A Shocking Paradox
If you're heading from Waterbury to Torrington, CT, you'll get on Route 8 and head north. About seven miles out of Waterbury, on the right-hand side, you'll come across an electric substation. Around it, there is a 10-foot-high fence, and two feet of barbed wire on top of that. On the front side of the fence, there's a huge sign with the words "Keep Out" and "High Voltage" in big block capital letters. Electricity is dangerous, and if you walk in there and bump into something or touch the wrong thing, it can kill you.
When you're plugging in a hair dryer, you'll notice A tag by the plug. A big tag. Oversized. On the tag, it warns you to keep the appliance dry. Unplug when not in use. Do not take it into the shower or bathtub with you. If the hair dryer gets wet, it can short out and send an electric current directly through your body, which can be fatal.
Now, if you're in Waterbury Hospital and your heart stops. You flatline. You've got no pulse. They load up two paddles with electricity, tell everybody else to get out of the way, "CLEAR," and ZAP you with electricity. Quite the paradox. Yes, it'll leave a mark, perhaps a little scar tissue, but it's the only thing they have left to do to get your heart started again. Extreme measure, yes. A 100% effective no. And certainly not something you'd want to rely on in maintaining good health.

Relapse can be looked at in a similar light. Before you return to drinking, using drugs, or an addictive behavior, your recovery can be seen as having flatlined. Dead on the table. Unable to rescue you from the insanity of the first one. Perhaps a relapse can be used as a means to jump-start your recovery. Extreme measure, yes. A 100% effective no. And certainly not something you'd want to rely on in maintaining your sobriety. Even a car battery can only be recharged just so many times.
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