ARE WE CARRYING THE MESSAGE OF HELP, HOPE AND RECOVERY TO ADDICTED PEOPLE !!

Thursday, 24. September 2015


    ARE WE CARRYING THE MESSAGE OF HELP,  HOPE AND RECOVERY
   TO ADDICTED PEOPLE !!
    
 Written by Beth Leipholtz

This was originally published at thefix.com.

One of the first things I did while in treatment was post on Facebook and tell all of my acquaintances what was happening and why I was no longer drinking. I did so mostly because I was sick of hiding, sick of being ashamed of who I was and what I was going through. I did so for selfish reasons, because I knew it would take a weight off of my shoulders.

I never dreamed it would lift me up and make my sobriety so much more meaningful and genuine, but that is what happened. As I began to worry less about being vulnerable and judged, I began to share more pieces of my story. The result was overwhelming kindness and understanding. I am no longer anonymous. To be honest, if I were still anonymous I would probably have started drinking again. I truly believe I have stayed sober because of my choice to be open about my journey.

I bring this up now, over two years after breaking my anonymity, because I recently returned from a young people’s AA conference where I attended a panel titled, “Carrying the Message Online: A Digital Think Tank.” In other words, we spent the session discussing the age of the Internet and anonymity (or rather, lack thereof). To say I was shocked by the opinions expressed is an understatement — my mouth was literally hanging open at parts of the session. I am so used to my generation being the first to embrace technology. We’re all about Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter.

Except, apparently, when it comes to sobriety.

To put it simply, I was largely disappointed by other young people’s inability to see the Internet as a powerful tool, as an incredible way to carry the message. I should stop and clarify here — I’m not saying that I think being vocal about sobriety is something everyone should do. It’s not. I know some people aren’t comfortable with that. My issue stemmed more with the fact that they seemed to look down upon those of us who do decide to share our stories, claiming that we are breaking Tradition 11, which states, “Our public relations policy is based on attraction rather than promotion; we need always maintain personal anonymity at the level of press, radio, and films.”

To be honest, I couldn’t care less about breaking Tradition 11. Here’s why I’ve chosen (and continue to choose) to break my anonymity.

1. Times change. The founder of AA wrote the book in 1939. That’s 76 years ago, people. He didn’t know that wireless phones would be a thing, let alone the Internet, a forum where people can share and connect on a different level than ever before. No one can predict the future when they are writing in the present, but just because something is written doesn’t mean we still need to abide by it. The Bible wrote that adulteresses should be stoned to death. As far as I know, that is no longer practiced because times have CHANGED and it is no longer acceptable.

2. By telling my story I am only breaking MY OWN anonymity, no one else’s. This is what I think so many people fail to realize. If I were posting on social media and tagging friends from AA who wish to remain anonymous, that would be a whole other story. But I am not doing that, nor will I ever. My involvement in AA is mine to express, and I choose to do so. Under no conditions am I required to keep my own membership a secret. In fact, I feel that would be detrimental to my recovery.

3. I feel that Step 12 is more important than Tradition 11. I would choose carrying the message to the alcoholic who still suffers over keeping my involvement in AA a secret any day. If by sharing my own story I can help even one other person who is suffering with alcoholism, I feel it has been worth breaking tradition. In fact, this isn’t a hypothetical situation. I know there are people, people I have never physically met, who are sober today because of reading something I’ve written. They have told me so. I’m not stating this to brag or make it sound like I’m a hero. That’s not the point. The point is that if one person has a better life and is suffering less today because I chose to break anonymity, then I feel it has been more than worth it.

4. Being vocal about my journey keeps me sober and accountable. This may sound selfish but it’s the truth. Since so many people know about my sobriety and follow my journey, I’d have that many more people to explain myself to if I were to relapse. Knowing that people read what I write and draw strength from it is truly what keeps me sober. More so than AA, it’s the people I’ve crossed paths with through telling my story. They are the reason I do not pick up a drink. Had I chosen not to tell my story, I never would have crossed paths with them, and eventually would have probably picked up a drink again since I would have had so many less people caring about that action.

5. I am proud of my recovery. I am. It’s not something I wish to hide from anyone in my life, even strangers. In fact, recently on my first day at my new job, I told everyone I was sober. Guess what? No one cared. More than anything, they admired the fact that I was young and able to maintain sobriety. I’d rather be open about who I am than try to hide it for fear of being rejected. I am over two years sober, and I am damn proud of that. I always will be.

