WEBVTT
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This is a renewed original recording.
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Hello and welcome to Believe in People, a two-time Radio Academy Award nominated and British Podcast Award-winning series about all things addiction, recovery, and stigma.
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My name is Matthew Butler, and I'm your host, or as Alex said, your facilitator.
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In the concluding part of this two-part conversation, Andy Woodwalker attends to examine the long-term effects of childhood trauma and how these experiences contributed to his later struggles with alcohol use.
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A false rape accusation in 2015 marks a significant turning point, removing the external structures such as careers in football and policing that had previously provided stability.
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Without those frameworks, alcohol became a means of coping with unresolved trauma from the past.
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Andy discusses the psychological impacts of trauma, including anxiety, panic, and difficulties forming secure relationships.
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He reflects on the media attention following his 2016 disclosures and the lack of aftercare that followed.
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Central to this episode is the recognition that relationships with substance misuse can develop as a response to prolonged emotional distress, and that recovery often begins with understanding that link.
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Andy's account also highlights the challenges of seeking help and the importance of individualised approaches to treatment.
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He goes on to describe his evolving relationship with alcohol, including his time in rehab and his openness to exploring multiple pathways towards recovery.
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Andy emphasises the value of living in the present, approaching change with energy and honesty, and respecting the varied ways people manage their relationship with substances.
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His story underscores the importance of choice, flexibility, and trauma-informed support in recovery journeys.
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First of all, thank you for having me back for part two.
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Because part two is about, you know, the the relationships that occurred previous, but also the relationships that happened in the last nine years.
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And I'll revert to that later on because it's about re relationships, resilience, and recovery.
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This is a start of part two, which I'll go on about.
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And when you when you talk then about you know being a footballer and being in that group mentality and the discipline of it, I was disciplined.
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Yeah.
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You know, I used to go out.
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I didn't say, you know, I was just like the rest of everybody else, really, you know, go out a weekend, but I was disciplined because I needed to play.
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And there's some footballers that that did drink, you know, and it's been prevalently put out there, but myself I didn't.
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I just drank socially with the lads, etc.
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And then in the police career, I'd say because you're it's trauma-based, really, because you're in that role and you're there to protect people, but you see an awful lot.
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And I did meet a lot of officers that were potentially dependent on drink.
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I can't speak for them, but I'd say the I'd say around I've looked back on it, and around about again, it's the synergy of 2013-ish, where Gary Speed took his life.
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There was a lot of turmoil in my life, and I think it started to catch up with me again, and that progressed, but it wasn't where I was drinking so heavily.
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And the 2015 incident where I'd mentioned before, you know, I was arrested for something that even to this day I'm still traumatized by it, but that significance of somebody accusing me of something that one I didn't do, and two, within the role I was doing, it kind of it sent me on the biggest spiral ever because that trauma that came with that, and all the trauma from my childhood to be accused of something that I didn't do, for the record I proved that I'm more than proved it, and the institute called the police are supposed to protect people, and they're also to protect staff.
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Now that really started my huge downward spiral.
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Talk to me a little bit about that incident because it's been a while since we last spoke, to be fair, and and not to know I sound bad saying this, but I don't fully remember us talking about an arrest and and what happened.
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Yeah.
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Can you just re refresh my memory about that?
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Yeah, well we'll start it there really.
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2013, like I said, just before, I'd started with you know Gary Speed's death, etc.
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I'd done an article with the Sunday Times magazine where I was approached, and the only reason I wanted to do that, well, I've always been about protecting others and me take the flat for it, yeah.
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They started knocking on my sister's door and started to pry into her life and my mum and dad's, and they asked me to sort it out, so I agreed to do an article in the Sunday Times anonymously, and it was to talk about Gary Spears' death, which I I did do, but the senior officers in the constabulary were made aware of because I was then told that an inspector had to come with me off duty, not on duty, to watch and observe everything that I said.
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At the time, I just thought it was that was protocol, yeah.
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But I'm off duty doing an article.
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I'm not talking about the police, I'm talking about my childhood.
