Drug addiction is a very scary thing to get yourself into, and usually it is very difficult to get yourself out of an addiction. Whether it be drugs, pills, alcohol... all of the above have their own set of dangers that come along with it. My friends suffered from a cocaine addiction for about a year and a half. He had lost his job, his girlfriend, and was about to be evicted from his apartment; the addiction was destroying his life, and I couldn't watch it any longer. So I did some research and found a website that directed me to a bunch of really great rehabs and support groups. He went, and in one year completely went full circle and got his life back together. It worked for my friend, and I'm sure it will work for yours too.
Your body will go into remission or even psychosis depnding on the strength of the drug and the body's dependency on it. Much like quitting drinking or smoking, you will crave for it. If the addictive drug is heroin or cocaine and you wish to quit, seek medical advice. If it is for Cannabis then just stop taking it, and live a happy life like I did.
nothing you are perfectly fine and healthy
It means you have stopped or just about to stop.
if you slowly reduce the feeding then your milk will just dry up. check www.gurgle.com for more info
Stop feeding it water and fruit an dmake sure it eats a lot of food.
You stop feeding them when they die.
Relapse.
Therapy is the way out.
yes they can
smoking addiction is when you can't stop smoking because your body tells you you need it
Addiction is where you cant stop having something! And alcoholism is something to do with alcohol! :)
The only effective and appropriate way to stop alcohol, drug or drug addiction is comprehensive treatment
When you stop feeding it
Stop doing it. That's not an addiction, you are simply making excuses for your behavior.
This term usually refers to enabling. If you are enabling an addict, you are allowing them to continue their addictive behaviours even if you don't intentionally wish to do so. Giving an addict money, lying for them, helping them or encouraging them to indulge in their addiction and believing them when they lie are typical enabling behaviours. Usually, enablers are family and friends who do not realise they are feeding the addiction, instead believing they are helping the addict.