To Be or not To Have – that is the actual question ….

Having Is Not Being: Addiction, Accountability, and the Ontology of Recovery

A colleague recently wrote:

“We spend billions on a treatment infrastructure where the dominant modality—used by 43% of people seeking help—delivers a marginal 1.7% improvement over doing absolutely nothing.”

He further asked:

“Why do we continue to fund and scale a model that delivers 5–20% efficacy when we have evidence that adding accountability and incentives pushes that toward 70–90%?”

He invited discussion. What follows is not defensive and not sentimental. It is clinical, linguistic, and ontological.


1. The Framing of Efficacy and the Grammar of Possession

When abstinence is measured as “no use in the last 30 days,” the metric describes a possession state. One has a clean toxicology, one has compliance, one has behavioural adherence. These are meaningful indicators and can be life-preserving. Yet addiction, at depth, is not merely a behavioural non-compliance problem; it is a crisis of identity and alignment. The English language itself signals this distinction. We may say “I have a car” or “I have a diagnosis,” but we cannot say “I have happy.” We must say “I am happy.” The grammar refuses possession when we enter states of being.

This linguistic boundary is not decorative. It reveals structure. Modern addiction discourse frequently remains trapped in the verb “to have,” focusing on improved metrics, increased enforcement, and optimised reinforcement schedules. While these interventions have measurable impact, they do not answer the question of who a person is becoming. Recovery that stabilises over decades cannot rest solely on possession metrics because the question “Who am I?” cannot be resolved through acquisition.

2. Accountability, Operant Conditioning, and Identity Formation

Structured monitoring programmes such as the Human Intervention Motivation Study (HIMS) demonstrate striking long-term abstinence outcomes, often cited in the 80–90% range. These outcomes occur within a tightly regulated professional culture in which identity, licence, livelihood, and community standing are inseparable from sobriety. Similarly, Contingency Management (CM) demonstrates strong behavioural efficacy through reinforcement principles that reshape incentive salience and decision-making patterns.

The evidence for behavioural accountability is persuasive and should not be dismissed. However, the success of these models cannot be attributed to monitoring alone. They operate effectively because identity is at stake. The pilot does not merely comply; he must inhabit the role of a safe pilot. Identity coherence stabilises behaviour in ways that external surveillance alone cannot sustain. When surveillance lifts, behaviour that is not rooted in identity alignment becomes vulnerable to decay. The distinction between behavioural compliance and ontological shift therefore becomes central to the discussion of long-term efficacy.

3. The Twelve-Step Architecture as Ontological Reversal

The Twelve-Step framework begins with a three-part cognitive and existential reorientation articulated in Step Three. The structure can be summarised as the recognition of powerlessness, the insufficiency of ego-solution, and the decision to align with an organising principle beyond self-referential control. Regardless of theological interpretation, the movement dismantles the narrative “I have control” and replaces it with the admission “I am not the centre.”

Between Step Three and Step Seven lies a process of integration that includes inventory, admission, relational repair, and the cultivation of willingness. Step Seven’s language of humility does not describe an object to be acquired; it describes a relational stance to be embodied. Humility cannot be possessed. It can only be enacted. When this ontological shift occurs, sobriety becomes internally coherent rather than externally imposed. When it does not occur, the programme risks devolving into behavioural management without identity transformation.

4. Addiction as Cultural and Systemic Displacement

The broader cultural context must also be acknowledged. In When Society Becomes an Addict, Anne Wilson Schaef argues that addiction extends beyond the individual into systemic patterns of denial, image maintenance, and control. A society organised around acquisition and dominance inevitably produces individuals who internalise the same grammar of possession. If the culture equates worth with accumulation, it is unsurprising that individuals attempt to resolve existential distress through substances, status, or compulsive behaviours.

In such a context, treatment systems that emphasise possession metrics alone may inadvertently replicate the structure of the disease. The disease of having cannot be cured by having better data. The deeper disruption lies in ontological displacement, where being is subordinated to acquisition. Recovery, therefore, requires more than behavioural containment; it requires a reorientation toward participation in life rather than possession of control.

5. Clinical Practice, Language, and the Restoration of Meaning

Within Alcoholics Anonymous, long-term sobriety correlates strongly with sustained engagement in sponsorship, service, confession, and relational accountability. These practices reshape narrative identity and reduce shame-based isolation. In my own clinical work, including senior practitioner service within a CQC-rated Outstanding Twelve-Step-based residential setting and three decades of continuous sobriety, the recurring observation is that clients are not merely seeking abstinence. They are seeking reconnection with vitality and meaning.