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But that, you know, I look back on that and that was strange, that was odd, which I just went along with and I give the article and and and following that I got I got dragged into a senior officer meeting, and I was sat along in a table with I mean high senior officers asking me about, and literally I felt like I was being interviewed about why I was doing this magazine.
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Bear in mind in 2003 I'd seen Benell in prison because I had a claim against crew, and they'd said that they wouldn't put me on any sexual offences, which I was on every single one, which I mentioned saying that, yeah.
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Yeah, but in but here it was like again a reiteration of okay Andy, we will look after you.
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And then following that, the amount of files I was given for paedophilia cases of of pornographic images and videos, and sitting in the headquarters from eight in the morning till midday, literally sifting through paedophilia on on an industrial scale that any like-minded any person would say, surely that's not right when they already knew what I'd gone through as a child.
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And I'm not making excuses for what happened following that, but that in itself is enough to take somebody to a very dark place, which I just got on and did, and I was always a yes person, always been that through my life because of the abuse.
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And then following that, I'd I'd say I started to spiral, and then they asked, you see, everything within the police, it was like I didn't go for it, I was asked to, and they asked me if I'd do the a family ozing officer role, which I thought I can help families that you know, in murders and things like that, you have to be there to protect the family, but also you are an investigator, but you're there to support a family, and for me it was my niche.
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That's you know, I've always been like that, you know.
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And I I dealt with I think it was two or three within the year, this was 2014 and 15, and ironically, I bumped into one of the mums just recently, and she hugged me and said, Thank you for everything you did, Andy, and you know, breaking the story.
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But I did what everything from my heart, and then this one time on the in 2015, an inspector just grabbed me at the night time and said, I need you to do a job for me.
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I need you to do, I need you to work your magic.
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And I was like, Magic?
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What is it?
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And it was a woman that wouldn't was not engaging with the police, you know, her brother had committed, was a subject to a victim of a serious crime.
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And I I said, Yeah, typical me, yeah.
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I was drained and all that, and I don't want to go into too much detail right now, but I got embroiled in this family liaison job, and what is by law is that looking back on it all, I wish I'd have been stronger, but by law within that establishment, again, protection is all about protection, is that a family liaison officer should be in twos at all times to protect both officers, yeah, and you've got witnesses to everything that you do, and there's a book that you have to fill in.
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Now, I was on my own, and again, I'm not making excuses for what followed, but I was vulnerable, I was on my own, and this lady made advances, and I ended up crossing the line, yeah, and messages were sent, and there were meetings with us, etc.
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Now, with that, what came following that, and my marriage started to really struggle because I'd done wrong.
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Yeah, I I owned that I'd done wrong, I'd crossed the line, and I knew that I'd gone against what the policies were.
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Yeah, I was vulnerable.
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Exactly that exactly that.
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And you know, I met I I was at a point where me and my wife at the time, it was I was going under, and I could feel myself sinking, sinking, sinking, and I left the marital home, and this person then sent me a message.
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She'd found out that I'd left the area, and her message was of this, and I have that documented as I do all the files, as I'm not saying anything untoward here, I'm telling the truth, and what it was was watch what happens now.
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And on the Wednesday, I went into my workplace and I was arrested, and it was the most serious arrest that anybody can actually comprehend, and I was arrested on suspicion of rape broke my heart.
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How somebody could one accuse somebody of that and two really that I was in the police station with all my colleagues coming into work and be put in that scenario to this day.
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That's a wrong because you nigga you can never come back to that job after that, can you?
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Well, I knew you know won the allegation, yeah, and there's so many allegations that are out there.
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I mean, right now we're talking about you know the big one that's out there at the moment, you know, is he innocent?
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Is he innocent?
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You know, I've proved it, I proved it, and not only proved it, I'll tell you in a second, but but that you know, that that doubt, that doubt in somebody's mind, did he do it?
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Did he need it?
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The fact that the people that you would have considered maybe you know friends, and we always say this about work colleagues, you spend more time with them than you do with your family, do you know?
