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WHAT IS NA?
| Narcotics Anonymous is
a non-profit fellowship of men and women for whom drugs had become a
major problem - Recovering addicts who meet regularly to help each other
stay clean.
The Narcotics Anonymous Programme
Narcotics Anonymous is a completely voluntary organisation. Membership
is open to anyone with a drug problem seeking help, regardless of what
drug or combination of drugs have been used, and irrespective of age,
sex, religion, race, creed or class.
The only requirement for membership is a desire to stop using drugs.
No membership attendance records are kept. Anonymity is one of NA's
most important traditions.
There are no dues or fees for membership. Narcotics Anonymous is entirely
self-supporting and accepts no financial contributions from non-members.
Most members regularly contribute small sums of money at group meetings
to help cover expenses such as rent, literature, tea and coffee but
contributions are not mandatory.
The core of the Narcotics Anonymous programme is a series of twelve
steps, adapted from the recovery programme of Alcoholic Anonymous. These
steps include admitting to a drug problem; seeking help; self-appraisal;
confidential self-disclosure; making amends when possible, where harm
has been done; achieving a spiritual awakening and supporting other
drug addicts who want to recover.
Narcotics Anonymous is a non-religious fellowship, encouraging each
member to cultivate an individual understanding, religious or not, of
a 'spiritual awakening'.
Narcotics Anonymous believes one of the cornerstones of its success
is the therapeutic value of addicts working with each other to achieve
recovery. In meetings members regularly share their personal experiences
with each other, not as professionals but as ordinary people who have
discovered that sharing brings about solutions to their problems.
Narcotics Anonymous has no professional therapists, no residential facilities
and no clinics. NA provides no vocational, legal, financial, psychiatric
or medical services. The closest thing to an NA counsellor is the sponsor,
someone who has been free from active drug use for a number of years
who gives informal support and assistance to newcomers and those with
less experience of the programme.
The primary service provided by Narcotics Anonymous is the local weekly
meeting. Each group is autonomous, organising itself according to a
series of 12 principles common to the entire organisation. Meetings,
which take place in rooms rented from public, religious or other organisations,
may be 'open', meaning anyone can attend or 'closed', meaning only for
people who want to address their own drug problems. Meetings are facilitated
by NA members. Other members may take part by talking in turn about
their experiences of addiction and the recovery, strength and hope they've
discovered through NA.
Narcotics Anonymous has no hierarchy or authority structure.
The Narcotics Anonymous programme uses a simple, experience-oriented
concept of addiction by defining it as a disease from which recovery
is possible. Narcotics Anonymous does not qualify its use of the term
'disease' in any medical or therapeutic sense, nor does NA attempt to
persuade others of the correctness of its views or that recovering addicts
can be cured. The NA fellowship simply asserts that its members have
found that an acceptance of addiction as a disease is an effective way
of helping them come to terms with their condition - and finding recovery.
Narcotics Anonymous encourages its members to abstain completely from
all drugs including alcohol because NA members have discovered that
complete and continuous abstinence provides the best foundation for
recovery and personal growth. Narcotics Anonymous however, takes no
stand on the use of caffeine, nicotine, or sugar. Similarly the use
of prescribed medication for the treatment of specific medical or psychiatric
conditions is neither encouraged nor prohibited by NA. While recognising
numerous questions in these areas, Narcotics Anonymous feels they are
matters of personal choice and encourages its members to consult their
own experience, the experience of other members, and the opinions of
qualified health professionals to help them make up their minds about
these subjects.
Narcotics Anonymous also recognises it is one of many organisations
addressing drug addiction and does not claim its programme will work
for all addicts under all circumstances or that its therapeutic views
should be universally adopted.
The development of NA and
further information
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