45 YEARS OF RECOVERY ONE DAY AT A TIME

Thursday, 21. March 2013

Arnie Wexler one of the foremost experts on gambling addiction will celebrate 45 years in his recovery
Anonymity Of Addiction Hurts More Than It Helps Our silence has allowed others to define us
On April 10th Arnie Wexler will celebrate 45 years clean from his gambling addiction. He placed his last bet on April 10th 1968
At that time gambling in America looked very different than it does today. Legal casinos were only in Las Vegas. There was no such thing as Internet gambling. There were no cell phones. There were no credit cards or ATM machines. There weren’t any check cashing privileges at racetracks. Off track betting, Simulcast , or telephone betting did not exist. There were no phones at the racetrack. Only three states had a lottery. Riverboats were a tourist attraction along the Mississippi River (not gambling facilities). There were no toll free 800 numbers to call to buy information on what games to bet on. Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon family groups, only had meetings in a few states. The Super bowl was only in its’ second year and there was no Monday night football for gamblers to “Bail out with ” !
Today most people in America live within 200 miles of some sort of gambling.
Today not only do we have more active compulsive gamblers, then in any other time in our history but we have states addicted to the gambling revenue also.
IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU KNOW, HAS A GAMBLING PROBLEM BREAK THE ADDICTION BEFORE IT BREAKS YOU !
CALL: 888- LAST BET

Arnie Wexler has spoken to more gambling addicts then any one else in the country and has been involved in helping compulsive gamblers for over 44 years. He has appeared on many of America’s top television show, including Oprah, Nightline and 48 Hours,60 Minutes He has been quoted and profiled in hundreds of magazines and newspapers..
Arnie Wexler is a certified compulsive gambling counselor (CCGC) and was the Executive Director of the Council on Compulsive Gambling of New Jersey for eight years. He currently works with his wife, Sheila. They run a consulting firm: Arnie and Sheila Wexler Associates. They present workshops and seminars on the subject of Compulsive Gambling Addiction internationally.


Wexler received the Herman Goldman Award from the National Council on Problem Gambling, Inc., 1991.
And the Robert L. Custer award from NCPG 2004
In 1984 Presidential Award for Community Service, presented by President Ronald Regan.
Arnie has presented workshops and training seminars nationally and internationally. He has trained over 40,000 casino employees and executives and has worked with gaming companies to help formulate Responsible Gaming Programs. In addition, he has done training for Fortune 500 corporations, legislative bodies and on college campuses. He has also done training’s’ for the National Football League .And workshops for the N B A
Compulsive gambling is a progressive disease, much like an addiction to alcohol or drugs. In many cases, the gambling addiction is hidden until the gambler becomes unable to function without gambling, and he or she begins to exclude all other activities from their lives. Inability to stop gambling often results in financial devastation, broken homes, employment problems, criminal acts and suicide attempts.
Since 1980 the American Psychiatric Association has included a diagnosis for Pathological (Compulsive) Gambling in their manual. It is considered a disorder that responds to treatment.
Compulsive gambling has some similarities to other addictions (i.e. chemical addiction or alcoholism). The gambler uses gambling to “get high” or to numb themselves, by escaping into a dream world of gambling. However, compulsive gamblers do not ingest anything and therefore, do not have any visual signs such as track marks, dilated pupils. This adds to the denial of this illness, since the person still appears “normal”.
The gambler is eventually able to remove themselves from reality to the point of being totally obsessed with gambling. Eventually, they will do anything to get the money with which to stay in “action”. They will spend all their time and energy developing schemes in order to get the money to continue gambling. Lying becomes a way of life for the gambler. They will try to convince others and themselves that their lies are actually truths.
The effects of compulsive gambling can be devastating. Financially, emotionally and mentally,the gambler as well as the family will be drained of all their energy and resources. The worst thing any family member can ever do is to bail out the compulsive gambler from their financial pressures. Money is the “drug” that the gambler uses.
Our society views gambling as “fun and games”. For many people, that is the case unless you are an addicted gambler
Gambling is glamorized in the movies, on TV and in the media. One prime example is the fact that when you open your local newspaper you can get the odds and point spreads on almost every sporting event that will take place, nationwide, even though you can’t place a legal bet in America, except in Las Vegas. Some newspapers are even running “poker” columns and treating the game of poker as a “sport”. Another example is the sports talk shows and nightly news shows that tell you who to pick and what point spreads to take.
The lottery has become a national event on a daily basis. Sometimes it’s the lead story on the nightly news. I’ve seen advertising when a Governor of a state, holds up a lottery ticket and suggests that citizens are helping worthy causes if they buy a lottery ticket. If that same Governor had held up a bottle of alcohol and suggested that sales taxes would help the state, people would be outraged. When I was the Executive Director of the Council on Compulsive Gambling of NJ, we hired Gallop to do a survey. Two of the questions were: “have you ever played illegal numbers?” (31 % said they did.) and “do you play legal lottery?’( 81% said they did).
Poker is sweeping the nation and the world. It is the hottest thing on college campuses. It is easier to play poker then it is to buy cigarettes or a can of beer on campuses all over the country. In the 44 years that I have been helping compulsive gamblers, I have never seen anything explode like poker has. One third of all the callers to our help line 888 LAST BET) are either parents of young gamblers or young people who have the problem. I have spoken to college students who play poker day and night. They even play during class. It has become such an enormous craze that poker paraphernalia is one of the biggest selling items in stores, today.

You can’t surf the TV without seeing some kind of poker tournament being televised, and you can’t be on your computer without seeing a pop up about poker or receiving an email inviting you to come to a poker site to play. They often invite you to play for free, and after awhile you will get invited to switch over to live poker games for money.
Some of the people (both youngsters and adults) are becoming addicted to poker. Not everyone who plays, will develop a compulsive gambling problem, but there are those who will get caught up in the craze and then cross that invisible line which will lead to destruction. Since Compulsive Gambling is an impulse disorder, the fact that someone can “play” at any time, day or night and anywhere (home, college dorm or office) increases the chances of the person becoming addicted.
According to a Harvard study a few years ago, 4.67% of young people have a gambling problem. Experts tell us that the earlier a person starts to gamble, the greater the risk of them becoming a compulsive gambler. In another survey, 96% of adult male recovering gamblers’ stated that they started gambling before the age of 14. With this poker explosion now we see that the average age of people seeking help for a gambling problem is much younger today.
It seems to me that there must be education and prevention programs for young people (from grade school through college) similar to those programs for drugs and alcohol.
I think it’s important to note that it is not just young people that have this problem.
The gambling experience (both legal and illegal) is much more available in our society, today. This disease cuts across all cultural, social and economic aspects of society.
SO MANY CASES OF WOMEN ARE SHOWING UP IN COURTS TODAY BECAUSE THEY EMBEZZLED $ TO SUPPORT THERE GAMBLING ADDICTIONS.
Wexler Said the shame and guilt hits the female gambler harder than with the male,” “When I talk with male gamblers, sometimes it takes two or three times before they go for help. Sometimes it takes two or three years before a female seeks help.
You can get up in the middle of the night and gamble on the Internet in your birthday suit And you don’t even have to put gasoline in your car to travel anyplace.

