Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Type A addiction denial is outright dishonesty or lying. The addict knows they have a problem but, when confronted about it, they flat-out deny having a problem.
Type B denial is more insidious and can be described as being honestly dishonest. The addict is pretty much blind to their problem, having convinced themselves through self-deception, rationalizing, justifying, and excuse-making, that they don’t have a problem, yet to everyone around them it is obvious.
Stage One Addiction Denial
Stage one of addiction denial can be either type A or type B denial as described above. The addict may accept being addicted to a substance but, they truly don’t believe that they have the disease of addiction. They might flat-out deny having a problem despite overwhelming evidence or they might admit that they are a drug abuser but that they’re not physically dependent or addicted.
The bottom line: the addict doesn’t accept having the disease of addiction, and therefore is unwilling to accept that complete abstinence from all drugs is required.
4 months since I entered rehab (gave up acros). I have tested alk only twice and phosphates only once since then. I have no idea what my nitrate levels are, don't care. I haven't tested anything else.
Stage Two Addiction Denial
This stage of addiction denial describes the experience of the addict who denies the need for ongoing sobriety after they complete treatment. People often struggle with the idea of being powerless over a substance and, overall, their addiction.
I only tested my phosphates to see if I was 'close' enough with my existing maintenance routine to ramp it up to get acros back in the tank. NOPE! The hanna phosphorous test was pegged at 200 (max) so there is no knowing what phosphates really are, but I am pretty confident they are above .61!
Stage Three Addiction Denial
The third stage of addiction denial is the refusal to believe that you have to be willing to go to any length for your recovery program. Basically, the addict's commitment to sobriety might be strong but, their commitment to doing whatever it takes to maintain their sobriety is weak.
An indication of this type of denial is having other priorities that trump their sobriety. Oftentimes, people rush their recovery because of their family, their job, the business they own.
What to do? I am resisting the urge to do anything at all with the tanks. I don't want to crank on the GFO hard to get into acros again, but ask me tomorrow, I might have changed my mind.
In the long run, I can see that I will need to move the fish that get really big into the 300 and the corals that they might eat into the 180, so basically, it will be a complete reversal of the current set up. Or, that could just be me inventing projects for myself. We all can't have Marty's menagerie of pipe, so we have to find ways to keep ourselves interested.
I killed monti in two weeks in a dedicated tank with no fish and it grows like a weed for you...