Addiction is a condition that results from repeated consumption of a drug or alcohol. The person may come to depend on the feeling of euphoria that their drug of choice creates.
They may continue to take the drug, even as negative consequences begin to appear. These consequences may, at first, be relatively manageable for the person. They may not yet need help from a Memphis drug rehab.
Over time, the user may begin to see that they must use more of the drug to get the same effect as they did in the beginning. Once they get the idea in their mind to use on a given day, they may go to great lengths to find the drug.
They may, at the beginning, use only occasionally. But as time goes on, their use becomes more frequent.
And, once they have begun using, they may find that they cannot stop until the supply, or their money, or the opportunity to get more, is gone. Even then, some drug addicts will not stop willingly. They may do extraordinary things to get money (stealing from friends and family is done without a second thought).
At this point, they may know they need help from a Memphis drug rehab, but they will often be unwilling to take steps in that direction. They will continue to use drugs, even as the fallout gets more and more serious. They may lose their job because they stopped showing up regularly.
Before realizing they need help from a Memphis drug rehab, they may go through their savings or even sell all their possessions to continue using.
Getting the addict to consider a Memphis drug rehab is often very difficult. They may deny they have a problem despite pleas from loved ones to get help. They may realize they have a problem but feel that their desire for the drug is simply too strong for them to go without it.
It may take an intervention to get the addict into treatment, or they may hit bottom and decide on their own that they have to change.
Founder -
Reverend Dr. Michael Wilson

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Online recovery resources and articles ...

The umbrella term "drug rehabilitation", also referred to as "drug rehab", is a complex of therapeutic measures and procedures (pharmaceutical, psychotherapeutic, medical, etc.) to help an individual get rid of his or her drug dependency, including psychological and physical types of dependency on various psychoactive agents, such as "street drugs" (amphetamine, crystal meth, heroin, cocaine, etc.), alcohol, prescription drugs, and so on. Various measures of drug rehabilitation are intended to enable the drug user to quit taking drugs and, therefore, to avoid numerous negative consequences and implications of substance abuse - legal, physical, physiological, social, and financial.