There is help for the compulsive gambler and their families in the form of Gamblers Anonymous and Gam-Anon, internationally. Gamblers Anonymous is a 12- step, self help program for the compulsive gambler. Gam-Anon is for those affected by a gambling problem.
Some people may have a need for professional treatment services, as well. Unfortunately, there are not that many facilities available. In addition, when most gamblers “bottom out”, he or she usually has no funds to pay for these services. Most insurance companies do not cover compulsive gambling treatment. A few states have funded programs, but more is needed.
People need to understand that although compulsive gambling is a devastating addiction, you can recover and live a productive and wonderful life. I know from my own experience that this is possible. I, like many others, lived every day in the grips of hopelessness because I couldn’t stop gambling. I used to go to bed at night hoping and praying that I would not wake up so that I wouldn’t have to face the next day. Today, I can’t wait to wake up in the morning and enjoy another day without gambling.
ARNIE WEXLER CCCG

561 2490922
954 501 5270

The American Psychiatric Association describes Pathological Gambling as an impulse disorder. The criteria they use to diagnose this disorder is as follows:
Persistent and recurrent maladaptive gambling behavior as indicated by at least five of the following:
1. is preoccupied with gambling (e.g., preoccupied with reliving past gambling experiences, handicapping or planning the next venture, or thinking of ways to get money with which to gamble)
2. needs to gamble with increasing amounts of money in order to achieve the desired excitement
3. has repeated unsuccessful efforts to control, cut back, or stop gambling
4. is restless or irritable when attempting to cut down or stop gambling
5. gambles as a way of escaping from problems or of relieving a dysphoric mood (e.g., feelings of helplessness, guilt, anxiety, depression.
6. after losing money gambling, often returns another day in order to get even (“chasing” one’s losses)
7. lies to family members, therapist, or others to conceal the extent of involvement with gambling
8. has committed illegal acts, such as forgery, fraud, theft, or embezzlement, in order to finance gambling
9. has jeopardized or lost a significant relationship, job, or educational or career opportunity because of gambling
10. relies on others to provide money to relieve a desperate financial situation caused by gambling

Arnie and Sheila Wexler have provided extensive training on Compulsive, Problem and Underage Gambling, to more than 40,000 gaming employees (personnel and executives) and have written Responsible Gaming Programs for major gaming companies. In addition, they have worked with Gaming Boards and Regulators, presented educational workshops nationally and internationally and have provided expert witness testimony. Sheila Wexler is the Executive Director of the Compulsive Gambling Foundation. They also run a national help line (888 LAST BET) and work at Recovery Road, a treatment facility in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida that specializes in the treatment of those suffering with gambling addiction.

The Last Bet: A Life Beyond Gambling Addiction

Wednesday, 20. March 2013

The Last Bet: A Life Beyond Gambling Addiction
This interview is live streaming until Thursday, March 21st at 4:00 pm PT.Click play to start!
with Arnie Wexler
This interview is live streaming until Thursday, March 21st at 4:00 pm PT.Click play to start!

Arnie Wexler is one of the foremost experts on compulsive gambling in this country, and has been involved in helping compulsive gamblers for over 30 years. He has appeared on many of America’s top television shows, including Oprah, NightLine, and 48 Hours. He has been quoted and profiled in hundreds of magazines and newspapers. Find out more about gambling addiction by calling 888-LAST-BET.

 

MARCH MADNESS the most gambled on event of the year.

Sunday, 17. March 2013

MARCH MADNESS the most gambled on event of the year.
Who knows how many college students are going to bet on these games ?
And how many who will place the 1st bet they ever make on one of the games and might become an addicted gambler ! How many athletes will place a bet on a game also. Maybe even some that are playing in the games.!
FROM THE BOOK MONEY PLAYERS DAYS AND NIGHTS INSIDE THE NBA
BY ARMEN KETEYIAN AND HARVEY ARATON
ARNIE WEXLER IS QUOTED SAYING ON A NCAA PANEL IN NYC MARCH 96 CALLED “GAMBLING AND COLLEGE SPORTS”
“THE GAMBLING IS GOING ON THE NEXT GENERAL THING THATS GOING TO HAPPEN IS A MAJOR POINT SHAVING SCANDAL ITS JUST AROUND THE CORNER GUYS AND WHEN IT HAPPENS YOU ARE GOING TO SEE COLLEGE ADMINISTRATORS SAY HOW COULD THIS HAPPEN IN OUR SCHOOL”
THE NCAA LET ME WRITE 4 ARTICLES ON GAMBLING ADDICTION OVER THE YEARS FOR THE NCAA NEWS. AND I HAVE NEVER GOTTEN 1 CALL FROM A COLLEGE ADMINISTRATOR ,COACH,OR A. D. BUT MANY CALLS FROM STUDENTS WHO WANTED HELP.

