Opiate drug rehabs could help you to turn your life around and overcome an addiction to opiates but only if you are willing to put in the necessary effort to change your life on a massive scale.

You see, drug rehab is nothing but a starting point.  It is not an answer to addiction and it is not a cure.  It does not insure long term success and it does not actually teach you how to live a clean and sober life; however, it can get you detoxed painlessly from opiates medically preventing any serious opiate withdrawal symptoms.

One of the most abused opiates today would be vicodin. There are people all around the country that a struggling with a vicodin addiction trying to stop using and find a new way to live.

The only way to learn how to live a clean and sober life is to actually do it for yourself and learn as you go along.  Other people can help you and make suggestions and tell you what worked for them, but ultimately that information is only going to be a part of what keeps you clean and sober.  A big chunk of your path in sobriety has to be the path that you find with your own two feet.  It has to be part of your own experience and your own way of working through recovery.

Recovery is a very personal thing.  A drug rehab attempts to make it into an objective series of events, a process that you can go through and get predictable results.  At our present level of substance abuse treatment, the results are generally pretty lousy and the most likely outcome is relapse.  It is rare for someone to leave a drug rehab and stay clean and sober for the next 5 years continuous.  In fact, it is pretty rare for someone to even make it to the one year mark.  Such an achievement is remarkable.

Why do so many people fail to stay clean and sober?  The bottom line is that this is a hard thing to do.  True recovery comes from a monumental level of change at the individual level.  Essentially the addict has to change everything about themselves, including who they really are.  They need a full personality shift and a complete change in priorities.  What is important to them in their life must change completely.  These are not minor requirements.  These are big, massive, life altering changes.

How can someone achieve this level of change that is necessary? It has been my experience the only by taking massive action can one truly overcome a opiate addiction.  That is the only way that they can hope to achieve the changes necessary to stay clean and sober.  What actions they take are not so important, so long as they are positive and recovery oriented.  The rest is all up to their level of enthusiasm and momentum.

Good luck