Reviewer: Queenie Lee I've been in the entertainment
industry for over 30 years. I was a very light drinker in my 20s. In my 30s, I was a social drinker, and somewhere in my early 40s,
I developed alcohol use disorder, which is abbreviated AUD. We don't really use the term
alcoholism that much anymore, because it's too narrow of a term. AUD covers everything from the occasional binge drinker
to the chronic daily drinker. I started to realize that something
was very wrong with me when I was always the last person
standing at the bar or at dinner parties when everybody else had switched
to coffee, I was still quaffing wine. Yeah. I realized then that I
definitely had a problem, so I decided that I would just
go cold turkey, sober, and I did. But what I didn't realize is that could cause what's called
the alcohol deprivation effect, where once the honeymoon period
of sobriety wears off, you're left with constant
physical cravings for alcohol. Think about it. You drive by a liquor store,
and you're triggered, you want a drink. You walk by a pub, and you get angry because you can't go in there
and have just one drink. You start isolating from your friends
and families because they drink. Developing AUD was
an incredibly confusing thing for somebody who, admittedly,
likes to be in control. I was definitely not
in control of this at all. In fact, I was swept up
in a nearly decade long battle with something I refer to
as "the monster." Addiction is a monster,
and it affects every ethnicity, social class, race, sex, age;
it doesn't matter. You can be the most
disciplined person in the world ... When it gets you, it has you. "It" is in control. When I finally realized
that I was not in the driver's seat, that the monster was, I sought out every single treatment
I could possibly find or afford. I went to rehab for $30,000 to basically drink wheat grass
and do tai chi. I went to talk therapy
for over two-and-a-half years for 200 bucks a session. I actually sought out a hypnotherapist who claimed that he had cured
a member of the Grateful Dead - that was 400 bucks an hour. I went to 12 different meetings
of AA in two different countries. I went macrobiotic.
I got my chakras realigned. I tried veganism. You name it, I tried it, and I - I prayed. I prayed until my knees
were black and blue, and I still kept relapsing,
time and time again. I mean, I think that in the years
that I was suffering from AUD and really battling it, I probably relapsed close to 20 times. And each relapse became
more difficult to recover from, and they got worse and worse and worse. And here's the thing: I wasn't drinking
because I had a crummy childhood, or because I was suffering
from any personal trauma. I mean, if you look at it
from the outside, I had a great life! I was in my chosen career.
I had a beautiful home. I had friends and family
who loved me and supported me. I was drinking because I was
physically addicted to alcohol. That's it. Once I started, I could not stop drinking. I have addiction
on both sides of my family, and the genetic predisposition
coupled with engaging in the behavior, which for me is drinking,
made me an addict. I knew one thing for sure
after trying all of these treatments, and this became very clear: doing equine therapy or tai chi in some swanky beachfront
expensive rehabilitation facility was not going to fix
my biological addiction. By the end of 2008, I had six months
of sobriety under my belt, and that's when the addict started
to talk to me in my head. That's the insidious thing
about addiction, is once you have a bit
of sobriety under your belt, you go, "Hey, I'm not an addict." It whispers to you,
"Go ahead, have a drink. You'll be able to control it.
Just one drink." So I listened to that idiot in my head,
and I went out to dinner that night, and I had a glass of wine, came home,
and I was so chuffed, "Well, look, the idiot is right.
I'm not an addict. I only had one glass." Right ... Day 2, I had two glasses;
day 3, I had three glasses - plus I picked up a bottle to bring home
and drink on the way home. Day 5, I was in a full-blown binge; I was drinking anything and everything, I would have probably
drunk vanilla extract if I had it. When I was finally too ill to drink
one more drop of alcohol, I did what I always did:
went cold turkey and tried to detox. This time, something went very wrong. I started to suffer
from seizures in my body. I lost all control of my motor controls. I couldn't stand up;
I couldn't get dressed. So I called a friend, and she took me
to my one and only medical detox. Where, I got to tell you,
I was not treated very well. In fact - until they had my $3,000 - they finally gave me my medication
that I needed to stop shaking. At that point, I felt so humiliated
and so down and so embarrassed by the whole experience
that I checked myself out and I left. On the way out, there was
this little stack of flyers for all these different
various treatments for AUD. One of them was for a shot, and this shot promised
to eliminate all cravings for alcohol. The shot was over $1,000 a month, but at this point, I would have sold
my soul to get better. When I got home, I Googled that shot. It turns out that the main
ingredient in it is Naltrexone, an FDA approved,
non-addictive, safe medication that's been used to treat AUD since 1994. As I was searching, a book popped up: the rather boldly named
The Cure for Alcoholism, by Dr. Roy Eskapa. And there was this little sample chapter, so I read the chapter,
and I was absolutely hooked. This made complete sense
to the science lover in my head. It described a treatment
called The Sinclair Method, or TSM, where one takes an opiate blocker, you wait for an hour so the medication
can get into your bloodstream and brain, and then you drink alcohol. Sounds counterintuitive,
I know, but hear me out. Usually when an addict drinks,
they get a huge reward from alcohol, and that's what makes them
want more and more and more. But if you drink an opiate blocker, like Naltrexone, or Nalmefene
if you're here in the UK, instead of the alcohol reinforcing
the addictive synapses in the brain, the opiate blocker blocks the endorphins from activating the part of the brain
responsible for addiction. It's as if you have a huge room
of endorphins living in your brain? And every time you drink alcohol,
