Hi guys,
I have a serious gambling problem, and mainly gamble on slots and FOBTs in the bookies. About 2.5 years ago, my problem became a problem when it developed into a compulsion. I have been strugging ever since with this terrible addiction. I honestly don't know where this is going to end, or indeed, if it ever will!
I have taken some major practical steps to try and stop my gambling:
1) All of my debit and credit cards have been cut up and I only use cash - at the end of each month I write out a cheque to myself that I pay into a building society account that I can use the withdraw cash from.
2) I have started going to GA meetings
3) I have started going to counselling/therapy and have even tried hypnosis
4) I have downgraded to a basic phone and got rid of my IPhone
5) I have installed anti-gambling software on my PC
6) I have self-excluded from so many betting shops and gambling establishments I have lost count - got to be 100 atleast now
Despite taking practical steps to stop my gambling, I just can't seem to stop! It doesn't matter how much help you get, or how many barriers you put in place: as long as the urges remain the problem remains.
I don't want to have to contend with this problem for the rest of myself, but do accept absolutely that I will always have this vulnerability.
Any feedback or support would be greatly appreciated 🙂
All good barriers but a couple of others that will help are handing over financial responsibility to someone you trust, mum,dad, sibling or partner. Accountability as to where your money is going, that mean receipting everything from a newspaper to a new car. Complete & utter honesty of your situation to those around you. I presume your GA group has already suggested these to you.
As addicts we are locked into our addiction not only by our painful pasts & distressing present but also by our bleak outlook for our future.
You dont just recover from an addiction by stopping using. You recover by creating a new life where it is preferable not to gamble, where you have hope & balance in your life that makes you want to participate in it rather than run from it. If you dont create this new life all the factors that brought you to addiction will eventually catch up with you again
Dan
Exellent post day@atime.
Only advice I can add for 29gamguy is to read the piece on urges by Phil on Challenge 2015. I have copied it across.
Coping with urges
A difficult week for some is coming and I hope we all get through it without any urges. However if you are struggling have a read of this. I found it here, https://www.gamblingtherapy.org/urges
How to cope with urges.
For many individuals, the crucial problem is coping with urges. In order to cope well with them, it is usually necessary to understand them accurately, rather than in the distorted manner of many addicts. Some common distortions about urges are that urges are excruciating or unbearable, that they compel you to use or act, that they will drive you crazy if you do not use or act, and that they will not go away until you use or act. Some individuals are confused enough about their own thinking that they have a difficult time identifying distinct urges, and simply think of themselves as behaving a certain way "because I like to."
In actuality, urges can be uncomfortable but they are not unbearable unless you blow them out of proportion; they do not force you to do anything (there have probably been many instances where you had an urge but did not act), they have not driven you crazy yet (and will not), each urge will go away if you simply wait long enough, and there are periods between urges which become increasingly longer if you stop.
Although during the initial days or weeks of abstinence or moderation, especially after a long period of daily addictive behavior, you may experience many urges of strong and even increasing intensity. Recovering addicts of all types report that urges eventually peak in frequency, intensity, and duration, and then gradually, with occasional flare-ups, fade away. How long it will take for urges to peak, and how rapidly they will subside, depends on many factors, including the specific addiction, the length of the addiction, how successful the program of abstinence or moderation has been, and the strength of the developing alternative lifestyle. However, as a very broad guideline, within six months to one year most addicts will report only feeble urges (for instance, one a week, lasting a few minutes, a 1 or 2 on a 10 point scale).
It is also crucial not to take responsibility for the occurrence of the urge, but only your response to it. It is normal for any addict to experience urges, and just because on Sunday you decide to stop does not mean that on Monday you will not have urges. The fact that urges occur does not indicate that your motivation is weak, but that your addiction is strong. Because all habits have unconscious components, of which the urge is one, it will take time for these to die away. What is within your control, however, is how you respond to the urge. An analogy could be made to someone knocking at your front door. All sorts of individuals might knock at your door, but it is up to you to decide with whom you will talk. Their knocking is not your responsibility, but to what extent you choose to speak with them is.
Specific techniques for coping with urges include the followin:.
When an urge occurs, accept it, but keep it at a distance. Experience it as you would a passing thought, one which "comes in one ear and out the other". Detach yourself from it, and observe and study it as an outside object for a moment. Then return your attention to what you were previously doing. If the urge is intense, remember (and perhaps picture) your benefits of stopping/cutting back (which can be carried in your wallet or purse). Recall a "moment of clarity", a moment when changing your addictive behavior seemed almost without question the right course of action. Think your addictive behavior through to the end:
When an urge is present, you tend to think only of the Benefits of the Addiction, but completing the image to include the negative consequences that follow will give you a more accurate view of the whole scenario. If the urge is very intense, engage yourself in a distracting activity, one which you have enjoyed before and which will take your mind off the urge, or use a specific distraction technique, such as counting things (e.g., leaves on a plant, books on a shelf), doing arithmetic (e.g., continually subtracting 7 from 1000, 993, 986, etc.), or focusing on alphabetical/verbal games (e.g., saying the alphabet backwards, reading signs backwards, searching book titles or license plates for the alphabet, etc.). Any simple activity conducted at high speed can fill up your attention, thereby allowing no attention for the urge. Any thought or activity on which you completely focus your attention is all that is needed, because if no attention is paid to the urge, then it will no longer exist. Although another urge may come along at any point, that urge also can be dealt with in a similar fashion. Over time the urges come less frequently, as already stated.
To summarize these urge coping techniques, all urges should be accepted. Low level urges can be observed but kept at a distance. Attention can then be re-directed to whatever one was paying attention to prior to the urge. More intense urges can be "counter argued" by reviewing in some fashion the benefits of not engaging in the addictive behavior, and the facts about urges mentioned above (e.g., all urges go away eventually; they are uncomfortable but not unbearable unless I blow them out of proportion;). V ery intense urges can be dealt with using some form of distraction, repeated as necessary. All urges eventually go.
Best Wishes.
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