. 58:44 MILLER: That works. 58:46 MIKE: You can only do this stuff so long before you are 58:48 going to start feeling the effects. 58:49 I’m starting to feel the effects. 58:51 Maybe I always was but I was too stupid to realize it. 58:54 I’m not too sure. 58:55 MILLER: You don’t want to go into debt. 58:57 MIKE: No. 58:57 I don’t want to go into debt. 58:59 MILLER: Makes sense to me. 59:00 Well, I’d love to know how the story comes out. 59:02 I see that we are running out of the allotted time for this 59:05 filming session. 59:06 MIKE: Well, should we do a follow up? 59:08 MILLER: I’d like to know. 59:09 MIKE: You know, I tell you. 59:10 If I do this, it’s not going to be for two to 59:13 three weeks, you know. 59:15 Everyone says, “Oh do it tomorrow.” You know what? 59:18 No. 59:19 MILLER: You are going to set a date out there somewhere. 59:21 MIKE: Well, yeah. 59:22 MILLER: Not tomorrow. 59:23 MIKE: Not tomorrow. 59:24 Not tomorrow. 59:25 Not today, not right now. 59:27 I mean, you know, I’m just not going to do that you know. 59:32 It’s going to be, here’s what happens to me. 59:37 When I start doing shit That’s contradictory to bad habits, 59:41 the bad habits start disappearing almost naturally. 59:45 And I start getting a roll. 59:47 MILLER: Beautiful. 59:47 MIKE: And then I start getting to the point where I want to 59:50 continue this good habit. 59:51 Bad habits, I’m not really thinking about. 59:52 They are starting to go away. 59:54 So I want to kind of like steamroll this turkey, and 59:57 then as soon as I got that steamroll thing going and I 01:00:01 got this thing on the run, it’s okay baby, and now we’re 01:00:05 going to get you. 01:00:06 Now you are vulnerable. 01:00:08 Now you’re going to die. 01:00:09 That’s 01:00:10 MILLER: That’s the plan that works for you. 01:00:11 MIKE: Yeah. 01:00:13 MILLER: Good. 01:00:13 MIKE: Does that work for other people or am I strange’ 01:00:16 MILLER: No, people are real different in terms of the way 01:00:19 they find, and it’s kind of your personality and what 01:00:23 grabs you and what’s the thing that finally tips 01:00:25 the seesaw for you. 01:00:26 MIKE: I was told, “That doesn’t work.” I was told, 01:00:29 “Well no, no. 01:00:29 One size fits all. 01:00:31 This is how we have to do this. 01:00:32 This is the only way we do it.” You know, that’s what I 01:00:34 was always told. 01:00:35 It made no sense to me, and I just really lost respect for, 01:00:39 you know, anyone in the industry because, do you have 01:00:43 any intuition? 01:00:44 Do you ever listen to your clients? 01:00:46 Have you ever thought that there could be something 01:00:48 called individuals out there? 01:00:50 Hey, bell shaped curve, guys. 01:00:52 Hey, you know what it is? 01:00:53 Guess what different IQ levels, 01:00:55 different personality traits. 01:00:57 Guess what. 01:00:57 MILLER: People know something about themselves. 01:00:58 MIKE: Yeah. 01:00:59 MILLER: Mmm hmm. 01:00:59 Yeah. 01:01:00 MIKE: So, but I never got that far. 01:01:02 Of course, like I said, it was state run. 01:01:04 It was a little bit different, so. 01:01:08 MILLER: Well, I wish you well. 01:01:09 I’d like to know how the story comes out. 01:01:14 CARLSON: Bill, was your work with Mike a good example of 01:01:16 Motivational Interviewing? 01:01:18 MILLER: It was, yeah. 01:01:19 He offered some unique challenges, I think, and gave 01:01:23 me a chance to really settle into the style, and I felt 01:01:27 pretty good about that interview. 01:01:29 How do you know in a case like that that you’re not being 01:01:32 conned or you’re not being deceived by someone’ Well, you 01:01:35 don’t, of course. 01:01:37 I tend to go with the person rather than 01:01:40 pushing against them. 01:01:42 And you get more honesty when you do that, as it turns out. 01:01:46 I wasn’t particularly concerned about dishonesty in 01:01:49 this case but I often will acknowledge to the person that 01:01:52 they can deceive me if they choose and not much I can do 01:01:58 about that. 01:01:58 And that very acknowledgment somehow decreases the need and 01:02:04 desire to do that. 01:02:06 But l really liked this guy and it felt 01:02:09 very genuine to me. 01:02:10 He was talking exactly about where he is, in that stuck 01:02:14 place and in that contemplation stage of ”Do I 01:02:19 go forward or back now?” 01:02:20 CARLSON: And he really liked you too. 01:02:22 After the session was over, I noticed he 01:02:25 didn’t want to leave. 