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So those people that you are close to are now having this interpretation of you, and and even as you said, you know, to be found out innocent, the fact that they even they thought that about you, it's just really hard to rebuild a relationship after an allegation like that is made about full stop, yeah, you know, and I imagine not not to interject to you, but I imagine as someone who is a victim of rape, to then be accused as a perpetrator of it, falsely accused, that must be even more heartbreaking because you know what it's like to be a victim of that crime as well.
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Exactly that, and but prior to all that, my ex-wife was starting to feel frightened because she knew about this individual and it was items being delivered to the door, including a picture frame saying Andrew loves the wife in Scrabble letters, and I was in fear, I was getting frightened, and she was getting frightened, but I was in fear to go to the establishment that is the police because back then this was 2015, people weren't speaking out about anything really then, and I was frightened to death, and I was in fear, but that then you know the horrible feeling of being in that situation put in a cell, knowing full well what the other person had actually done to someone that gave nothing but care and love and didn't do anything wrong other than leave the area and not want to participate within that cross line that I'd done.
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Yeah, and you know, I told the the police the full truth, nothing but the truth.
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I told them to take my phone and please look at it.
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I've crossed the line.
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Yeah, if I lose my job, I lose my job.
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I'm I'm you know you brought you brought the conduct to the police officers, but you uh police uh uh establishment, but you haven't committed a crime.
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Well no, yeah, and and it was that I mean the the job in itself for 13 years was an absolute minefield of a struggle for me, but I did it for humanity then, you know, I got awards and I did that, but I did that from my soul, from my heart.
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So so for that to happen, Matt, was just the most horrific thing that anybody could do, but not only that, it was kind of like and I I told them, I said, take it away, please.
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You know, this offence, I categorically would never inflict that on any human being in my life, and don't get me wrong, we've talked before in part one how some people can can can go down a different path and and then choose to abuse others, yeah, choose to be a narcissistic horrible person with no heart and turn cold, but for somebody to accuse me of that was like literally it, you know, it nearly was the death penalty to me, but it was horrific, and so following that, I expected it to turn round really quickly.
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I had you know, my colleague who who really helped me, I didn't have any support.
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They, you know, people might say, Well, you're arrested for that, why should you have support?
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But you know, I hadn't done anything wrong, as in what I'd done is I'd crossed the line, I'd done wrong in the job, and I know that I know what I'd done wrong, but in terms of that, it was horrific.
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Yeah, and would you say that this then, after everything that you went through, that was the catalyst which turned you towards states?
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That's it.
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When did you realise that?
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Because I imagine maybe it started with a bit of drinking.
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Yeah, it was tell me how it was.
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So the build up to that was I was drinking more alcohol, yeah, and I'd had time off work just prior to this happening, and I was drinking alcohol, and you know, following that I literally drank, started to drink heavily, and it was binge, it was wasn't like um I well there was a period, a short period, where I was like literally, it was the only method for me to block out what somebody had accused me of, and then what it also brought was all my trauma again from my childhood, and I seeked help from the PFA to see a therapist because I'd been building everything up because of the Gary Speed stuff, and I'd worked out loads of things out with the you know the rings of the football clubs and what was going on, and I was like looking into it all and stuff like that, as well as everything else that was going through, but it was like bang, and it was like a Pandora's box had lifted off.
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And as people will watch this and they'll see that when a trigger or an event happens, it it doesn't matter, it can be any time in life, it can be from a young adult, it can be from the teenagers, it can be whatever, but that substance for me was always in my life where it wasn't like as though it was the be-all and end all to block out, but that was always my go-to to drink alcohol to wash out the trauma, yeah, but not to that degree, and then when that started there, that was me.
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I was I was on, you know, as they say, garden leave, I was at the home, I was like, and I was just drinking, and then there was a gap because I had some therapy, and that therapy sidetracked me again on the right path, hence me doing the Victoria Derbyshire.
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I mean, but following the Victoria Derbyshire and the impact of the amount of interviews that I'd done and I started smoking, you know, that's the you know, that's another addiction, isn't it?
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It's a good stress management, isn't it?
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A lot of people turn into it, don't they?