Arnie over the years has spoken to many athletes who had a gambling addiction.
When you open your local newspaper to the sports pages all over the country you do see lines and point spreads on sporting events.
I think the responsible thing to do would be for newspapers to carry a
public service message
Need Help For A Gambling Problem? Call: 1-888 LAST BET).
The N C A A should have enough clout to stop something like this on
N C A A games—– if they wanted to !! . But why would they want to.
“The NCAA and the media are part of the problem,” Wexler said. “…A couple years back the NCAA said it wouldn’t credential any newspaper that carries the lines and odds. In two or three weeks that story went away very quickly because the NCAA knew they wouldn’t get the hype” for its NCAA basketball tournament if it started banning media from coverage.
Arnie Wexler said “It is easier to gamble than it is to buy cigarettes or a can of beer on college campuses all over the country.”
The National Gambling Study Commission said that there are “5 million compulsive gamblers and 15 million at risk in the U.S” Forty eight percent of the people who gamble bet on sports.
Get the real scoop: Talk to Arnie Wexler who is one of the nation’s leading experts on the subject of compulsive gambling and a recovering compulsive gambler himself, who placed his last bet on April 10, 1968. He has been involved in helping compulsive gamblers for the last 44 years. Through the years, Wexler has spoken to more compulsive gamblers than anyone else in America.
Arnie has spoken to students who gamble in college, day and night. They even gamble during class, and it goes on in high school even in the lunch rooms. According to a Harvard study a few years ago, 4.67 percent of young people have a gambling problem. Experts tell us that the earlier a person starts to gamble, the greater the risk of them becoming a compulsive gambler. In another survey, 96 percent of adult male recovering gamblers stated that they started gambling before the age of 14 .
Some years ago, Arnie was on a TV show with Howard Cossell (ABC Sports Beat). The topic was: Does the media encourage the public to gamble? Bobby Knight, Indiana University basketball coach at the time, said: “A newspaper which published point spreads should also publish names and addresses of services that render to prostitutes. They practically have the same legality in every one of our states, and I can’t see why one is any better than the other” On the same show, former baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn said: “Anything that encourages gambling on team sports bothers me. We all look hypocritical. But then why are we putting up the odds unless we are trying to encourage it?” David Stern, NBA commissioner said: “We don’t want the week’s grocery money to be bet on the outcome of a particular sporting event”
Yet on Dec. 11, 2009, commissioner David Stern told SI.com (the website for Sports Illustrated) that legalized gambling on the NBA May be a huge opportunity”
Arnie is available to speak with you on this subject.
Arnie & Sheila Wexler Associates
aswexler.com
LAKE WORTH FL
Office #: 561-249 0922
Cell#: 954-501-5270
Need Help For A Gambling Problem?
Wexler runs a national help line for gamblers seeking help:
Call: 1-888 LAST BET
ASWEXLER.COM

GAMBLING ADDICTION INTERVIEW

Sunday, 17. March 2013

http://www.entheos.com/Recovery2point0/Arnie-Wexler

RECOVERY 2.0: BEYOND ADDICTION CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

Saturday, 16. March 2013

RECOVERY 2.0: BEYOND ADDICTION CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

Sunday, March 17

12 PT / 3 ET – Sat Dharam Khalsa– Beyond Addiction: The Yogic Path to Recovery 1 PT / 4 ET – Elisa Hallerman – Maintaining Sobriety, Achieving Balance and Healing Families 2 PT / 5 ET – Rolf Gates – Meditations from the Mat – Along the Road to Recovery 3 PT / 6 ET – Dr. Marc Lewis – The Addicted Brain: Insights From a Neuroscientist and Former Drug Addict 4 PT / 7 ET – Beverly Berg, PhD – Recovering Couples: From Dysfunction to True Love 5 PT / 8 ET – Nick Ortner – Emotional Freedom Technique and Overcoming Addiction 6PT / 9 ET – Noah Levine – Take Refuge: The Buddhist Path of Recovery

Monday, March 18

12 PT / 3 ET – Bruce Alexander – The Globalization of Addiction 1 PT / 4 ET – Chelsea Roff – Starving for Love: Recovering from Eating Disorders 2 PT / 5 ET – Sukhdev Jackson – Women in Recovery: The Graceful Path of Recovery 3 PT / 6 ET – Anna David – Sex and Relationships in Recovery 4 PT / 7 ET –Guru Prem- Finding the True Path of Recovery: Moving from the Head to the Heart 5 PT / 8 ET – Dr. Dan Frigo – Hazelden Turns 64: Best Practices of In-Patient Treatment for Addiction 6 PT /9 ET – Christopher Kennedy Lawford – Recover to Live: Kick any Habit, Manage any Addiction

Tuesday, March 19

12 PT / 3 ET – Rainbeau Mars – Food, Drugs and Fear: A Survivor’s Tale of Recovery and Triumph 1 PT / 4 ET – Guru Charan – Meditation and Transformation of the Addictive Mind 2 PT / 5 ET – Mastin Kipp – The Daily Love and Recovery 3 PT / 6 ET – Durga Leela – Ayurveda: The Ancient Science of Living and Recovery 4 PT / 7 ET – Trudy Goodman – Insight: Vipassana on the Path of Recovery 5 PT / 8 ET – Akahdahmah Jackson – Spiritual Healing: Living in Connection With a Higher Power 6PT / 9ET – Dr. Gabor Maté – Understanding the Roots of Addiction

Wednesday, March 20

12 PT / 3 ET – David Wolfe – Profound Recovery Through the Food You Eat 1 PT / 4 ET – Tommy Rosen – Recovery 2.0: A Holistic Approach to Addiction and Recovery 2 PT / 5 ET – Guru Singh – A Master Yogi’s Eye View of Addiction and Recovery 3 PT / 6 ET – Ashley Turner – Addiction, The Body and The Chakras 4 PT / 7 ET – Arnie Wexler – The Last Bet: A Life Beyond Gambling Addiction 5 PT / 8 ET – Dr. Howard Samuels – The Landscape of Drug and Alcohol Treatment Today

Thursday, March 21

12 PT / 3 ET – Jennifer McLean – The Sacred Chamber – Connecting to Your Highest Self 1 PT / 4 ET – Gabrielle Bernstein – May Cause Miracles 2 PT / 5 ET – Ron Tannenbaum and Kenny Pomerance – InTheRooms.com: A Look at The World of Online Recovery 3 PT / 6 ET – Nikki Myers – Yoga and 12 Step Recovery 4 PT / 7 ET – Kia Miller – Yoga and Your Relationship With Food 5 PT / 8 ET – Jamie Huysman – Caregiver Burnout and Compassion Fatigue

RECOVERY 2.0

Thursday, 14. March 2013


March 17-21, 2013

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The Last Bet: A LIfe Beyond Gambling Addiction
with Arnie Wexler

Arnie Wexler is one of the foremost experts on compulsive gambling in this country, and has been involved in helping compulsive gamblers for over 30 years. He has appeared on many of America’s top television shows, including Oprah, NightLine, and 48 Hours. He has been quoted and profiled in hundreds of magazines and newspapers.