01:02:26 He wanted to keep talking with you. 01:02:28 MILLER: Yeah, we were chatting out in the hall. 01:02:30 And he wanted some ideas and things. 01:02:33 It seemed like he wanted some action steps, 01:02:36 where he might go next. 01:02:38 Yeah, and I think he’ll be taking them. 01:02:40 CARLSON: Where would you go if you were to meet him again? 01:02:43 Where do you think the story’s going to end? 01:02:47 MILLER: I think he’s headed for making a change. 01:02:50 And the first thing I would do, of course, is check in on 01:02:54 where he is. 01:02:55 Sometimes people get the sense that once you’ve cracked this 01:02:59 motivation thing then you just get right to business and you 01:03:02 change them. 01:03:03 But the ambivalence continues throughout the process of 01:03:07 treatment and change, and so it may very well be that when 01:03:12 he comes back in, even if he may have gone a few days 01:03:16 without drinking or something, trying it out, he’s still 01:03:19 going to remember the old days and have some ambivalence. 01:03:22 And so I would deal with that. 01:03:24 But I would start checking out whether he’d like some ideas 01:03:28 about other things to try. 01:03:30 This guy probably won’t need them. 01:03:32 He’s got lots of good ideas. 01:03:34 And usually the ideas that the client comes up with are 01:03:37 better than the ones I would come up with. 01:03:38 But if he wants suggestions, I could certainly make some. 01:03:41 I noticed, too, that there were several times when he was 01:03:46 convincing you that he needed to make a change-like he was 01:03:50 the one that said, ”Try drinking a six-pack and then 01:03:54 program a computer.” He was the one that said, ”Well, if 01:03:59 I’m going to quit smoking I’m really going to have to 01:04:07 drinking, too.” Right. 01:04:08 Now, is that something that’s pretty typical? 01:04:11 LEWIS: Did you ask him something to put him in the 01:04:13 position of convincing you that he had a problem? 01:04:16 MILLER: Well, it’s an interaction. 01:04:18 We’re dancing together. 01:04:20 In fact, when we’re looking at videotapes of therapists, one 01:04:24 of the scales we use is the dancing-wrestling scale. 01:04:27 Are these two people dancing with each other, or are they 01:04:29 wrestling with each other? 01:04:30 And we were dancing. 01:04:32 It had that sense of moving with him. 01:04:35 So I think I had something to do with the fact that we wound 01:04:39 up there and it certainly is where I want to be. 01:04:43 I want the person telling me about change rather than me 01:04:47 being the authority and telling them about change. 01:04:50 But that also has very much to do with his willingness in the 01:04:52 place he is to be ready to move. 01:04:55 So in a sense I just made it possible for him to move in 01:04:59 the direction that he was already headed anyhow. 01:05:02 You can’t trick people into changing. 01:05:04 LEWIS: Although you did reflect or summarize positive 01:05:07 statements that he made statements that were oriented 01:05:11 toward change rather than against it. 01:05:14 I know there are a lot of places where he had ambivalent 01:05:18 statements that he made and the one that you picked up on 01:05:21 was the positive one. 01:05:23 MILLER: Right. 01:05:23 And that’s a good example. 01:05:25 My role in that is to accentuate the positive. 01:05:30 But they’re his words. 01:05:31 So he says it, and I reflect it. 01:05:35 He hears me say that he says it. 01:05:36 And I’ll come back later, maybe, and summarize with it a 01:05:39 little bit too, or reflect it again. 01:05:42 But they’re his words to begin with. 01:05:44 And it’s that kind of process that seems to trigger change. 01:05:49 CARLSON: I like when he said, ”I can’t change for at least 01:05:53 two or three weeks,” which seemed to me to be quite 01:05:57 optimistic. 01:05:57 I would have been inclined, though, to say, ”Well, how 01:06:00 will that work? 01:06:00 How will you do that?” And yet you resisted. 01:06:02 You kind of let back and let him just accept that fact. 01:06:07 ”You’ve got time in the future that you’ll do this.” 01:06:10 MILLER: Yeah. 01:06:10 It would be fine to say, ”Tell me what that will look 01:06:13 like,” too, or, ”How would you do that?’ 01:06:15 Nothing wrong with that. 01:06:16 I didn’t know whether that would be pursuing too much, 01:06:19 because it seems like the more you pursue, the more they 01:06:21 distance, and when you stop pursuing they seem to move 01:06:24 toward you. 01:06:25 Well, the nice thing is that your clients 01:06:27 teach you this style. 