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You know, and and that that trauma base that that really sort of kick-started me into drinking alcohol a lot, and it was binging and binging and binging.
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Was it any drink in particular, or was it just any alcohol you could really you see with myself, it's never spirits, yeah.
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It was just, you know, any lager or cider or bottles of cider and you know, stuff like that.
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But when you're when you're in that destruction path of I I don't like saying the word addiction for some reason, but that that relationship with alcohol, drugs, gambling, sex, you name it, once you're in that, you're kind of in that hole.
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And what comes with that, what I've had identified now, and obviously you see I'm I'm good now, but back then when you when you've when you've gone down that slippery slope of your relationship with it is that important, it goes past that element of your family, your friends, ones dearest to you, and you hear them when they're saying you've got a problem here, you need to slow down or stop drinking, etc.
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etc.
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But when you're in that binging or relationship with it, and when you've suffered trauma as a child, yeah, no matter what that is, whether it's from sexual abuse, abuse, you know, family, anything like that, you you you end up with fear, and what runs alongside that is you're an empath, so you care, you've got a big heart, and then the next level with that is the anxiety, yeah, and the anxiety that kicks, and that's one of the reasons you want to block out the past because it's you're getting all these flashbacks, you want to get rid of any fear because in drink you become confident, more able, and you've you you can walk in somewhere and you can have a laugh and blah blah blah.
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But the anxiety level, it takes that edge off you, so you become calmer, you're real well, you do know it's damaging your body, but that feeling of being all those three, everything else goes out of the window, yeah.
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And then when you wake up, it's that dread of that feeling.
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It's not when you've done it for a period of time like myself, I've been there, yeah.
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It's not like a hangover.
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I used to have hangovers, I know what they're like, and you wake up in the morning and go, Oh gosh, but yeah, do I have a hair of the dog or do I have a bite to eat, or do we eat a McDonald's or a KFC?
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And by the night time, you're kind of like, Oh, I'm coming round a bit now.
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No, it's deep because you you wake up with that dread of that feeling of anxiety rippling right through you.
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So the instant reaction is how am I gonna stop that?
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Oh, drink.
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See, it's interesting because everything you've described there for me is addiction, but you don't like to use the word addiction.
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Why do you think that is?
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I think uh I think the stigma of the actual word is quite damning to people, and it's quite a negative word.
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I think in society, the way that we turn around and say, Oh, you're an addict.
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Yeah, yeah, I get it.
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Yeah, it just doesn't it's more of a horrible relationship with a substance, and you can't say that obviously, because you you the addiction is addiction, you know, the word, but I just um people will all understand this because when when you've got a bad relationship with a substance, and then that word, because the stigma around it is you're an addict.
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Whoa, no, don't like that.
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Yeah, it it internally it hurts, even though we have our own free will that we we've got ourselves into this mess, we still don't want to be in this mess.
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And when people go, Oh, you're an addict, or are you an addict, just the wording just there's the the denial about it, isn't there?
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I mean, yeah, yeah.
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I think if if we we look at the 12-step programme, yeah, I think the first step is obviously to accept that powerlessness over addiction, isn't it?
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And you'd think for people in addiction that'd be a quite easy thing to do.
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They'd look at the life around them and think, okay, I'm definitely powerless over this, but even step one can be quite difficult for people.
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Did you follow a 12-step programme?
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How did it work for you?
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Yeah, I've I've you know, in the in the the journey of Andy's relationship with alcohol, I've I've been to AA, I've read the book, I've done the 12 steps, and to be fair, the principles actually are principles of life.
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Yeah, it doesn't matter whether it's a substance or alcohol or drugs or anything like that.
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The 12 steps are really about life.
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Yeah.
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See, a lot of people say that more people should follow a 12-step program with without an addiction because they'd live a much more fulfilling life.
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Fulfilling life, yeah, absolutely that.
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So the actual concept that Bill brought up was really more about humanity, but what it it then became a lot of men, groups of men, and I I still think you know, I think women find it harder to be in that AA come 12 steps.
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So I did do the 12 steps, and you know, the fundamentals of that are are right, but you know, is it the answer?
