In this compassionately original book, In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts,
physician Gabor Maté gives
us a surprisingly broad look at the
epidemic of addictions in our society, and tells us why we are so prone to them
and what is needed to liberate ourselves from their hold on our emotions and
our lives.
For over seven years Gabor Maté has been the staff
physician at the Portland Hotel, a residence and harm reduction facility in
Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. His patients are challenged by
life-threatening drug addictions, mental illness, Hepatitis C or HIV and, in
many cases, all four. But if his patients are at the far end of the spectrum,
there are many others among us who are also struggling with addictions. Drugs,
alcohol, tobacco, work, food, sex, gambling and excessive inappropriate
spending: what is amiss with our lives that we seek such self-destructive ways
to comfort ourselves? And why is it so
difficult to stop these habits, even as they threaten our health, jeopardize
our relationships and corrode our lives?
Beginning with a dramatically close view of his drug-addicted
patients, Dr. Maté looks at his own history of compulsive
behaviour. He weaves stories of real people who have
struggled with addiction with the latest research on addiction and the brain.
Providing a bold synthesis of clinical
experience, insight and cutting-edge scientific findings, Maté sheds light on this most puzzling of human frailties.
He proposes a compassionate approach to helping drug addicts and, for the many behaviour addicts among us, to addressing the void addiction
is meant to fill.
I believe there is one addiction
process, whether it manifests in the lethal substance dependencies of my
Downtown Eastside patients, the frantic self-soothing of overeaters or shopaholics, the obsessions of gamblers, sexaholics and compulsive internet users, or in the
socially acceptable and even admired behaviours of
the workaholic. Drug addicts are often dismissed and discounted as unworthy of
empathy and respect. In telling their stories
my intent is to help their voices to be heard and to shed light on the origins
and nature of their ill-fated struggle to overcome suffering through substance
use. Both in their flaws and their virtues they share much in common with the
society that ostracizes them. If they have chosen a path to nowhere, they
still have much to teach the rest of us. In the dark mirror of their lives we
can trace outlines of our own.
Also by Gabor Maté
is When
the Body Says No.