those endorphins rush through the door, and they raise hell in your brain
and your neuro pathways. The opiate blocker stops those endorphins
from even leaving the room. It slams that door, and it locks it,
so they can't even get out and play. Over the course of a couple days,
or weeks for some people, the body is slowly detoxed, drinking levels dramatically decrease because your cravings for alcohol subside. I didn't have a doctor that would
prescribe me Naltrexone back then; in fact, when I mentioned it
to anybody, they said, "What?" So I ordered my pills
from an Indian pharmacy online, 50 mg of hope. Took a couple of weeks
for the pills to come to me, and when they did, I got to tell you
I was scared out of my mind because I thought,
"What if it doesn't work? What if it makes me relapse again? What if it's a worse relapse
than the last one?" But at this point, I was
so desperate - I took my chance. So I took the pill; I waited the hour; I poured myself a glass of wine,
and it was a miracle. I mean, the wine just sat there
while I ate my dinner. There was no head games, no compulsion, no "I want more, more, more" - nothing. I took a couple of sips,
and I went, "Meh. I'm done." It was a complete miracle. Three months into TSM,
I had my true aha moment. There was this billboard -
I hate this billboard - near where I lived in Los Angeles, and every time I drove by it,
it had a huge glass of red wine on it, which was my particular poison,
massive glass of red wine, every time I drove by that billboard,
it would trigger me. If I was in drink mode, it would trigger me,
I'd go, "I want more." If I was in sober mode,
I would drive by that billboard, and I'd go, "Uh, damn it,
I can't have a glass of wine." This particular day,
I drove by that billboard, and my brain said to me,
"That's just a billboard." I can't even explain to you
what a profound moment this was, because it meant that my thought
processes were normal again. It meant that my brain was fixed. It meant that I was me again. Six months into TSM I was mostly sober, except for the occasional planned drink
one hour after taking Naltrexone. TSM worked so well for me
that I decided to contact Dr. Roy Eskapa and thank him for writing his book. I also asked him to thank
American researcher Dr. David Sinclair, whose life's work,
quite literally, saved my life. I asked him, "What can I do to help
spread the word about this treatment?" He said, "Well, why don't you
write a book?" So I did. That's when my journey
of discovery really began. I found out that the World
Health Organization estimates that a person dies - 3.3 million people die every single year
from alcohol-related causes. That's more than malaria,
tuberculosis, AIDS. I also found out that multiple researchers estimate that 80 - 90% of people
suffering from AUD do not seek treatment, and many of these people
don't seek treatment because they've been falsely
led to believe that they have to give up alcohol
for the rest of their lives, which to a 20- or 30-year-old
can be utterly daunting, not to mention kind of unrealistic. I also found out that of the 10%
who do seek treatment, up to 90% of those people
are relapsing within the first four years! I mean, what other
treatable disease can you think of that has this abysmal of a success rate? Studies show that tough love
and humiliating an addict, or making them hit rock bottom
is not helping them; it's actually making people worse. As Dr. Keith Humphreys
from Stanford University said, "It's remarkable that people believe
what's needed is more punishment. If punishment worked,
there wouldn't be any addiction. It's a punishing enough experience." He is absolutely right. It is punishing. If we addicts had a normal disease, we would be treated
with sympathy and comfort; instead, we're faced with a barrage of
"Why can't you just quit? Just say no," and a complete lack
of understanding or compassion. Many people suffer for
much longer than I did, but the majority of us suffer
for about a decade before finding help. So, why do so many people believe that a long-term battle
with alcohol addiction can be simply stopped in 30 days or less with nothing but talk therapy
and willpower? It's amazing. It's amazing. The World Health Institute estimates that a person dies every ten seconds
from alcohol use disorder. Is our current treatment system
really the best we can do? The Sinclair Method
has a 78% long-term success rate. Imagine a world with 78% less alcohol addicted people. Imagine the profound impact
that would have on our society. 78% less broken families. 78% less abused children, lost days of work, insurance costs, accidents,
and on and on and on. The Sinclair Method uses science
to empower your friends, your family, or even yourself to achieve recovery. Thanks to the Sinclair Method, I was able to Ctrl-Alt-Del
my addiction to alcohol. I am no longer powerless. The monster is no longer in control. I am. TSM works wonders
for alcohol-addicted people. It is my dream to see it become a go-to, regularly offered treatment
for those in need. I encourage all of you, I beg you to please help spread the word
of this lifesaving treatment. And let's give addicts
the option they deserve. Thank you very much. (Applause)
I read her book “Babylon Confidential,” where she tells many stories of her life, including her struggle with the bottle. She doesn’t present naltrexone as a magic bullet there. It helped her disarm her addiction and cravings, as long as she takes the pill and sticks with the discipline.
She only touches on it a little in the video, but there are lots of other environmental triggers to learn to deal with as well. Learning new ways to think, new ways to interpret things, is always going to be an important part of “fixing” anything with a behavioral component.
She's so incredible. The strength it takes to talk about this in front of a room full of people and the internet in such frank terms is so huge.
All indications is that Nalmefeme does work, but only in combination of psychosocial management. It doesn't just magic it away.
Great video and I am glad it worked out. But I think its ironic that is it called the Sinclair Method
I hope it works for her, but I have a feeling taking a magic pill to cure your alcoholism really doesn’t work in the long run.