6. Recovery is about becoming comfortable with who I am. How would I ever be able to like the person I am if I’m always hiding the reason I’ve become that person? Sobriety and AA have made me a better, happier, kinder person and I feel the need to give credit where credit is due. I didn’t just wake up this way one day. I worked to become this person and it’s important to me that people know how I did it.

We need to not let our addiction define us, but have our recovery define us.  
OUR BOOK  GAMBLING ADDICTION AND HOW TO RECOVER FROM IT
  ” ALL BETS ARE OFF”

  BY ARNIE AND SHEILA WEXLER AND STEVE JACOBSON 



N B A AND GAMBLING NEVER ENDING !!

Tuesday, 8. September 2015

N B A  AND GAMBLING NEVER ENDING !!

SEE ARTICLE BELOW FROM THE  NYPOST

ARNIE WEXLER CCGC

GAMBLING PROBLEM CALL 888 LAST BET

In 1999 I was asked to fly to New York to the National Basketball Association office in Manhattan and met with league officials, x players and union officials, concerned about players’ gambling. I was told, “We have a problem, and we’re trying to find out how bad the problem is” “We have players gambling on airplane trips loosing all kinds of $” Officials asked me to keep my calendar open for the spring of the following year and said to me that they wanted me to address every team and player in the league. They then flew my wife in, and we had a second meeting they asked us develop questions that were going to be given to the players to answer. ”We need to know how big the gambling problem is in the N.B.A ,” When I hadn’t heard from the N.B.A, I called and asked, “When do we start?” The talked were cancelled, and the response I got was this: “They said that the higher-ups didn’t want the media to find out”
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NY POST  

September 8, 2015 | 10:02am


Less than a decade removed from the Tim Donaghy betting scandal, the NBA is probably more than just a little sensitive when it comes to stories about gambling and its employees. So you have to imagine commissioner Adam Silver & Co. were less than thrilled to see what former Duke star and lottery pick Jay Williams had to say on “The Brilliant Idiots” podcast on Monday.

Talking about his brief run with the Chicago Bulls, Williams opened up on the lifestyle of — and pitfalls facing — an NBA player … especially a young one.

“Think about gambling to the next degree, like rock, paper, scissors; bet 20 grand … ,” Williams told hosts Charlamagne Tha God and Andrew Schulz.

He was then asked: Is that really what players do?

“All day long. Why wouldn’t you? You get bored! … Don’t get yourself down in the dice game. Don’t be in the corner and let some dude keep fading you and all of the sudden you’re down 100 grand and he’s like, ‘Yo, bet it back. Rock, paper, scissors.’”

Yup. $20,000 on pounding fists.

Williams also drops a hint that he lost a nice chunk of money on a little trip he took … to Vegas, of course.

Williams was an All-America point guard at Duke and was selected No. 2 overall by the Bulls in the 2002 Draft. After averaging 9.5 points and 4.7 assists in 75 games (54 starts) as a rookie, Williams crashed his motorcycle in June 2003, hitting a streetlight and suffering severe injuries. The shattered pelvis, damaged knee ligaments and severed nerve proved to be too much for him to overcome, and Williams never played again.

In the podcast, Williams also talked about the damage losing it all can do to a player.

“It not even the physical part that f—ed me up, it’s the mental part … ,” Williams said. “And that’s what my book is about, it’s about living with all that s–t day to day. By knowing that knowing you f—ed up, and you trying to let it go, and other people remind you that you f—ed up. So you can’t let it go. It almost puts you in this f—ing mental misery of a jail cell.”

How Williams got out of that cell, who was the hardest on him in his recovery, and how much he actually dropped on that trip, is all covered in his upcoming book, “Life is Not an Accident: A Memoir of Reinvention,” due out Jan. 26, 2016.

Donaghy was an NBA official who admitted that in the 2005-06 and ’06-07 seasons he bet on games which he officiated. He pleaded guilty to two charges and served 15 months in prison.

We need to not let our addiction define us, but have our recovery define us.  
GET OUR NEW BOOK  GAMBLING ADDICTION AND HOW TO RECOVER FROM IT
  ” ALL BETS ARE OFF”

  BY ARNIE AND SHEILA WEXLER AND STEVE JACOBSON 


 

                

X N H L PLAYER AND GAMBLING

Monday, 7. September 2015

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) – A professional hockey player has been sentenced to eight months of home confinement for being part of an illegal sports betting business that took wagers from other players.

