The Addictive Personality Myth

The Addictive Personality Myth thumbnail
The notion of an addictive personality is "a convenient myth."

Dr. Neill Neill, a psychologist and author, terms the notion of an addictive personality "a convenient myth." The idea of an addictive personality implies that a person does not have any measure of control over his or her addiction.

  1. Addictive Personality Significance

    Underlying Problems

    • Rather than an addictive personality, some people are simply compulsive.
      Rather than an addictive personality, some people are simply compulsive.

      Dr. Neill believes that while the addictive personality is a myth, the underlying problem for alcoholics, workaholics, sexaholics and others is compulsion, a means to cope with an primary fear. It, too, can be a defense mechanism.

    Excesses and Consequences

    • Peele believes Americans can make anything "addictive" and thereby delute the real problem.
      Peele believes Americans can make anything "addictive" and thereby delute the real problem.

      Stanton Peele, a critic of addiction treatments, believes Americans make everything into an addiction---shopping, watching television, playing computer games---while failing to understand that real addition is about consequences, not about excesses in behavior. He believes the 12-step treatment method reinforces the addictive personality myth by telling people they are powerless to control their problems when, in fact, they can control their excessive behavior by substituting it for less consequential behavior such as coffee drinking for alcohol or exercise for sex.

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