01:06:28 That’s where I learned it in the first place. 01:06:30 So if you’re pursuing too much you find out right away. 01:06:35 You can judge whether you’re doing the right thing by what 01:06:38 the client’s doing. 01:06:39 You get immediate feedback. 01:06:41 So if the client is moving toward change, is talking 01:06:45 about how they might change or envisioning how it might be, 01:06:50 or the costs of the way it’s been before you’re doing fine. 01:06:53 All you have to do is agree. 01:06:54 You’re on coast at that point. 01:06:56 But if you try something like that and the client suddenly 01:07:01 backs off, then it’s, ”Oops I pushed a little too hard.” 01:07:05 You can recover from that. 01:07:07 But you use the client, always and respect the client’s 01:07:11 presence as the feedback for whether you’re doing the right 01:07:14 thing or not. 01:07:16 CARLSON: Well, we have a studio audience who has lots 01:07:19 of questions. 01:07:20 So what we’d like to do now is take some specific questions 01:07:24 about the interview, and then in a little while we’ll have 01:07:28 some general questions about the approach, Motivational 01:07:31 Interviewing. 01:07:34 AUDIENCE: You talked about dancing with your client 01:07:38 versus wrestling. 01:07:39 And it seems to me that your approach is more appropriate 01:07:43 to talkative, outgoing clients of this type. 01:07:47 What about if you had one who was wrestling, who was not as 01:07:51 talkative and who was quieter? 01:07:55 How would this approach fit? 01:07:58 Because I’m interested in goodness of fit, like more 01:08:00 research here. 01:08:02 And I’m wondering if you had someone who is 01:08:04 the opposite of dancing. 01:08:06 You obviously enjoyed yourself. 01:08:08 But if you had a wrestler, as most alcoholics are could you 01:08:15 just project a little bit how you would have 01:08:17 approached the client? 01:08:19 MILLER: Well, there are really two pieces- 01:08:21 AUDIENCE: And you would have to do this in the 01:08:22 abstract, I know that. 01:08:24 MILLER: Well, no. 01:08:25 There are two pieces. 01:08:27 One is, what if your client’s less verbal? 01:08:28 I can talk about that in a bit. 01:08:30 But dancing and wrestling are interpersonal behaviors. 01:08:34 We could have been wrestling real easily. 01:08:38 There were lots of invitations to wrestle all through the 01:08:41 time, and all you would have to do is a little bit of 01:08:43 confronting, a little bit of pushing a little bit of 01:08:46 shaming or criticizing, and you’d have professional 01:08:49 wrestling on your hands. 01:08:50 It would be very dramatic. 01:08:51 So it’s not that people come in wrestlers or dancers. 01:08:56 It’s what you invite them to do with you. 01:09:01 So, sure, some people come through the door mandated by 01:09:05 the court, angry, defensive, but do they stay that way? 01:09:09 What happens over the course of the 01:09:11 session is in your hands. 01:09:13 So those aren’t client personality traits. 01:09:16 Those are interactions of two people. 01:09:19 But the less verbal client, it’s fine, really. 01:09:23 On another set of videotapes that I made, we had a very, 01:09:26 very nonverbal client. 01:09:28 And Rogers demonstrated the same thing-that even with a 01:09:32 client who’s not talkative and not high on the verbosity 01:09:37 side, you can still stay with them and be very much a part 01:09:41 of their experience, reflect nonverbals, anticipate what it 01:09:48 might be that’s going on and if you’re wrong they tell you. 01:09:50 There’s no penalty for missing here. 01:09:57 This sounds a little bit arrogant, but I really haven’t 01:10:00 yet found a client with whom I couldn’t do this. 01:10:03 Because it’s not a trick. 01:10:05 It’s not a technique. 01:10:07 It’s a way of being with people. 01:10:08 And you offer that to the person, and you 01:10:10 see how they respond. 01:10:11 And how they respond is right. 01:10:13 The client’s always right. 01:10:15 AUDIENCE: It’s interesting that you mention Rogers. 01:10:19 How close is this approach to Rogers’s approach? 