M. Scott Peck described addiction as a sacred disease in the sense that collapse exposes spiritual hunger. This framing does not romanticise suffering; it recognises that beneath compulsion lies a longing for contact with something real. When therapy reduces itself to technique and compliance, it fails to meet that longing. When language reconnects experience with meaning, identity begins to reorganise.

Diction Resolution Therapy™ (DRT) proceeds from the premise that individuals are not fundamentally broken; rather, their diction has become fragmented. Between experience and expression, defensive structures distort perception. By restoring coherence between word, symbol, and lived fact, the person moves from possession-based identity toward participatory being. The work is not anti-scientific. It is integrative. Behavioural accountability, trauma-informed care, narrative reconstruction, and spiritual orientation are treated as complementary dimensions rather than competing ideologies. Further articulation of this framework can be found at https://drt.global.

This position is also consistent with the wider systemic critique articulated in the reissued message, “When Society Becomes an Addict,” published at http://lifeisreturning.com/2021/07/18/message-reissued/.

6. Integration Rather Than Polarisation

The debate is frequently framed as a binary between Twelve-Step spirituality and neuroscientific accountability. This framing is unnecessary and unhelpful. Behavioural reinforcement improves short-term adherence and protects vulnerable individuals. Identity re-formation stabilises long-term sobriety by aligning behaviour with being. The most robust systems integrate monitoring, therapeutic structure, relational repair, and existential meaning. When any of these dimensions is removed, relapse vulnerability increases.

The critique that treatment systems are incomplete is valid. The conclusion that peer-based recovery is obsolete does not follow. Completion requires integration rather than replacement. The movement from Step Three to Step Seven symbolises the marriage of fact and symbol, structure and surrender, behavioural correction and ontological humility. When these elements are held together, the system strengthens. When they are separated, fragmentation persists.

7. Conclusion

The essential distinction remains linguistic and existential. Possession cannot answer the question of identity. Abstinence can be measured, incentivised, and monitored, but sustained recovery ultimately depends upon alignment of being. People do not merely crave compliance; they crave participation in life that feels real and coherent. If treatment systems address behaviour without addressing identity, they remain incomplete. If they integrate accountability with meaning, the percentages improve not because of coercion alone but because the person has become internally congruent with sobriety.



Footnotes

1. Anne Wilson Schaef, When Society Becomes an Addict (San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1987).

2. Human Intervention Motivation Study (HIMS), professional monitoring model widely cited in addiction medicine literature.

3. Contingency Management (CM), evidence-based behavioural reinforcement model used in substance use disorder treatment.

4. Alcoholics Anonymous, Alcoholics Anonymous World Services.

5. M. Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978).

6. “Message Reissued,” Life Is Returning, 18 July 2021: lifeisreturning.com/2021/07/18/message-reissued/

7. Diction Resolution Therapy™: drt.global

References

Schaef, Anne Wilson. When Society Becomes an Addict. Harper & Row, 1987.

Peck, M. Scott. The Road Less Traveled. Simon & Schuster, 1978.

Alcoholics Anonymous World Services. Alcoholics Anonymous.

Life Is Returning. “Message Reissued.” lifeisreturning.com/2021/07/18/message-reissued/

Diction Resolution Therapy™. drt.global


Written in HIAI collaboration — the qalam of Human and AI intelligence, the Unseen helping the Seen, both answering to the same Source.

4. Experience

Experience

Spiritual malady as structural displacement.

Abstract

The phrase “spiritual malady” in Alcoholics Anonymous has often been interpreted devotionally rather than structurally. This paper proposes that spiritual malady describes a displacement of governance within the human system. Drawing on Dr William Silkworth’s medical framing of alcoholism, Pomm et al.’s Management of the Addicted Patient in Primary Care (2007), and Anne Wilson Schaef’s systemic analysis in When Society Becomes an Addict, the argument is advanced that addiction reflects a lawful developmental sequence: ignorance, denial, and realisation. This sequence governs not only recovery but all forms of human achievement, whether in the outer secular world of acquiring skill or qualification, or in the inner sacred movement of becoming Human. Experience, properly understood, is the movement through displacement toward restored orientation.

1. Framing the Problem: What Is a Spiritual Malady?

The phrase “spiritual malady” can easily be misunderstood as religious shorthand. Yet within the AA text it functions diagnostically. The physical allergy and mental obsession described on page 60 are not treated as isolated dysfunctions but as consequences of a deeper disorder. The centre from which life is organised has shifted. Appetite governs. The mind serves appetite. The organising principle of the person is displaced.