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I don't think it's just the 12 steps are the answer.
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There's so many.
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I suppose you to to define the answer, you need to again define the question because your relationship with alcohol now, from what I understand, you could have a drink now.
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Is that correct?
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Yeah.
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Is that a is it something you've tried to do, or have you just chose not to even?
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I mean, because one of the things I think the interesting thing about recovery is that a lot of people, from my experience of work in this field, and when you talk to people, there's this idea of right, it's been a year, two years, three years, whatever it may be.
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I'm no longer physically dependent on the substance now, so I can have just one drink.
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But of course, it's never just the one drink, the one drink tends to two, and then you might find that you know you're free four weeks down the line and you're right back to where you were.
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Yeah, those you know, a couple of years ago.
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I've been on that, I've been on that road, you know.
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I've been in rehab.
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So in my journey, you know, I I knew I had a bad relationship with it, I knew it was really going worse.
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And is that my fault?
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Yeah, it's my free will, but also the fundamentals around that was the way I was being treated, how I'd been treated, all my trauma had caught up with me.
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So my only get out was to pick something up.
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You see, I never gambled, drugs, no, you know, any of those other elements, but alcohol I drank before, so I knew that it'd calm me down, take me off.
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And then I went down that road and people that that you know that fight that say about alcoholism or drugs, etc.
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Unless you've stepped over that parapet, social drinkers, you know, they're they're not far away from it because if they had it ended up with a traumatic event, loss of someone's life, or something huge, quite easily just then two becomes three, becomes four, one bottle becomes two bottles, and before they know it, without them even realizing it, they're in denial that they are actually are they an addict?
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Because where's the where's the where's the balance on here?
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Are they an addict?
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So when was the last time you had a drink?
00:26:50.400 --> 00:26:54.640
Recently I've had a couple, but and it was able to just be a couple and that'd be that.
00:26:54.880 --> 00:27:12.160
But what yeah, but what I also can identify, if I do, then what I do to myself is go, whoa, because I know that if I was to let that couple go into more and more and more, there's no doubt I'll be back to 2017.
00:27:12.400 --> 00:27:13.039
Yeah.
00:27:13.440 --> 00:27:18.160
And it's the hardest battle, and will I have this for the rest of my life?
00:27:18.720 --> 00:27:34.160
Probably because of you know, I always say it's the the percentages that people say about addictions and the link to trauma, it's all right them saying, Oh, it's this percent and that percent.
00:27:34.319 --> 00:27:39.440
Well, if you get a hundred people or a thousand people, if you don't pick the right thousand people, yeah.
00:27:39.519 --> 00:27:40.640
The percentages are always gonna be different.
00:27:41.839 --> 00:27:43.200
The figures are always gonna be stupid.
00:27:43.359 --> 00:27:50.799
I I hate data research and we spoke to a hundred people, it's like yeah, because you you know what I mean, you still have very small amount of people you're speaking to.
00:27:51.119 --> 00:27:55.279
But you I could speak to a hundred people and not one of them have experienced any form of addiction.
00:27:55.359 --> 00:27:58.400
No, and I could speak to a hundred other people and maybe all hundred of them have.
00:27:58.640 --> 00:28:01.759
So your percentages are always gonna be skewed in that one in three people.
00:28:02.640 --> 00:28:20.960
I suppose I guess if someone was listening to this and they identified as you know an addict and quite you know avid follower of the 12-step programme, they could listen to this and think, well, he was never an addict then, or he's not an addict because you can have a you've got a bit more control over your use of substances than than what some people will have.
00:28:21.200 --> 00:28:25.119
So I guess the question is, is there a difference between addiction?
00:28:25.359 --> 00:28:30.480
Which again, if you've had a physical dependency, that's it, and being an addict as well.
00:28:30.640 --> 00:28:32.160
Is there a difference between the two?
00:28:32.559 --> 00:28:35.680
Bear in mind this is like you know, I'm talking 2017.
00:28:36.240 --> 00:28:38.559
We're talking like eight years that have passed now.