Mouse over the images to learn more about each speaker and their session!

The Last Bet: A LIfe Beyond Gambling Addiction

with Arnie Wexler

      Arnie Wexler is one of the foremost experts on compulsive gambling in this country, and has been involved in helping compulsive gamblers for over 30 years. He has appeared on many of America’s top television shows, including Oprah, NightLine, and 48 Hours. He has been quoted and profiled in hundreds of magazines and newspapers.
Arnie Wexler

A Special Keynote Message

with Richard Branson

      Sir Richard Branson is a hugely successful international entrepreneur, icon, and chairman of the Virgin Group. His autobiography Losing My Virginity and his second book Screw It, Let’s Do It have both been international bestsellers.
Richard Branson

The Addicted Brain: Insights From a Neuroscientist and Former Drug Addict

with Dr. Marc Lewis

      Dr. Marc Lewis is a developmental neuroscientist and professor of human development and applied psychology at Radboud University in the Netherlands, and professor emeritus at the University of Toronto. He is the author of over fifty journal publications in neuroscience and developmental psychology.
Dr. Marc Lewis

The Globalization of Addiction

with Dr. Bruce Alexander

      Bruce Alexander is a psychologist and Professor Emeritus at Simon Fraser University, where he has worked since 1970. His primary research interest has been the psychology of addiction. He is best known in the UK for the “Rat Park” experiments, which helped to demonstrate the falsity of the outworn belief that simple exposure to narcotic drugs can cause addiction.
Dr. Bruce Alexander

May Cause Miracles

with Gabrielle Bernstein

      Featured on Oprah’s Super Soul Sunday as one of the next generation thought leaders, Gabrielle Bernstein is making her mark. Expanding the lexicon for the next generation spiritual seekers, Gabrielle is a #1 bestselling author and launched her new book, May Cause Miracles, at the beginning of January 2013!
Gabrielle Bernstein

Meditation and Transformation of the Addictive Mind

with Guru Charan

      Gurucharan Singh Khalsa is a psychotherapist, teacher and writer, and is a world recognized expert in Kundalini Yoga. He is a business consultant, therapist, past MIT instructor and the director of a large community of yoga practitioners.
Guru Charan

The Sacred Chamber – Connecting with Your Highest Self

with Jennifer McLean

      Internationally acclaimed entrepreneur, author and creator of The Body Dialog system of healing, Jennifer McLean is a spiritual catalyst. Intelligent, heart-centered and mindful Jennifer works with the acclaimed masters from the transformational thought and wellness communities, amplifying their teachings at a level her audience can absorb, no matter where they are in their own spiritual journey. This valuable amplification skill combined with Jennifer’s intention to be a beacon of love, peace and light, has allowed her, in a few short years, to build a successful international business from the ground up.
Jennifer McLean

Maintaining Sobriety, Achieving Balance and Healing Families

with Elisa Hallerman

      Elisa is an attorney and a certified drug and alcohol counselor, and she is currently pursuing her Master’s and Ph.D. in Depth Psychology with an emphasis in Somatic Studies at the Pacifica Graduate Institute. Elisa Hallerman founded HallyLife in October 2011 and opened HallyLife/WEST, a sober living house, that same month. She combined her passion for living a healthy, happy, and spiritually fulfilled sober life with her years of executive-level business experience to develop a holistic and individualized crisis intervention and modern-day case management program.
Elisa Hallerman

Meditations from The Mat and Along the Road of Recovery

with Rolf Gates

      Rolf Gates, author of the acclaimed book on yogic philosophy Meditations from the Mat: Daily Reflections on the Path of Yoga is one of the leading voices of modern yoga. Rolf conducts Vinyasa Intensives and 200/500 Teacher Trainings throughout the US and abroad.
Rolf Gates

Recovering Couples: From Dysfunction to True Love

with Beverly Berg

      Beverly Berg, MFT, PhD, has worked with children and adults in her psychotherapy practice for over 25 years. She has been active in the field of chemical dependency as a marriage, family, and child therapist since 1982. Dr. Berg’s work is founded on the integration of psychological, emotional, physical, and spiritual well being. She has studied and practiced meditation, 12-step programs, and holistic treatment methods.
Beverly Berg

Emotional Freedom Technique and Overcoming Addiction

with Nick Ortner

      Nicolas Ortner is the CEO of “The Tapping Solution,” and Creator and Executive Producer of the breakthrough documentary, “The Tapping Solution,” which explores EFT or “tapping”, a healing tool based on ancient Chinese acupressure and modern psychology.
Nick Ortner

Take Refuge: The Buddhist Path of Recovery

with Noah Levine

      Noah Levine is a Buddhist teacher, author and counselor. He is trained to teach by Jack Kornfield of Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Woodacre, CA. He teaches meditation classes, workshops and retreats nationally as well as leading groups in juvenile halls and prisons.
Noah Levine

Beyond Addiction: The Yogic Path to Recovery

with Sat Dharam Kaur

      Sat Dharam Kaur is a naturopathic doctor, writer and Kundalini Yoga teacher who has developed a 16 module addiction recovery program called Beyond Addiction: The Yogic Path to Recovery, incorporating the teachings of Yogi Bhajan, Dr. Gabor Maté and naturopathic principles. The program includes Kundalini Yoga, breathing techniques, meditation, self-reflection, relaxation, lifestyle and dietary guidelines, stress management tools, hydrotherapy, group therapy, naturopathic detoxification, and nutritional and herbal supplementation for neurotransmitter and glandular balance. Sat Dharam has taught the program in Toronto and internationally for 5 years with great success and trains Kundalini Yoga teachers and professionals who would like to facilitate the program. She has also developed a yoga and naturopathic program for breast cancer prevention and recovery and facilitates annual Kundalini Yoga teacher training programs in Toronto and Canmore, Alberta, as well as maintaining a busy private practice.
Sat Dharam Kaur

Starving for Love: Recovering from Eating Disorders

with Chelsea Roff

      Chelsea Roff is a nationally-recognized author, speaker, and yoga instructor. She serves as Managing Editor for the Chopra family’s online magazine, Intent, and integrates her background in science, women’s health, and humanitarian issues in her teaching and writing.
Chelsea Roff

