Late Stages of Alcoholism
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Alcoholism Stages. There
are four stages of alcoholism. Therefore, the late stages of alcoholism consist of the third and the
fourth stages of this disease.
Perhaps the defining characteristic of the late alcoholism stages is the loss of control the
alcoholic has concerning his or her drinking behavior.
Stated differently, in the earlier stages of alcohol addiction, the alcoholic had a choice
whether he or she would take the first drink. In the late stages of alcoholism, however, an alcoholic
no longer has a choice: he or she simply must drink in order to function.
Due to the fact that the late alcoholism stages consist of the third and fourth alcoholism
stages, we will review each one of these stages in an attempt to gain a better understanding of this disease,
especially during the late stages.
Late Stages of Alcoholism: The Third Stage
In the third stage of alcoholism, the loss of control becomes more problematic. This means that the
individual is not able to drink according to his or her intentions.
For instance, once the individual reaches this stage and takes the first drink, he or she
can no longer control further drinking behavior despite the fact that their intentions were to have just a "few
drinks."
Another key chrematistic of
this stage of the disease is the following: the drinker often starts to experience serious relationship,
financial, work-related, and perhaps legal problems (such as multiple DUIs).
In the third stage of alcoholism, the drinker starts to avoid family and friends and exhibits a lack of interest
in activities that once were meaningful or fun.
Also typical during this stage are "eye-openers," that is, drinking that takes place whenever the alcoholic
awakens. The alcoholic resorts to eye-openers mainly to "calm the nerves," to lessen a hangover, or to quiet
the feelings of remorse the drinker sometimes feels after a period of time without having a drink.
As the alcohol continues to drink more, he or she starts to neglect most things of importance, even necessities
such as shelter, personal interaction, food, and water.
At this stage of the disease, moreover, it is interesting to point out that instead of encountering an increase
in tolerance, the drinker frequently experiences a decrease in alcohol tolerance. Simply put, this basically
means that less alcohol is needed for the person to get drunk.
And finally, during this stage, the alcoholic usually makes half-hearted attempts at getting medical
treatment. Stated differently, due to the fact that most alcoholics during this stage are hesitant to reveal
the extent of their drinking, they seldom receive any lasting medical care.
Even when they admit a small segment of the "truth" concerning their drinking behavior to a health care
provider, they typically fail to follow through with the medical treatment, consequently accomplishing little, if
anything of significance regarding their disease.
Classic Alcoholic Behaviors in the Third Stage of Alcoholism
The following list characterizes some of the classic alcoholic behaviors in the third stage
of alcoholism:
- Loss of willpower
- Increasing tremors
- Serious financial, work-related problems, and relationship problems
- A decrease in alcohol tolerance
- Unreasonable resentments
- The start of physical deterioration
- Frequent destructive or violent behavior
- An increase in failed promises and resolutions to one's self and to others
- Loss of interests
- Problems with the law (e.g, DWIs)
- The loss of control has become a pattern
- The development of an alibi system - an elaborate system of excuses for their drinking
- A decrease in alcohol tolerance
- Avoidance of friends and family
- Aggressive and grandiose behavior
- Eye-openers upon awakening
- Half-hearted attempts at seeking medical treatment
- Neglect of necessities such as food, shelter, and water
Late Stages of Alcoholism: The Fourth Stage and the Alcoholism Last
Stage
The fourth and
final stage of alcoholism is exemplified by an almost total loss of control regarding drinking
behavior. In the earlier stages of the disease, for instance, the individual may have been successful in
maintaining employment.
Now, however, since drinking starts earlier in the day and frequently continues throughout the day,
very few, if any full-time positions can be sustained once an individual reaches such circumstances.
Moreover, in the earlier stages of the disease, the alcoholic had a choice whether he or she would
take the first drink.
Once the alcoholic had the first drink, he or she typically lost all control and would therefore
continue drinking. In the last stage of alcoholism, however, alcoholics no longer have a choice: they
must drink in order to make it through the day.
| As the alcohol dependent person advances through the various alcoholism stages, he
or she usually experiences severe problems and difficulties in virtually all facet of his or her
life. Examples include financial difficulties, employment problems, poor health, legal issues
(such as receiving multiple DUIs), and relationship issues. |
Flights Into Oblivion
In this
stage of the illness, the alcoholic typically exhibits an almost total disregard for everything, including
necessities such as food, shelter, family interactions, and employment. During the last stage of alcoholism,
moreover, benders are common.
More to the point, in this stage, the alcoholic frequently gets helplessly and hopelessly drunk and
may linger in this condition for days at a time.
The unachievable goal for the alcoholic at this time is to experience the "high" he or she once
felt.