01:10:22 Because as you said, Rogerian therapy indeed does a lot of 01:10:27 reflection, but for alcoholics, they require that 01:10:30 the alcoholic be in recovery for two years so they can 01:10:33 bring these things to the table that 01:10:36 this gentleman brought. 01:10:37 But how close are you to that? 01:10:40 MILLER: Very grounded in Rogers. 01:10:42 The work that Rogers did, we wouldn’t be doing Motivational 01:10:46 Interviewing without that. 01:10:47 It’s just fundamental to this approach. 01:10:50 The difference is the consciously 01:10:54 directive aspect of this. 01:10:56 Rogers described his approach as nondirective. 01:10:59 His students, Traux and Carkhuff, were able to 01:11:02 demonstrate that he was very contingently responding to 01:11:06 what clients were saying, and tending to reinforce and 01:11:09 emphasize the positive self-statements, and he wasn’t 01:11:11 conscious of doing it. 01:11:13 And he was sort of surprised and shocked when they 01:11:16 demonstrated the operant contingencies 01:11:17 in what he was doing. 01:11:18 So in a way we’re doing the same thing. 01:11:21 We’re just trying to be very conscious and a little bit 01:11:23 strategic about it and to use reflection as a reinforcer for 01:11:30 the person’s own momentum. 01:11:35 AUDIENCE: That leads into my question. 01:11:37 I loved the way, you call it, ”danced” with him. 01:11:40 To me it was like tai chi, like one of the Eastern 01:11:45 martial arts, because you were so clear not to get engaged in 01:11:50 counterforce with him, and yet it was highly skillful. 01:11:54 But you mentioned before the interview about times that you 01:11:59 reflect and other times you lead. 01:12:01 And at least for me, the trick with this guy would be not to 01:12:04 lead at the wrong time or he would become 01:12:07 oppositional again. 01:12:09 Can you say any more about how you chose to encourage or 01:12:14 empower or lead in ways that wouldn’t evoke the 01:12:19 oppositional? 01:12:20 I’m clear if it were oppositional you’d 01:12:22 know to back off. 01:12:25 MILLER: You see right away the person’s response- they begin 01:12:27 moving in the other direction. 01:12:31 It’s almost like interpretations in classic 01:12:34 psychotherapy, that you don’t jump too far beyond where the 01:12:39 person is, but you go a little bit beyond 01:12:41 where the person is. 01:12:42 In this case, my suggesting of a five-day outback kind of 01:12:52 trip was consistent with what he’d been talking about, but 01:12:55 it was something new. 01:12:56 So it was a suggestion, an invitation 01:12:59 to think about this. 01:13:00 And he seemed to like it. 01:13:02 Later on, he said, ”Well, a year? 01:13:06 How long am I going to be out there”’ So there I pushed a 01:13:09 little bit too hard. 01:13:10 But that was an example, I think, of understanding his 01:13:15 own perspective, where he is experientially, and making a 01:13:22 suggestion as a suggestion just to see if it’s something 01:13:26 he’s willing to pursue. 01:13:30 It’s not, ”Okay, be quiet, now I know the answer and I’m 01:13:33 going to tell you what you should do.” That will have a 01:13:36 very predictable result with this fellow and with, indeed, 01:13:40 many human beings- most human beings. 01:13:42 So it’s just moving a little bit past, and doing it in the 01:13:45 context of the person’s own values what’s 01:13:49 important to him. 01:13:50 AUDIENCE: To make it concrete-you said something 01:13:56 about a cabin or outback, and he changed it to the river. 01:14:00 You followed the river. 01:14:02 MILLER: Absolutely. 01:14:02 Always follow the river. 01:14:05 AUDIENCE: Absolutely. 01:14:06 But it would have been tempting to me to say, ”Well 01:14:10 you’ve got two components you know. 01:14:12 One is to start doing more of a positive thing, like more 01:14:18 soccer whatever it is, more athletic stuff. 01:14:21 And the other is you need to be off alone for a period. 01:14:25 Can you plan more of that?” You never asked that, and you 01:14:29 never pushed him to really get concrete in his plan. 01:14:34 MILLER: But he is planning. 01:14:36 If you listen toward the end of the tape, there’s some of 01:14:40 what we call envisioning of thinking ahead to the time 01:14:43 when he has changed and how he deals with that. 01:14:46 So I don’t need to tell him to plan. 01:14:48 He’s doing it. 01:14:49 And I don’t need him to write it down and 01:14:51 sign it as a contract. 01:14:52 It’s happening. 01:14:53 One of the funny things about Motivational Interviewing is 01:14:55 it’s not very dramatic. 