Women in Recovery: The Graceful Path of Recovery

with Sukhdev Jackson

      Sukhdev Jackson leads “The Power Of A Woman” retreats and is an acclaimed musician using the ancient science of yoga and chanting as she travels internationally, teaching and giving concerts with the musical group Aykanna, inspiring people to reconnect with their true identity – their Soul.
Sukhdev Jackson

Sex and Relationships in Recovery

with Anna David

      Anna David has been writing about addiction and recovery for nearly her entire 12+ years of sobriety—in her book Party Girl, which Dr. Drew Pinsky has hailed as “the best book about addiction and recovery I’ve come across,” in her three books that followed and for publications as varied as Details and The Daily Beast. She also speaks at colleges across the country about addiction and has been featured discussing the topic on The Today Show, Hannity, Showbiz Tonight, Dr. Drew and Jane Velez-Mitchell.
Anna David

Kick any Habit, Manage Any Addiction

with Christopher Kennedy Lawford

      In recovery for more than 26 years from drug addiction, Christopher Kennedy Lawford campaigns tirelessly on behalf of the recovery community in both the public and private sectors. He currently works with the United Nations, the Canadian Center on Substance Abuse, the White House Office on Drug Control Policy, and the World Health Organization. He also consults with Fortune 500 companies and numerous nonprofit groups, speaking around the world on issues related to addiction, mental health, and hepatitis C.
Christopher Kennedy Lawford

Food, Drugs and Fear: A Survivor’s Tale of Recovery and Triumph

with Rainbeau Mars

      Rainbeau Mars – From her birth under a double rainbow to her rise on the big screen, this actor, author, and innovator has left imprints of her inspiring story around the world. She has a natural ability to lead individuals on a journey to a greener, healthier lifestyle.  In her 3 Week Cleanse program, offered seasonally online to a global community, and her soon to be released book, 28 DAYS TO YOUR SUPERSTAR GLOW, she shares nurturing food, thoughts and practices to let go of addictions and habitual negative programming. With these tools Rainbeau has guided thousands of people to freedom in health and clarity to radiate their unique SuperStar Glow.
Rainbeau Mars

The Daily Love and Recovery

with Mastin Kipp

      Mastin Kipp is an entrepreneur and writer from Los Angeles, CA. He is the founder of www.TheDailyLove.com which is a website, daily email and Twitter account that’s merging pop culture with inspiration.
Mastin Kipp

Ayurveda: The Ancient Science of Living and Recovery

with Durga Leela

      Durga Leela (spiritual name) is the founder of Yoga of Recovery. Durga holds the RYT-500 qualification, having completed both the Sivananda Yoga teachers Training Course and an Advanced Yoga Training. She is also extensively trained in Meditation and Vedanta.
Durga Leela

InSight: Vipassana on The Path of Recovery

with Trudy Goodman

      Trudy Goodman is currently the senior Vipassana teacher in Los Angeles from the Theravada lineage of the major meditation centers  where Trudy trained — and now teaches, with the blessings of her teachers: Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Woodacre, CA, The Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, and Insight Meditation Society in Barre, MA.
Trudy Goodman

Spiritual Healing: Living in Connection With a Higher Power

with Akahdahmah Jackson

      Akahdahmah Jackson is a 5th generation plant and spirit medicine man, inheriting this legacy from his Great Great Aunt Mamie, a pinewoods plant and spirit medicine woman from Alabama.  He was ordained as a Harmonic Healing Minister, in 2000, he serves the community as a Herbalist,  Spiritual Councilor, Whole-listic Health Educator, Longevity Movement Instructor and KRI Certified Kundalini Yoga Teacher.
Akahdahmah Jackson

Understanding The Roots of Addiction

with Dr. Gabor Maté

      Dr. Gabor Maté is a Hungarian-born Canadian physician who specializes in the study and treatment of addiction and is also widely recognized for his unique perspective on Attention Deficit Disorder and his firmly held belief in the connection between mind and body health.
Dr. Gabor Maté

Profound Recovery Through The Food You Eat

with David Wolfe

      Internationally renowned author and one of the world’s foremost authorities on raw-food nutrition, David Wolfe conducts nearly 100 health lectures and seminars, and hosts at least 6 raw adventure retreats each year in the United States, Canada, Europe, the South Pacific, as well as in Central and South America.
David Wolfe

A Master Yogi’s Eye View of Addiction and Recovery

with Guru Singh

      Guru Singh m.s.s., is a yogi, teacher, writer, composer-musician, shaman, ordained minister, healer, and most importantly as he says “a family man”, living in Los Angeles and sometimes in India, London and New Mexico. Living with his wife and their two children, his life exemplifies a delicate and vital balance; honoring family and personal commitments while maintaining his spiritual dedication to working with the people of this world.
Guru Singh

Addiction, The Body + The Chakras

with Ashley Turner

      Elevating personal growth as a lifestyle, Ashley Turner, M.A. is a mind-body psychotherapist and yoga-meditation teacher. The creator of 4 best-selling yoga dvd’s, Ashley offers free weekly video trainings, works with clients via Skype and leads events to power points around the globe.
Ashley Turner

The Landscape of Drug and Alcohol Treatment Today

with Dr. Howard Samuels

      Howard C. Samuels, PsyD is a leading drug and alcohol addiction expert. He is a licensed therapist with a Doctorate in Clinical Psychology with years of experience running two successful treatment centers, and is the founder of The Hills Treatment Center.
Dr. Howard Samuels

InTheRooms.com: A Look at The World of Online Recovery

with Ron Tannebaum

      Ronald (RT) Tannebaum is the Co Founder and CEO/President of InTheRooms.com, the premier free online social network dedicated to the global recovery community for people seeking help, in recovery. RT has 29 years of long term recovery and has dedicated his life to helping make the recovery movement a positive, mainstream force the world today.
Ron Tannebaum

Yoga and 12 Step Recovery

with Nikki Myers

      Nikki Myers developed Yoga of 12-Step Recovery (Y12SR) in 2004. Nikki is an accomplished yoga therapist, teacher and somatic experiencing practitioner.
Nikki Myers

Yoga and Your Relationship With Food

with Kia Miller

      Kia is a devoted Yogini and teacher who imparts her wonderful passion for life and well-being in her teaching. Her style pulls from multiple yogic disciplines, and is both intuitive and steeped in the traditional aspects of yoga.
Kia Miller

