Teen Alcohol Abuse: It’s Not A Healthy Option

Although there is a big trend right now regarding healthy eating and healthy living, it’s true that adolescents don’t tend to focus on health at this age. Why should they? They’re young and practically invincible.

 

Yet, alcohol in excessive amounts can lead to medical disease and illness. Of course, it can also lead to psychological disorders such as depression, anxiety, and addiction. The risks associated with teen alcohol abuse and addiction is especially true if teens are binge drinking.

 

Yet, if a teen is experiencing an addiction to alcohol, healthy eating can actually facilitate finding sobriety. To be more specific, part of healing the addiction cycle is also healing the process of an insatiable appetite. Often, this ravenous appetite is at the root of an addiction with an unending feeling that we can’t get enough. And underneath that insatiable appetite is trying to feed a part of the self that feels unloved, unwanted. However, the alcohol or the addiction to drugs is only pushing that part of the self away and the ferociousness of the addiction only gets stronger.

 

This destructive cycle continues on and on in the psyche and can apply to food and being compulsive in other ways too. According to Guy Kettelhack, author of Sober and Free: Making Your Recovery Work For You, writes that compulsive behavior stems from a fierce attachment. Holding onto something with that level of ferociousness, in turn, stems from a fear of losing something, whatever that is. Kettelhack suggests that if there’s any magic key to lessening the grip on a compulsive behavior, it’s releasing the fear of what might happen. Certainly, any cycle of addiction is rooted in fear and anxiety.

 

This sort of ferociousness can be applied to what and how a teen eats. In extreme examples, it might look like an eating disorder. In less than extreme cases, it appears as unhealthy eating, such as unconsciously working through an entire bag of chips while watching television. However, both the teen addiction to alcohol as well as the unhealthy eating patterns can result in wreaking havoc on the body. Alcohol alone impedes nutrient breakdown and impairs the ability to assimilate those nutrients. Also, when a teen is in the height of his or her drinking, 50 percent of their calorie intake is derived from the drinking. The damage to the body, not only because of the addiction but also because of the destructive food choices has led many rehabilitative treatment centers to include nutritional counseling in their treatment plan.

 

Nutritional eating can in fact aide the healing process during recovery. Returning to a diet that is rich in nutrients can help replenish the body, giving it energy, repairing organ tissue, and strengthening the immune system. Recovering addicts can actually use certain food to facilitate their healing, such as those that increase the production of serotonin that help enhance mood. Feeling better physically and mentally no doubt can facilitate one’s overall experience of life, providing a better outlook on the recovery road ahead.

 

Many teen treatment centers argue that feeling better reduces the risk of relapse. In fact, nutritionists believe that many addicts are so unfamiliar with the feeling of hunger that they can sometimes misinterpret that feeling for a desire to drink, leading to relapse. This is a mistake that can be remedied during recovery with frequent, healthy meals.

 

Working with a nutritionist can be an essential part of achieving recovery from teen alcohol abuse and sobriety, which is in fact all about feeling better emotionally, physically, psychologically and spiritually. Healthy eating is making that choice for healthy living.

 

 

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Teen Alcohol Abuse: It's Not A Healthy Option

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Lucy Nguyen

Lucy Nguyen, LMFT
Clinical Reviewer

Lucy Nguyen is the Executive Director at Paradigm Treatment, overseeing all clinical treatment programs across the organization's southwestern region. Her extensive experience includes working with young adults in private practice, serving as a therapist for children and teens with emotional and behavioral needs, and acting as a behavior interventionist for teens with developmental disorders. Lucy integrates cognitive-behavioral approaches with mindfulness and compassion in her work, and she is also EMDR-trained. She holds a Master of Science in Counseling from California State University, Fullerton, and a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Social Behavior from the University of California, Irvine.

Although there is a big trend right now regarding healthy eating and healthy living, it's true that adolescents don't tend to focus on health at this age. Why should they? They're young and practically invincible.

 

Yet, alcohol in excessive amounts can lead to medical disease and illness. Of course, it can also lead to psychological disorders such as depression, anxiety, and addiction. The risks associated with teen alcohol abuse and addiction is especially true if teens are binge drinking.

 

Yet, if a teen is experiencing an addiction to alcohol, healthy eating can actually facilitate finding sobriety. To be more specific, part of healing the addiction cycle is also healing the process of an insatiable appetite. Often, this ravenous appetite is at the root of an addiction with an unending feeling that we can’t get enough. And underneath that insatiable appetite is trying to feed a part of the self that feels unloved, unwanted. However, the alcohol or the addiction to drugs is only pushing that part of the self away and the ferociousness of the addiction only gets stronger.

 

This destructive cycle continues on and on in the psyche and can apply to food and being compulsive in other ways too. According to Guy Kettelhack, author of Sober and Free: Making Your Recovery Work For You, writes that compulsive behavior stems from a fierce attachment. Holding onto something with that level of ferociousness, in turn, stems from a fear of losing something, whatever that is. Kettelhack suggests that if there’s any magic key to lessening the grip on a compulsive behavior, it’s releasing the fear of what might happen. Certainly, any cycle of addiction is rooted in fear and anxiety.

 

This sort of ferociousness can be applied to what and how a teen eats. In extreme examples, it might look like an eating disorder. In less than extreme cases, it appears as unhealthy eating, such as unconsciously working through an entire bag of chips while watching television. However, both the teen addiction to alcohol as well as the unhealthy eating patterns can result in wreaking havoc on the body. Alcohol alone impedes nutrient breakdown and impairs the ability to assimilate those nutrients. Also, when a teen is in the height of his or her drinking, 50 percent of their calorie intake is derived from the drinking. The damage to the body, not only because of the addiction but also because of the destructive food choices has led many rehabilitative treatment centers to include nutritional counseling in their treatment plan.

 

Nutritional eating can in fact aide the healing process during recovery. Returning to a diet that is rich in nutrients can help replenish the body, giving it energy, repairing organ tissue, and strengthening the immune system. Recovering addicts can actually use certain food to facilitate their healing, such as those that increase the production of serotonin that help enhance mood. Feeling better physically and mentally no doubt can facilitate one’s overall experience of life, providing a better outlook on the recovery road ahead.

 

Many teen treatment centers argue that feeling better reduces the risk of relapse. In fact, nutritionists believe that many addicts are so unfamiliar with the feeling of hunger that they can sometimes misinterpret that feeling for a desire to drink, leading to relapse. This is a mistake that can be remedied during recovery with frequent, healthy meals.

 

Working with a nutritionist can be an essential part of achieving recovery from teen alcohol abuse and sobriety, which is in fact all about feeling better emotionally, physically, psychologically and spiritually. Healthy eating is making that choice for healthy living.

 

 

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