00:28:38.960 --> 00:28:40.160
It didn't happen overnight, did it?
00:28:40.319 --> 00:28:42.400
You've you've worked to get to it.
00:28:42.720 --> 00:28:49.440
I've worked alright, and I've had, you know, relapses that many, and I was powerless to it.
00:28:49.680 --> 00:29:07.759
I've been in rehab, you know, and rehabs are there, they're they're designed to get you off alcohol, they're there to protect you because coming off alcohol or drugs has side effects and they can be very dangerous.
00:29:08.160 --> 00:29:10.640
So it's all managed in that that way.
00:29:11.440 --> 00:29:13.279
Some are better than others.
00:29:13.759 --> 00:29:26.720
Are they are they that I mean they they have statistics of people, but I know that the the second one that I went in, there's quite a lot of them that relapsed.
00:29:26.799 --> 00:29:28.240
Yeah, as I did.
00:29:28.960 --> 00:29:40.480
And you have all the intentions, you're clean, you feel great, you've been fed, you've been watered, you can't drink, you've gone through the 12 steps, you've been taken to AA, CA, you name it.
00:29:41.599 --> 00:29:48.319
And the families have paid X amount of pounds because they're not cheap, they're very expensive to go in a private one.
00:29:48.400 --> 00:29:59.839
Yeah, and then I think the support network after it, I think that's where the chain gets broken because you're kind of chained up in there.
00:30:00.079 --> 00:30:04.240
When you have to go with the process, you have to, you have no option.
00:30:04.640 --> 00:30:07.279
I mean, you can leave, but you're there for that purpose.
00:30:07.519 --> 00:30:17.279
And then you go back into reality in the real world, and then your relationships, it could be a partner, and your partner drinks, it happened to me.
00:30:17.599 --> 00:30:23.920
You know, my ex had come out of rehab within three weeks, it was Barry Benell's trial.
00:30:25.279 --> 00:30:28.559
She turned around and said, Come on, D, have a drink.
00:30:28.880 --> 00:30:29.039
Yeah.
00:30:30.319 --> 00:30:30.640
No.
00:30:31.839 --> 00:30:32.400
Go on then.
00:30:32.480 --> 00:30:32.720
Yeah.
00:30:32.880 --> 00:30:33.519
That one.
00:30:34.000 --> 00:30:34.880
That was it then.
00:30:35.119 --> 00:30:36.000
I was on.
00:30:36.319 --> 00:30:41.039
So I guess looking at your relationship with alcohol now, do you know bearing mind what it has done to you?
00:30:41.119 --> 00:30:46.000
It begs the question why you'd even risk picking it up just for that one or two.
00:30:46.079 --> 00:30:54.640
Why do you think you do still feel like you can have a drink on occasion then after it, alcohol has kind of put you through so much moral interest?
00:30:54.880 --> 00:31:00.400
I think because with myself, you know, I probab it's probably in me.
00:31:00.720 --> 00:31:02.799
I like to test myself.
00:31:03.200 --> 00:31:03.599
Yeah.
00:31:03.920 --> 00:31:04.240
Okay.
00:31:04.880 --> 00:31:06.400
Is it a test way of doing that?
00:31:06.559 --> 00:31:07.839
I suppose that's the one thing, isn't it?
00:31:08.000 --> 00:31:10.160
The risk versus reward sort of thing.
00:31:10.559 --> 00:31:12.240
Yeah, is it is an element of that.
00:31:12.319 --> 00:31:16.960
But but for me, every personal journey is different to mine.
00:31:17.279 --> 00:31:17.680
Absolutely, yeah.
00:31:17.839 --> 00:31:21.119
Do you know we're we're human beings and we have our own free will?
00:31:21.279 --> 00:31:21.599
Yeah.
00:31:21.839 --> 00:31:31.920
You know, somebody that's a friend of mine that's in a different mindset, different situation, different trauma, different past, different journey, different road.
00:31:32.240 --> 00:31:33.039
Nobody is an individual.
00:31:33.440 --> 00:31:42.319
Gosh, that person, the th the actual one, or even half a one, or a sip of one, that could just completely obliterate years.
