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Common Natural remedies

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Benefits of Antabuse
Suffering from alcoholism is a terrible and dreaded disease. While you may attend meetings and work tirelessly to defeat the disease there is no doubt that occasionally you need more than just a wish and a prayer. Thanks to the wonderful advancements in the world of modern medicine it can be much easier to deal with the alcohol abuse through a wonderful medication called Antabuse.
Antabuse, also known by its chemical name as disulfiram, is one of the smartest and most advanced drugs on the market. The way alcohol works is when you drink alcohol is broken down by your liver which is converted ultimately into acetic acid. So the way antabuse works with the abuse of alcohol is the amount of acetaldehyde is about 10 times higher in the body than if you had consumed the same amount of alcohol and yet hadn’t been on antabuse.
So what does this increased level of acetaldehyde due to you? Produces a dreaded hangover. So let’s say you are on antabuse and you down a beer to get your night started, within a few minutes you will start to experience some severe hangover symptoms and they will last anywhere from several minutes to several hours.
What symptoms do you experience? Your skin might flush, there will be nausea, vomiting, terrible headache, confusion, shortness of breath, and perhaps even fainting or collapse. In short it is the worst hangover you can imagine for the least amount of alcohol you have ever drank. Here is where antabuse works in the longterm: your body cannot build an immunity to it. Some medicines are taken but then you can grow a tolerance with it. However the longer you take Antabuse the worse the effects get for you if you consume alcohol.
While the hangover itself is a side effect, the true side effect of Antabuse is a shortness of breath and a tingling in the lower legs. But there is no doubt that if Antabuse is committed to by the patient it can help keep you clean and sober for many years to come.
Telling Kids About Addiction

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When a parent is suffering from a crippling addiction to drugs or alcohol it can take its toll on a family. It doesn’t just affect the addict themselves. Kids are often the most at risk to retain long lasting negative effects of a parent dealing with drug and alcohol addiction. So as the spouse of a person with a drug addiction, talking to kids about the condition of the other parent is not an easy or enviable task but if you are careful but direct you can help make the process of dealing with a parent who is addicted go a lot easier.
The first and most important thing to tell the kids is that their mommy or daddy loves them. Kids easily confuse the distant behavior of a parent with not being loved. It is important that this point is hammered home for the children. They need to know that addiction is more about a person not loving themselves than it is about them not loving someone else.
Make sure the children are aware that the problems or the behavior they are seeing is not a reflection on them at all. Sometimes kids think a parent behaves a certain way because they acted out. This is never the case. Explain that they are important and special and the behavior is a separate issue.
If your spouse is about to or is currently receiving treatment for their addiction let the children know that the behavior of their parent will continue to change and may in fact go a little back and forth. Let them know that the parent is trying to get better not just for themselves but for their children.
Make sure you ask the kids if they have any questions. They may not feel comfortable telling you how they feel. But they may have all kinds of questions. It’s hard to prepare for what they might ask but know that you just need to be delicate in it all and reiterate that mom and dad love them no matter what their behavior otherwise suggests.