01:14:59 Sometimes people weep during sessions but you don’t have 01:15:02 these dramatic confessions and things in the session. 01:15:05 And if that’s what you’re looking for, a soap-opera kind 01:15:08 of response, it looks like not much 01:15:10 happened during the session. 01:15:11 And indeed, you sit and watch a session like this you say, 01:15:14 ”Well, did anything really happen?” It’s the data that 01:15:17 are persuasive-that when you do this 01:15:19 you really see changes. 01:15:20 Even though the person’s not swearing they’re going to do 01:15:23 something and laying out plans and signing contracts, they 01:15:27 actually do it. 01:15:27 And that’s what matters to me not that they say they’re 01:15:29 going to do it, but that they actually go ahead and change. 01:15:33 LEWIS: He did seem to me as though he was ready to wrestle 01:15:36 in the session when it first started that if you’d been 01:15:40 willing to wrestle with him, he was up for wrestling more 01:15:43 so than dancing. 01:15:43 MILLER: Oh, we’d have had a great time, you bet. 01:15:45 And it’s what he expected. 01:15:47 This guy has had a lot of experience with addiction 01:15:49 counselors and he came in knowing what 01:15:51 was going to happen. 01:15:52 And it didn’t happen. 01:15:57 AUDIENCE: I was more interested in, than anything 01:16:01 parallel between you and your client and we saw the client 01:16:06 and we heard you talking But what I would like to do is 01:16:10 sort of get inside you. 01:16:12 Like when you were making this point, ”freedom of choice,” 01:16:16 what was your freedom of choice when you were in that 01:16:20 counseling relationship as a therapist? 01:16:28 When he said a couple times, ”fear of failure,” any 01:16:34 beginning Rogerian counselor it would have been a focal 01:16:38 point-this man saying about himself, ”fear of failure.” 01:16:43 But it seemed like you just went along with that. 01:16:47 But what was in you then, in relation to the fear of 01:16:52 failure, as the therapist? 01:16:56 And also any ambivalence in you regarding what are you 01:17:05 doing, taking this counseling relationship in what 01:17:09 direction, or anything in response to 01:17:14 his triggering you? 01:17:17 Did you have any struggle at all? 01:17:22 MILLER: Well, three questions again. 01:17:23 Yeah. 01:17:25 I had a couple reactions to ”fear of failure.” My first 01:17:27 one was ”psychobabble” -that this is a phrase he’s picked 01:17:31 up somewhere or some counselor’s given, or he read 01:17:33 it in some book. 01:17:34 So he wasn’t connected to it. 01:17:36 It was an explanation, but he wasn’t connected to it. 01:17:39 And yet I assumed he was telling me the truth and it 01:17:41 meant something. 01:17:42 And so my thought was, ”What does it really mean?” And the 01:17:46 obvious thing to me that it meant was, ”I’m not sure I 01:17:48 can do this.” So rather than going down the road of 01:17:52 exploring why he feels fear of failure and what his family 01:17:55 history is that would contribute to that and so 01:17:57 forth it really is an issue of confidence. 01:17:59 And if a person knows it’s a problem, as he does, but isn’t 01:18:04 sure how to do it or that he can do it, then that’s the 01:18:08 place where you’re stuck, and that is indeed 01:18:10 where this guy is stuck. 01:18:11 He needs something that he can believe in and say, ”Yeah, I 01:18:15 could do that,” and then he will move forward with that. 01:18:18 I wasn’t quite sure about the freedom of choice point except 01:18:23 that I can give you an example of it, which is toward the end 01:18:27 where we were talking about the ambivalent place and that 01:18:31 he can go forward or he can go back, but it’s real 01:18:35 uncomfortable to stay where he is. 01:18:37 I didn’t make a big deal out of it but that implicitly is, 01:18:41 ”You can choose to go back.” And I somewhere reinforced 01:18:45 that and he said, ”Well, but why would you do that?” So 01:18:49 he’s again making the argument against that. 01:18:52 But it is imbued in the whole approach that of course the 01:18:56 person has freedom of choice about this, and they can 01:18:59 decide to continue doing what they’ve been doing. 01:19:01 They can decide to do more of it, they can change it, and it 01:19:04 really is in their hands. 01:19:07 An

 

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