Our Needs: They Go Wa-a-a-y Back
Earlier this month, I attended a conference in Owensboro, Kentucky, entitled Spiritual Caregiving for Persons with Co-Occurring Disorders. The event was coordinated by RiverValley Behavioral Health and the Owensboro District of the United Methodist Kentucky Annual Conference. It was rewarding to see a wonderful turnout and shared effort between treatment providers and the faith-based community.
When I considered the outlined needs, I thought: how basic - and incredibly important - they are. If unfulfilled, how does the baby grow - always in search of such needs? Then too, how might a lifestyle, influenced by addiction, be connected?
Let's take a look at the three needs:
- to be mirrored: when a baby smiles, (s)he has a need to be smiled back; when (s)he cries, there is a need for a concerned response, etc.
- to be seen: hence the child knows that others deem him/her as important enough to be looked at, watched, noticed, paid attention to ...
- to be regarded as
unequivocally wonderful: in other words, the baby is of high value; (s)he essentially is a person of worth: no doubt about it!
Reflecting on these above needs, it becomes obvious: are not these needs STILL significant to older children/teens/adults ... persons of any age? And more to the point: how can the goals of recovery work strive to meet these needs in a healthy, constructive way?
There is treatment for compulsive gambling and there is group support through Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon through which individuals can find help and hope in recovery!
For more information on Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon Meetings, go to www.gamblersanonymous.org
For more information on problem gambling, visit
www.ncpgambling.org
For more information on Indiana treatment options, go to
www.indianaproblemgambling.org
OR
www.grmumc.org
Rev. Janet Jacobs
Director, Gambling Recovery Ministries
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