Intervention on A&E "JOSH"
This show is really an excellent look into the hard core life of drug and alchohol abuse (among others) and I am looking forward to see how they present this subject.
Below is a link to the show which will be presented next week starting Monday 1/23/08 @ 9:00 PM
http://www.aetv.com/intervention/int_episode_guide.jsp
Next, a talented singer and the owner of his own karaoke business, 22-year-old Josh is addicted to food and weighs 550 lbs. Josh's father, Rex, has the same weight problem--at 317 lbs., he's a diabetic who's had six strokes. Now, Rex watches helplessly as Josh follows in his footsteps toward an early death. Josh's mother and two brothers hope that an intervention will be a wake-up call for the whole family to choose health.
The free man owns himself. He can damage himself with either eating or drinking....... If he does he is certainly a damn fool, and he might possibly be a damned soul; but if he may not, he is not a free man any more than a dog.
I do not agree at all and let me tell you why I started watching the Interventon shows after I was part of an intervention- After that I spent 10 Days at the Betty Ford Clinic as part of Family Week- This was a week of intensive counseling about Addicts, speifically my brother. When I say this was intensive counseling, I mean it. My youngest brother is an Addict and Alcholohic and what I did learn that is Addiciton is part of the bagage you carry with you your whole life. My brother manifested his issues growing up with Drink and Meth- I manifiested his with food. I can not tell you how many sessions I sat through- when I say myself in the people and counselors and sessions I attented. The only difference is, they used a needle or a straw or a glass and I used food. By the time I was leaving, my counselor had classified me as a dry drunk (AA has this termed for someone who has all the signs of an addict but does not take drink) Addiction is addiction is addiction- it matters very little what your drug of choice is, what does matter is out of control behavior.
addiction: the state of being enslaved to a habit or practice or to something that is psycholgically or physically habit-forming, as narcotics, to such an extent that its cessation causes sever trauma. my 2 cents Chris
Banded on November 10 2006
60 Days Pre Op 418
Day of Surgery 370
370 / 246 / 190
Pre / Now / Goal
keep us posted on how they treat this episode. interested to know the outcome. thanks for bringing up a very serious problem we can sometimes face. not everyone has this problem but some of us are cross addicted and it's a demon. i can't tell you how many in here battle this and turn to other forms of addiction. sex, food, drugs, pain meds, booze, exercise. the list if formidable. not that any of these things i listed are bad if taken in moderation. it's just when it becomes the only thing you want........carbonblob
The best way to handle an exercise addiction is to take an interest in a variety of physical activity and rotate that activity so that you don't spend too many consecutive hours/ days on one body part or activity type.
With weights, I rotate body parts. With running technique I do drills some days, balance work some days, sprints some days, slow runs some days. Then swimming is for Sundays.
Of course, cardio or weights every day will also lead to fatigue, so it's good to either take a day off or have some low level activity. For me it's balancing on an Indo board (doesn't get me out of breath) or some kind of static running stance activity like balancing on the ball of the foot.
Best Wishes,
Dave