Nathan Paetsch (paytch) also must perform 400 hours of community service and spend five years on probation following his sentencing Friday in federal court in Rochester.

The 32-year-old accepted a plea agreement in June which also requires him to forfeit $265,000.

Paetsch played the last three seasons in the American Hockey League. Before that, he spent part of five seasons with the National Hockey League’s Buffalo Sabres, through 2010.

Authorities say he was involved with a gambling operation that took bets through offshore websites, placing wagers himself and receiving credit when he recruited fellow players and others to bet.

ALL BETS ARE OFF== BOOK ON GAMBLING ADDICTION AND RECOVERY

Sunday, 6. September 2015

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We need to not let our addiction define us, but have our recovery define us.  
GET OUR NEW BOOK  GAMBLING ADDICTION AND HOW TO RECOVER FROM IT
  ” ALL BETS ARE OFF”

  BY ARNIE AND SHEILA WEXLER AND STEVE JACOBSON 

SPORTS BETTING ! What HYPOCRISY not in New Jersey

Thursday, 3. September 2015

 

SPORTS BETTING ! What  HYPOCRISY not in New Jersey    

  In a 2-to-1 vote, a three-judge panel on the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals in in Philadelphia has ruled against the authorization of sports gambling in New Jersey.

Lets look at the history of sports betting NJ…In 1992, Senator Bill Bradley sponsored a bill that allowed sports betting to be grand fathered for the 3 or 4 states that had sports betting or previously had sports betting. All the other states got an 18 month window to make sports betting legal within their state. NJ legislature did not pass sports betting within that 18 month window.

 

Years ago, I was on a TV show with Howard Cossell (ABC Sports Beat). The topic was: Does the media encourage the public to gamble? 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”

What a change===== On Dec. 11, 2009, commissioner David Stern told SI.com (the web site for Sports Illustrated) that legalized gambling on the NBA “May be a huge opportunity”

 

Last year New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie Goes to court to win the right to become the fifth state to allow sports betting, 

 

 

Yet the N.B.A. joined the N.C.A.A., the N.F.L., the N.H.L., and Major League Baseball filed a motion for a temporary restraining order  in an effort to halt legalized sports betting in New Jersey. in the suit against New Jersey, contending that sports betting in New Jersey would  corrupt sports in the United States.  

NOW  ==

N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver: Allow Gambling on Pro Games
NOW   NBA commissioner Adam Silver wants New Jersey governor Chris Christie to work with the league on expanding sports betting, according to ABC News.
“Governor Christie, and I’m happy to join him, should turn his attention to Washington, D.C., to Congress, and say, ‘Here are all the reasons it should be regulated, but let’s come up with a framework that makes sense on a national basis presumably that would allow states to opt in,’” Silver said.===“If you have a gentleman’s bet or a small wager on any kind of sports contest, it makes you that much more engaged in it,” Silver said. “That’s where we’re going to see it pay dividends.”

 

We are also hearing that if we legalize sports betting we will stop the illegal sports betting in the state. We know it  can’t  true ! But what we do know is that if you add a new form of gambling more people try it and some of those people will become addicted. The proof to that test is that we heard that when lottery came into effect we were going to stop the illegal numbers games. In fact that never happened. One of the reasons are that you can still get credit from a “runner” when you play an illegal number, and today some stores that sell lottery tickets, still allow known players to run up a tab and pay when they can.  In fact, when I was the executive director of the Council on Compulsive Gambling of NJ (1986-1994) we did a survey that Gallup conducted for us. Two of the questions on the survey were: Have you ever played illegal numbers? 31% of the respondents said “yes”. Second question was: Do you play legal lottery in the state of NJ. 81% said “yes”.

 JUST GIVE THEM A PIECE OF THE ACTION !!!! AND ITS OK
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We need to not let our addiction define us, but have our recovery define us.  

GET OUR NEW BOOK  GAMBLING ADDICTION AND HOW TO RECOVER FROM IT
  ” ALL BETS ARE OFF”

  BY ARNIE AND SHEILA WEXLER AND STEVE JACOBSON