Caregiver Burnout & Compassion Fatigue

with Jamie Huysman

      James Huysman, Psy. D, LCSW, aka Dr. Jamie, is a fierce advocate of patient-centered healthcare and a work force in touch with its own wellness.  He is a popular conference speaker and media guest on the topics of caregiver burnout, compassion fatigue, addictions and healthcare reform.  Dr. Huysman blogs for Psychology Today, writes for Florida MD and sat on the NASW committee to establish national protocols for certification and standardization of caregiving practices.  He co-wrote the acclaimed caregiving book, Take Your Oxygen First: Protecting Your Health and Happiness While Caring for a Loved One with Memory Loss.  He also contributed to the Healing Project’s offerings, Voices of Caregiving and Voices of Alcoholism. His website is www.drjamie.com.
Jamie Huysman

Finding the True Path of Recovery: Moving from the Head to the Heart

with Guru Prem

      Guru Prem Singh Khalsa is a Yoga Teacher and has been teaching Kundalini Yoga for over 25 years. He is certified by the Kundalini Research Institute as a Trainer of Teachers of Kundalini Yoga. Guru Prem travels throughout the world teaching the principles of Divine Alignment to students of all types of Yoga. He has had a Yoga therapy/therapeutic massage practice for 25 years at the Khalsa Medical Clinic in Beverly Hills, CA.
Guru Prem

Hazelden Turns 64: Best Practices of In-Patient Treatment for Addiction

with Daniel Frigo

      Dr. Frigo is an academician who trained and practiced as a clinical social worker.  He has taught graduate students for 18 years and received three awards for excellence in teaching at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, where he taught for 12 years, and where he continues to teach as a visiting professor.  Dr. Frigo’s academic and research interests include evidence-based practices in addiction and mental health treatment, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, and the therapeutic alliance.
Daniel Frigo

Recovery 2.0: A Holistic Approach to Addiction and Recovery

with Tommy Rosen

      Tommy Rosen is a certified Vinyasa Flow and Kundalini Yoga Teacher and a leading authority on addiction and recovery with 20 years experience helping others to overcome addictions of every kind.  He is one of the pioneers in the relatively new field of Yoga and Recovery, which utilizes yoga and meditation to help people to move beyond addiction and build fulfilling lives.
Tommy Rosen


Tommy Rosen

Tommy Rosen is a yoga teacher and addiction recovery expert who has spent the last two decades immersed in yoga, recovery and wellness. Tommy is certified in both Hatha and Kundalini Yoga and Meditation. He is one of the pioneers in the burgeoning field of Yoga and Recovery and has over twenty years of experience assisting others to holistically transcend addictions of all kinds.

Tommy teaches regularly at yoga conferences and festivals, including Wanderlust, Hanuman, Bhaktifest and Tadasana. He is the host of the upcoming Recovery 2.0: Beyond Addiction Online Conference and also teaches annually at Esalen, Omega and Kripalu.

 



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IS GAMBLING ADDICTION A BRAIN IMPAIRMENT !

Saturday, 9. March 2013

BRAIN ADDICTION— COMPULSIVE GAMBLING ?

Gambling affects brain, research finds

What is Compulsive Gambling?

BY ARNIE WEXLER CCGC
Compulsive gambling is a progressive disease, much like an addiction to alcohol or drugs. In many cases, the gambling addiction is hidden until the gambler becomes unable to function without gambling, and he or she begins to exclude all other activities from their lives. Inability to stop gambling often results in financial devastation, broken homes, employment problems, criminal acts and suicide attempts.
The gambler is eventually able to remove themselves from reality to the point of being totally obsessed with gambling. Eventually, they will do anything to get the money with which to stay in “action”. They will spend all their time and energy developing schemes in order to get the money to continue gambling. Lying becomes a way of life for the gambler.
They will try to convince others and themselves that their lies are actually truths and they will believe there own lies.
After they hit a real bottom they will have to do something if they want to try to recover. Most gamblers at that point will want to stop but can’t (they wont be able to).
Most even at that point will keep gambling some will end up in jail some will attempt suicide some will die from their addiction as they will not take care of their health or the stress will kill them.
And a small group of addicted gamblers will seek and find real help but the real trick is to get in to real recovery. Not just abstinence. By the time the gambler comes for help they have broken brains (Meaning their brains don’t work like they used to when they were not in there addiction).
To get real recovery the gambler needs to work on them self’s one day at a time and get someone to do there thinking for them who has been in recovery some time and has there brains are working right (a sponsor) After some time in recovery there brains will start to work again. They will become productive on there job and become a good father and husband. Recover is a process and does not happen with out a lot of work on your self . and making a moral and financial inventory. But people can recover and do.—————
Nine gambling myths
From Arnie and Sheila Wexler, who present workshops and seminars on compulsive
gambling addiction and run a national hotline for problem gamblers: 888-LAST BET:
1. The big win is just around the corner with the next bet I make.
2. I can get even again, then I will stop gambling.
3. I am not like drug addicts or alcoholics.
4. I can stop anytime I want. I just don’t want to stop.
5. I am too young to be a gambling addict.
6. If I had more money I know I could win.
7. I am smarter than the rest of the gamblers.
8. The losses are not my fault right now because I’m having bad luck.
9. I know I can beat this game.

