General William Booth. Founder of 'The Salvation Army' once said; " It takes more than a bath and a clean pair of breeches to save a man's soul.' Simply eloquent. How true, it takes work, hard, soul searching work. A believer can coast through steps 1 & 2. I rested at 3 for decades. I'm an alcoholic among other things you see. And I just wanted it taken from me. I resisted doing the work. I wasn't ready able or willing to face the fact that no human power, even my own could relieve me of my dis-eases. I was ashamed and afraid. The pain was more than I was willing to face. I'd rather get loaded than face and deal with the truth.
The fact was I was being childish and cowardice. the past was to painful and rather than face the pain and cut it out. I let it fester. It very nearly killed me. I let it destroy 2 marriages and let it separate me from 2 children. I'd rather hide in my addictions than face them. Denial played a role too. denial is when the addicted sub conscious lies to the part of the mind that thinks it's in control. We accept the fantasy that it's all due to people, places and things beyond our control while we neglect to take responsibility for our actions. It's a trick of the subconscious mind. It's easy to deny. in case you haven't learned yet, in rooms of recovery denial stands for; Don't Even No I'm Lying. It's a common delusion.
Dont just think this program is for stoners and locos. Allow me to extrapolate this From 12 steps and dual disorders:
"Some of us have additional disorders and impairments, such as learning disabilities, head or spinal injuries, seizure disorders, vision and hearing impairments, or terminal illness." (pg. 34 & 35)
In the case of chronic illness vs medication, abstinence may not be an option. Mood altering medication, taken as prescribed is not considered a relapse or failure. (see your doctor,) There are worse things.