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“Every addict has two internal

conversations going on,” says Lynn

Bertram, MD, a psychiatrist and the

medical director at St. Helena Recovery

Center. “There’s the one that’s saying

they want to keep using — and the one

that knows they need help.”

Loyd tried to help himself by detoxing

at home. He spent almost a month

in his pajamas, “shaking, shivering,

sweating…wishing I was dead.”

He finally realized what addiction

specialists know: He could not do it

alone. That’s because addiction is a

chronic brain disease that alters areas

in the brain that are crucial to judgment,

decision making and behavior. And

like other chronic diseases — asthma,

diabetes, hypertension — addiction

requires lifelong daily treatment.

In desperate need of help, Loyd called

St. Helena Recovery Center. “They said

they had an opening in a week, and

I said, ‘I’ve got to come today.’ They

squeezed me in.” Loyd believes he was

more dead than alive when he arrived at

St. Helena. “I had one goal in mind — to

survive. All I focused on was not dying.”

From addiction to

When 70-year-old

Loyd retired in 2008,

he felt good.

You can’t do it alone

I didn’t feel like drinking or

using,” he recalls, referring

to the addictions to alcohol

and cocaine he believed

he had under control

for most of his adult life.

But when he injured his

back in December of

2012, the Vicodin that

was prescribed for pain

triggered a relapse. “Within

six months, I was taking

15 to 20 pills a day. I was

drinking 24 hours a day.

I could not stop.

Lynn Bertram, MD

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