THIS IS FROM A LADIE WHO NOW IS IN RECOVERY
I have to tell you , in 2005, it was one night I had a very strong impulse. I didn?t know what was going on with me, I knew nothing about impulses. All I knew at that time it was ? I don?t want to gamble anymore. It is killing me. So that night I had chain myself to calorifere (Heater) with little handcuffs I have spited out the window little keys and for the whole night I was sweating (perspired), crying and I was by myself. I was in pain. I think it was the worst night in my life. As I see it now, I had one impulse after another that night. I couldn?t go to the bathroom so you can imagine what?In the morning I called on mobile my neighbour ? she went down (as I live on the second floor) and she found the keys and released me.———–
============
MY FRIEND WHO WENT BACK TO GAMBLING AFTER YEARS IN RECOVERY
I lost all of my savings, 3 houses I owned, and my Cadillac. In spite of this,I’m a little surprised that you continue to try to get me to stop, because I really feel that if all of the above hasn’t helped me to reach any bottom at all, that I never will.
Each time I start a little winning streak, I believe that this is the beginning of a continuing future of a successful gambling life Now I truly believe that I can make that happen.
==================
LONDON
Compulsive gambler is ‘cured’ by brain surgery
A compulsive gambler who lost thousands on fruit machines has undergone radical brain surgery to cure his addiction.
Raymond Mandale, 58, took the drastic decision after losing more than £10,000 at his local bingo hall in a single year.
During a six-hour operation which cost £30,000 surgeons fitted a “neuro stimulator” to Mr Mandale’s brain.
The battery-operated device is then used to send electrical pulses to “reset” the area that stimulates the desire to gamble.
The surgery, which was paid for by the NHS, is now Mr Mandale’s last hope of beating his addiction.
Normally used to treat patients with Parkinson’s Disease, new research has shown it can also benefit those with addictive personalities.
Mr Mandale, of Workington, Cumbria, claims it was side effects from drugs he was given to treat the effects of Parkinson’s that caused him to start gambling in the first place.
=======================================
Brain scans show that excessive gambling and drug addiction activate the same parts of the brain.
Gambling addiction may have something in common with certain brain impairments.
Both conditions can hinder decision-making and the ability to determine the consequences of actions, according to Franco Manes, MD, and colleagues. They say it’s possible that gambling addiction is associated with impairments in the brain’s prefrontal cortex, affecting the ability of gamblers to consider future consequences before taking action.
Newser) – After four years of work involving 80 experts, the American Society of Addiction Medicine is redefining addiction—to alcohol, drugs, sex, gambling, and more—as a brain disorder, updating its former classification as a behavioral problem, reports Live Science. Addiction is also now considered a primary and chronic disorder, meaning it is not the result of stress, abuse, or other causes, and it needs to be treated over a patient’s lifetime, just as one would deal with a chronic disease like diabetes.
ASAM officials were swayed in part due to advancements in neuroscience over the last 20 years, which have shed light on the fact that the brain circuitry that regulates impulse control and judgment is altered in addicts’ brains. “We have to stop moralizing, blaming, controlling or smirking at the person with the disease of addiction,” said an addiction researcher. “The disease is about brains, not drugs.”
=========================
Randy Shore, Vancouver Sun CANANDA
Published: Friday, February 29, 2008
The thrill of risk and the intermittent rewards experienced by gamblers appear to “hijack” the brain’s natural reward systems, according to University of B.C. researcher Catharine Winstanley.
“Gambling has a tendency to become very addictive in the same way that crack cocaine does,” said Winstanley.
Gambling can affect the areas of the brain associated with planning and forming strategies.
“In people that develop problems with gambling it seems that parts of that area don’t work as well as they used to,” she said. In adults, such experiences can change the way neurons in the brain fire and in drug addicts, research has found that those changes can be permanent.
=======================
PARKINSONS AND GAMBLING
From The Times
February 20, 2009
Gambling blows your mind
The inherently unpredictable nature of gambling makes it hard for our brains to recover from the dopamine high it generates
Jonah Lehrer
I am a sucker for financial bubbles. The first stock I bought was Cisco Systems, in early 2000. It was the height of the dot-com bubble and Cisco was about to become the most valuable company in the world. Naturally my investment crashed too.
I’d like to say that I learnt from my dot-com disaster, but I didn’t. In late 2006 I began investing in blue-chip financial stocks, such as Citibank and Bank of America. At the time these companies were reporting record profits as they expanded into the sub-prime mortgage business. We all know how that turned out.
If there’s any consolation from my losses it’s that I wasn’t the only one. The current economic crisis is a by-product of collective failure, an example of terrible decision-making on a huge scale. Banks gave out loans to people who shouldn’t have taken them, consumers got used to spending money they didn’t have, regulators failed to regulate, and investors, appeased by ephemeral profits, failed to ask hard questions.
In retrospect we can see the profound foolishness of this behaviour. Yet it’s worth remembering that this is not the first time that the markets have gone haywire. The history of finance is largely a history of financial bubbles, from the tulip mania of 17th-century Holland to the South Sea Bubble of 18th-century England. Do we never learn? And, if not, why not?
The answer to these questions returns us to the human brain, in particular a single neurotransmitter in the brain – dopamine – that seems to play a crucial role in shaping the behaviour of investors. While dopamine is an essential ingredient of cognition – it helps us to process and predict rewards, from a bite of chocolate cake to stock market profits – this neurotransmitter system can also be led astray, with often devastating consequences.
Ann Klinestiver was a high school English teacher in a small town in West Virginia when she was found to have Parkinson’s disease. She was only 52, but the symptoms were unmistakable. “I lost control of my body,” she says. “I’d look at my arm and I’d tell it what to do but it just wouldn’t listen.”
Parkinson’s is caused by the death of dopamine neurons in a part of the brain that controls bodily movements. Klinestiver’s neurologist put her on a dopamine agonist, a class of drug that imitates the activity of dopamine in the brain. “At first, the drug was like a miracle,” she says. “All my movement problems just disappeared.” Over time, however, higher doses of the drug were required to quieten her tremors.
That’s when she discovered slot machines. It was an unlikely discovery. “I’d never been interested in gambling,” Klinestiver says. But after she started taking the medication she found the machines at her local dog-racing track completely irresistible. She would start gambling as soon as the track opened, at 7 in the morning, and would keep playing the machines until 3.30 the next morning, when the security guards kicked her out. “Then I would go back home and gamble on the internet until I could get back to the real machines,” she says. “I was able to keep that up for two or three days at a time.”
After a year of addictive gambling she had lost more than $250,000 (£176,000). She had exhausted her retirement savings and emptied her pension. “I knew I was destroying my life but I just couldn’t stop,” she says. In 2006, Klinestiver was finally taken off her dopamine agonist. Her movement problems came back but the gambling compulsion disappeared. And she isn’t the only one. Medical studies suggest that as many as 13 per cent of patients taking dopamine agonists develop severe gambling compulsions. People with no history of gambling suddenly become addicts. While most of these people will obsess over slot machines, others will become hooked on internet poker or blackjack. They will squander everything they have on bets that are stacked against them.