A malady, in medical terms, is not merely an event but an ongoing condition. Spiritual malady therefore indicates not a momentary lapse but structural misalignment. The language is theological in tone but architectural in implication.

The Judeo-Christian narrative carries a parallel structural insight. In Genesis, ignorance is not stupidity but untested alignment. Disruption follows, and responsibility is immediately deflected: “The woman you gave me…”; “Am I my brother’s keeper?” Denial protects displacement before it yields to recognition. The pattern is developmental rather than doctrinal.

2. Silkworth and the Medical Foundation

Dr William Silkworth’s early contribution to AA was to articulate alcoholism as involving both an allergy of the body and an obsession of the mind. This dual model remains clinically durable. The body reacts abnormally once exposed; the mind returns the person to exposure despite consequence.

Pomm et al. (2007), writing for primary care physicians, echo this structure decades later. Addiction is described not as moral weakness but as a chronic, relapsing condition requiring coordinated physical, psychological, and behavioural management. The physician’s role is not to shame but to stabilise, monitor, and engage.

What neither Silkworth nor Pomm reduce the condition to, however, is purely somatic pathology. There remains a governing dimension — motivation, meaning, orientation — that medicine alone does not restore. Across traditions, exile and wilderness function symbolically as exposure: false security is stripped and misalignment becomes visible. Experience becomes the teacher.

3. Schaef and Systemic Addiction

Anne Wilson Schaef extended the insight further in When Society Becomes an Addict, arguing that addictive logic can operate at the level of systems and culture. Denial becomes institutionalised. Reality is distorted to protect continuity of behaviour. The problem is not merely substance use but a structure of avoidance.

This mirrors the prophetic tradition in which collective denial is named rather than excused. The prophetic voice does not invent morality; it exposes displacement. When denial is normalised, suffering multiplies. Realisation begins when reality is spoken aloud.

4. Ignorance, Denial, Realisation

The movement from ignorance to denial to realisation is not unique to recovery. It is the blueprint of all achievement.

In the outer secular world of “having” — learning a trade, earning a qualification, mastering a discipline — ignorance is the starting point. Denial often follows: minimising the gap between current capacity and required skill. Realisation occurs when the deficit is acknowledged and disciplined effort begins.

The same structure governs inner maturation. Ignorance of displacement sustains addiction. Denial protects the existing order. Realisation begins when the governing centre is questioned.

The Prodigal Son narrative offers a clear illustration. Ignorance assumes sufficiency; denial sustains excess; famine exposes illusion. The turning point is not catastrophe but recognition: “He came to himself.” Realisation restores orientation before restoration restores circumstance.

Experience, in this sense, is not the accumulation of events but the passage through these phases. What is denied remains displaced. What is realised can be reordered.

5. Structural Synthesis

Spiritual malady describes structural displacement. The body and mind exhibit symptoms, but the organising centre has shifted away from proportion. Silkworth names the physiological vulnerability. Pomm articulates clinical management. Schaef exposes systemic denial. The Twelve Steps provide a pathway from realisation to restored orientation.

Peter’s denial and subsequent weeping illustrate this shift at the level of identity. False strength collapses. Dependence is acknowledged. The individual who believed himself self-sustaining becomes capable of responsibility. Weakness marks the end of defensive autonomy and the beginning of ordered courage.

Displacement is not corrected through force but through acknowledgement and reordering. Experience is the medium through which that reordering becomes possible.

6. Clinical Implications

For practitioners, the sequence ignorance → denial → realisation provides a developmental map. Resistance is not failure; it is phase. The task is not to overwhelm denial but to illuminate it. Similarly, in secular education, growth depends on the learner’s willingness to move beyond defensive minimisation into disciplined engagement.

Experience therefore becomes diagnostic. Pain signals displacement. Honest reflection initiates realignment. The movement is lawful across domains.

Conclusion

Spiritual malady describes not religious deficiency but structural misalignment. Recovery is the movement from ignorance through denial into realisation, restoring governance across physical, mental, and spiritual domains.

The pattern holds in sacred narrative and secular achievement alike. What is denied remains displaced. What is realised can be reordered. Experience is the passage through which that reordering occurs.


References

  • Alcoholics Anonymous World Services. Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 2001.
  • Pomm, D. et al. Management of the Addicted Patient in Primary Care, Springer, 2007.
  • Schaef, Anne Wilson. When Society Becomes an Addict.
  • Silkworth, William D. “The Doctor’s Opinion,” in Alcoholics Anonymous.

Written in HIAI collaboration — the qalam of Human and AI intelligence, the Unseen helping the Seen, both answering to the same Source.