You are correct on some points but also express some common misperceptions about RR. There is no such thing as 'early recovery' in RR. Everyone in RR is issued a zero tolerance policy, and it is understood by all members that they have already used up all of their relapses, once you start RR you don't get any coins that you can cash in for a relapse. Not happening. If you have even a sip of alcohol you are banned forever from RR.
It doesn't matter how much you drank or used prior to taking the course just so long as you are not under the influence when you begin the course.
The founder was in fact a former drunk and has not had a drink in 20+ years. He is an honest and respectable person.
Oh, I don't doubt any of that, RR. And thanks for the clarifications.
My basic position is, if a program keeps you sober, then it's the best program in the world for you. I just have doubts whether some of the drunks / addicts I've known would be able to follow the RR program, period, early on.
When I say "early on," I mean as in the first hours / days of sobriety. If you can't get past the first hours, then the rest never happens.
As you mentioned, the RR program requires you to be sober (or at least not under the influence -- whether that's the same as "sober" is questionable) when you start the program. Getting to that point can be harder for some drunks / addicts than for others.
There also are people who suffer from varying degrees of cognitive impairment as a result of their drinking and/or prolonged lack of proper nutrition. Most of these folks can recover to a remarkable degree with sustained abstinence and proper nutrition and medical care, but I think they'd have a hard time following the RR program at first. It simply requires more clarity of thought than some drunks are capable of at that point.
In the worst cases, alcoholics can develop a form of encephalopathy known as Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome, from which anything resembling full recovery is unlikely. Too much damage has been done by that point.
Still, even though they may never recover all of their faculties, these folks may be able to get and stay sober using A.A.'s simple program and the group support available to them in that program. But I have serious doubts whether most of them would have the presence of mind to benefit from RR in their first few hours or days off the bottle.
In the interests of disclosure, my opinions are based solely on my own experiences working with alcoholics and addicts (among others) in New York City, as a volunteer sponsored by a religious organization, for about 10 years. I wasn't specifically assigned to work with chemically-dependent people, but most of the people I worked with were (or had once been) chemically-dependent.
I also should mention for the sake of disclosure that I did have CASAC certification at one time, and the CASAC training does
heavily emphasize the 12 steps over other recovery programs. So that may be coloring my opinions a bit.
Also, the people I worked with who had alcohol and/or drug problems tended to be pretty far along down those respective roads. The farther along an addict gets, the more damage is done, and the more difficult it gets for them to follow
any sort of program that requires actual thought.
But again, in my opinion, the best recovery program in the world is the one that works for you.
-Rich