At first glance, slot-machine addiction seems to have nothing to do with financial bubbles. I was buying Citibank stock, not sinking quarters into a one-armed bandit. And yet, Klinestiver’s tragedy also reveals a serious flaw in the dopamine system. It’s a flaw that is constantly being exploited, from the casino floor to the stock market, and it’s ultimately rooted in the way that our brain cells make sense of the world.
Wolfram Schultz, a neuroscientist at the University of Cambridge, has exposed how the dopamine system works at a molecular level. His experiments follow a simple protocol: he plays a loud tone, waits for a second or two and then squirts a few drops of apple juice into the mouth of a monkey. While the experiment is unfolding, Schultz monitors the electrical activity inside individual cells. At first the dopamine neurons fire only when the juice is delivered; the cells are responding to the actual reward. However, once the animal learns that the tone precedes the arrival of juice, the same neurons begin firing at the sound of the tone
instead of the reward. Schultz calls these cells “prediction neurons” since they are more concerned with predicting rewards than receiving them. Once this pattern is memorised, the monkey’s dopamine neurons become exquisitely sensitive to variations on it. If the cellular predictions are correct, and the reward arrives right on time, then the primates experience a brief surge of dopamine, the pleasure of being right
Games of chance prey on this neural system. Think, for instance, about how a slot machine works. You put in a coin and pull the lever. Eventually, the machine settles on its verdict. Since slot machines are programmed to return only about 90 per cent of wagered money, the chances are you lost money. Now think about the slot machine from the perspective of your dopamine neurons. The purpose of these cells is to predict future events. While you are playing the slots, inserting quarter after quarter, your neurons are struggling to decipher the patterns inside the machine.
But here’s the catch: while dopamine neurons get excited by predictable rewards – they increase their firing when the juice arrives after the loud tone – they get even more excited by surprising ones. The purpose of this dopamine surge is to make the brain pay attention to new, and potentially important, stimuli.
Most of the time the brain will eventually get over its confused delight. We will figure out which events predict the reward, and our dopamine neurons will stop releasing so much neurotransmitter. The danger of slot machines, however, is that they are inherently unpredictable. Because they use random number generators, there are no patterns to uncover.
At this point, our dopamine neurons should simply surrender: the slot machine is a waste of mental energy. But this isn’t what happens. Instead of getting bored by the haphazard payouts, our dopamine neurons become obsessed. When we pull the lever and get a reward, we experience a rush of pleasure precisely because the reward is so unexpected – the clanging coins are like a surprising squirt of juice. The end result is that we are transfixed by the slot machine, riveted by the fickle nature of its payouts.
For patients with Parkinson’s who are on dopamine agonists, the surprising rewards of the casino trigger a huge release of chemical bliss. Their surviving dopamine neurons are so full of dopamine that the neurotransmitter spills over and pools in the empty spaces between cells. Such patients are so blinded by the pleasures of winning that they slowly lose everything. That’s what happened to Klinestiver.
The lesson of slot machines is that our brain is not good at dealing with randomness, which leads us to search for patterns where there is only accidental chance. Look, for instance, at the the stock market. Economists refer to the stock market as a “random walk” since the past movement of any particular stock cannot be used to predict its future movement. In this sense, Wall Street is like a slot machine.
The danger of the financial markets, however, is that their erratic fluctuations often look predictable, at least in the short term. Our dopamine neurons are determined to solve the flux – but most of the time there is nothing to solve. Read Montague, a neuroscientist at Baylor College of Medicine who studies the dopamine pathway, recently demonstrated how an urestrained dopamine system can lead, over time, to dangerous stock-market bubbles. The experiment went like this: subjects were given $100 and some basic information about the “current” state of the stock market. Then they chose how much of their money to invest. After making up their minds the players nervously watched as their stock investments either rose or fell in value. The game continued for 20 rounds, and the subjects got to keep their earnings. One interesting twist was that, instead of using random simulations of the stock market, Montague relied on distillations of data from famous historical markets, such as the Dow of 1929, Nikkei of 1986 and the Nasdaq of 1998. This let the scientists monitor the neural responses of investors during real-life bubbles and crashes.
How did the brain deal with the fluctuations of Wall Street? The scientists immediately discovered a strong neural signal, emanating from dopamine-rich areas of the brain, that seemed to be driving many of the investment decisions. Take, for example, this situation. A player has decided to wager 10 per cent of his total portfolio in the market, which is a rather small bet. Then, he watches as the market rises dramatically in value. Here’s where the experiment gets interesting: because our dopamine neurons are obsessed with predicting rewards they start making predictions about what will happen next. Since the market has just gone up, these cells assume that it will continue to go up, which led the investors to perpetually increase their investments. The end result was an escalating feedback loop of dopamine as the brain made reward predictions – the market will continue to rise – and then watched as those predictions came true.
Montague argues that these dopamine neurons are also a main cause of financial bubbles. When the market keeps going up, people are naturally led to make larger investments in the boom. (This is precisely what happened to me when I bought shares in Cisco and Citibank.) Their greedy brains are convinced that they have solved the stock market, and they forget about the possibility of a loss. But then, just when investors are most convinced that the bubble isn’t a bubble, the bubble bursts. At this point investors race to dump any assets that are declining in value as their neurons realise they have made some expensive prediction errors. That’s when you get a financial panic.
The lesson, and it’s a lesson that I’ve learnt the hard way, is that it’s silly to try to beat the market with our brains. Dopamine neurons weren’t designed to deal with the oscillations of Wall Street. When we spend lots of money on investment management fees, or sink our savings into some hot hedge fund, or buy shares in companies because everybody else is buying them, we are slavishly following our primitive reward circuits, just like a gambler losing a fortune in a casino. That’s why a randomly selected stock portfolio will, over the long run, beat the expensive experts with their fancy computer models. Or why the vast majority of mutual funds in any given year will underperform the S&P 500.
Because the market is a random walk with an upward slope, investors who do nothing to their stock portfolio – they don’t buy or sell a single stock – outperform the average “active” investor by nearly 10 per cent. Wall Street has always searched for the secret algorithm of financial success, but the secret is that there is no secret. The world is more random than we can imagine. That’s what our brain is unable to understand.
Jonah Lehrer is a science writer and the author of Proust Was a Neuroscientist. His new book, The Decisive Moment: How the Brain Makes Up Its Mind, is published by Canongate.
——————————————
Arnie Wexler ccgc
HELP LINE 888 LAST BET
561 249 0922 CELL 954 5015270

ASWEXLER.COM

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Friday, 8. March 2013