Paradoxically, these occasional "flights into oblivion" are perhaps best described as drinking to
get away from the problems caused by drinking.
| Alcoholism Last Stage. Due to the fact that drinkers in the alcoholism last stage
rarely, if ever, admit the extent of their drinking, they infrequently receive any lasting medical
treatment. |
In the second or third stages of alcoholism the alcoholic's hands may have trembled ever so
slightly on mornings after getting drunk.
In the last two alcoholism stages, however, alcoholics get "the shakes" whenever they try to or are
forced to quit drinking. These tremors are a symptom of a critical nervous disorder that now affects the
entire body.
| The Stages of Alcoholism. Most people who drink alcohol stop at the "experimental"
or the "recreational" phase. For a host of complex and complicated reasons, however, some
people drink their way through the stages of alcoholism. |
The Shakes and the DTs
When "the shakes" are combined with hallucinations, the result is known as "the DTs" or delirium
tremens, a potentially fatal form of alcoholism withdrawal if the alcoholic does not receive immediate medical
treatment.
After an attack of the DTs, more than a few alcoholics promise to never drink
again. Regrettably, most of them do not and can not fulfill their promise, and so they gradually return to
drinking, and the process starts all over again.
| The Alcoholism Stages. During most of the alcoholism stages, alcohol recovery is
possible--if the disease has been caught in time and treated. Relapse can be triggered by
external factors, such as environmental events, social pressures, negative life situations or
internal factors such as anxiety, craving for alcohol, or depression. |
The Need to Hide the Booze
Alcoholism Last Stage. In the
fourth and final stage of alcoholism, the most important thing in the life of the alcoholic is having an
easily accessible supply of alcohol close at hand so that he or she can avoid "the shakes."
Consequently, during last of the alcoholism stages, alcoholics will do almost anything to get the
alcohol they need. Once the alcohol is acquired, however, alcoholics will typically hide their bottles so that
they can get a drink whenever they desire, which usually means any hour of the day or night.
| Many people only think of a "skid-row bum" when they think of someone with a serious
alcohol problem. This situation is reflective of the late stages of alcoholism, when the alcoholic
has lost his or her health, financial stability, family, or job because of alcoholism. An
individual doesn't reach this alcoholism last stage overnight. |
Alcoholism Last Stage Symptoms
The following
represents some of the classic alcoholic behaviors in the fourth and final stage of alcoholism:
- Impaired thinking
- Moral deterioration
- Unreasonable hostility and resentment toward others
- Benders, or lengthy intoxications
- Devaluation of personal relationships
- "The shakes"
- Obsession with drinking
- Visual and auditory and hallucinations
- Continual loss of control
- Nameless anxieties and fears such as feelings of impending doom or destruction
- The "DTs"
- The disintegration of the alibi system
- Persistent remorse
- Nebulous spiritual desires
- The realization of being out of control
- The possibility of alcoholic psychosis
- Loss of tolerance for alcohol
- Indefinable fears
| Perhaps the most dangerous of the stages of alcoholism withdrawal is called delirium
tremens (DTs). Approximately 5% of the alcoholics who experience alcohol withdrawal symptoms
when they quit drinking suffer from delirium tremens. |
Late Stages of Alcoholism: Conclusion
The Late Stages of Alcoholism. Based on the perspective that is advocated,
it is generally accepted that there are a number of alcoholism stages.
In a four-stage alcoholism framework, the third and fourth stages of alcoholism comprise the "late
stages of alcoholism" and are typified by an almost total loss of control regarding drinking behavior.
This lack of control is pivotal and along with the fear of experiencing alcohol withdrawal
symptoms, is essentially the cause of virtually everything the alcoholic experiences.
Stated differently, if alcoholics had control over their drinking and never had to experience
alcohol withdrawals, they would not find themselves caught in the vice-like grip of alcoholism, the disease.
| In the very early stages of alcoholism, denial is minimal. And with
encouragement, alcoholics in first two stages of alcoholism can usually view their problem fairly
realistically. By the time the alcoholic's illness has sufficiently advanced to the late
stages of alcoholism, however, denial becomes serious in the eyes of others and an elaborate system
of denial shields the alcoholic from seeing what is truly happening. |
| Four Stages of Alcoholism Treatment. Alcohol treatment can be seen as consisting of
four stages. First, the alcohol dependent individual needs to be medically stabilized. Second,
the alcoholic, needs to undergo the detoxification process as well as the alcohol withdrawal
process. Third, the drinker needs counseling and education so that he or she can learn how to
function in society without drinking. And fourth, the alcoholic needs to establish long-term
sobriety and rehabilitation. |
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