Ok I gotta respond to this. Those who relapse, relapse, yes they do. But they weren't killing people before their minds were messed up.
Take a person prone to blackouts while drinking.
Add equal gallons of shame, guilt, abuse, threats and involuntary confinement and everything else clients need to endure in SOME treatment centres and you now have a person who blacks out AND kills people while drinking.
1.43% of AARC "Graduates" commit murder.
I guess what you're saying is AARC has NO affect on people?? I guess they can't be held responsible for HELPING people if they can't be responsible for HURTING people either, and vice versa.
I'm entitled to my opinion, but, go ahead... I know it's coming... bash me.
I do not bash people, and I hope you let me know if you feel you are being attacked. But here goes....
AARC is plenty powerful. They have the ability to change people's lives dramatically. They can hurt and offer a hand to soothe and make you feel all safe and warm. They offer to solve all of your problems - and for a while, they often do. When someone is in complete control of every aspect of your existence, down to whether or not you are allowed to use the bathroom, they can make you feel however they want you to feel.
This is all within AARC, once outside, this all changes. Because AARC simply does not allow any discussion of underlying issues. "You are not in here because your father molested you, you are in here because you were using drugs." AARC does not ever allow anyone to deal with the reasons they had to look for an escape in the first place. They claim that drugs were the cause of all your problems. They will in fact claim that every problem in your life was caused by your disease, and that AARC/AA will solve them all for you. I think that this is one of the most dangerous aspects of AARC. Because when a person gets out and happens across a difficult patch in their life (and everyone does), first they will try to apply everything AARC has taught them - One day at a time, Easy does it, etc. When AARC's method doesn't work to solve every problem, they have nowhere next to go. Because AARC constantly drills it into your head that no one can help you but AARC. No one knows you like another addict. And that AARC was the "end of the line". So when eventually AARC's principles don't solve everything, there is no backup plan. And because AARC has taught us all that doctors are "quacks" who know nothing about the problems we might have - same with therapists, psychiatrists, and friends not in the program - there is no where to go. They have nothing, so they give up. This has been the case with so many, many graduates that it is the true tragedy of AARC. It is not the physical and/or sexual abuse that some suffer, bad as it may be, but the lasting psychological damage that is done. AARC does not have a single professional psychiatrist or doctor onsite who treats or diagnoses underlying issues that these kids have. That is why AARC can be held (at least partially) responsible for the ultimate desperation and isolation that kids like Jason, Cody, Andy, Devon, etc, etc. feel at the end.