00:31:42.799 --> 00:31:44.559
It could be two years, it could be ten years.
00:31:44.960 --> 00:31:49.519
I've known people 15 years, just that sip of it, that's it then.
00:31:49.759 --> 00:31:56.240
Because the brain goes into and it's not even the taste of the alcohol, it it's something within it, yeah.
00:31:56.400 --> 00:31:57.680
You know, whatever's in it.
00:31:57.920 --> 00:31:59.839
I think it's the circumstances that surround it.
00:31:59.920 --> 00:32:16.559
I think one of the things that I always found interesting is the um the relapse before the relapse, and it's something that people have said to me before, even previous guests on this series have said that you know, often when a relapse happens, it happens long before they ever pick up a drink, and it's down to mindset and where you are.
00:32:17.119 --> 00:32:25.440
And I think obviously you've said yourself, you know, you like to test yourself, and you you can have a couple of drinks, and you recognise when it can start to go too far and you know when to stop.
00:32:25.680 --> 00:32:26.319
That's great.
00:32:26.480 --> 00:32:32.720
As we said, everyone's individual, so not everyone can do that, but even that thought process of oh, I might just test myself.
00:32:32.880 --> 00:32:47.279
There's the there's the relapse before the relapse, or it could be you've got something stressful going on in your life, you maybe experiencing a bereavement, and that in some way could be the relapse before the relapse because you've already kind of decided to yourself this is how I'm gonna cope with this.
00:32:47.519 --> 00:32:51.200
It is that because that's exactly what happened to me in the past.
00:32:51.839 --> 00:33:05.039
It'll be an event, it'll be a subconscious traumatic event, or something occurs, or a stressful situation, and I'm real stressed, and that that bubbles because the mind's then gone, yeah.
00:33:05.440 --> 00:33:12.079
And then it's like, and then environments where we are, we can go in a shop, it doesn't have to be a pub.
00:33:12.240 --> 00:33:20.880
No, you go past those aisles and it's all in front of you, it's on advertisements, it's there, it's boom boom boom, and it can just take you, yeah.
00:33:20.960 --> 00:33:32.160
I get it, you know, and and like you know, say I have a couple I can have a couple of drinks, I'm testing myself, but also there's events that occur that can also go.
00:33:32.640 --> 00:33:38.400
I think in some ways, well, if you think of it like a bit of a traffic light system, ironically, red being the safe zone, that's where you're there.
00:33:38.799 --> 00:33:54.480
Amber is the the contemplation stage, which some people can be at, and for you, like you said, all it took was for someone to say go and have a drink, and if you're in that amber stage, that's someone basically giving you the green light to go happen and have a drink, exactly, you know, and then that's where it can can happen as well, yeah.
00:33:54.720 --> 00:34:09.760
And that and that's the other thing, it's like you know, the stigma around you know, not drinking, which is I think it's brilliant now that they've brought a lot better zero alcohol out, and you don't have to be stood there with a without with a with a J2 or something, yeah, yeah, technology.
00:34:10.239 --> 00:34:11.119
Which is good, yeah.
00:34:11.280 --> 00:34:33.760
But it all boils down to you know, with with this word addiction or relationship with alcohol or drugs or gambling, they all are the same in terms of once you're in it, it's near impossible to get out, and you don't you don't just don't know how you're gonna get out of it.
00:34:33.920 --> 00:34:44.559
Yeah, and those people that you know, and I said to you before about the hangovers, they're not hangovers, they're it literally your body is rejecting the poison that you've put in.
00:34:45.760 --> 00:34:49.440
And although you know that's happening, you want it to go away.
00:34:49.599 --> 00:34:51.760
Yeah, so you'll just drink.
00:34:52.000 --> 00:34:56.719
Yeah, because you know it's gonna in a in a strange way is make you feel better.
00:34:56.800 --> 00:35:06.880
I remember first having you know the hair of the dog sort of thing when I was uh when I was a teenager, and I was like, what that can't be right, sort of thing, and obviously, I mean it stems from somewhere, doesn't it?