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The Science Behind the Serenity Prayer

Posted: 02/ 8/2012 8:35 am

"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference."

These are the first lines of what's known as the Serenity Prayer, which is well-known to many recovering alcoholics. It's often recited in the rooms of AA as a reminder of the core principle of successful sobriety: Acceptance of the reality that for addicts, nothing but absolute, lifelong abstinence will lead to healthy and lasting recovery.

As simple as that message is, it's very difficult for many alcoholics to embrace, at least at first. Most resist the finality of an absolute prohibition, hoping and looking instead for half measures and temporary fixes to the problem -- or putting off abstinence for another day. These lukewarm efforts often end in relapse.

So what's actually going on in the mind of an alcoholic as he or she goes through the process of recovery? What are the cognitive mechanics underlying the initial, angry rebelliousness and, later, the genuine commitment to a sober life?

Duke University psychological scientist Aaron Kay has some ideas that may clarify this mysterious transformation. The human mind, he and his colleagues say, sees all restrictions, prohibitions and bans as fundamental limits on personal freedom. Personal freedom is so highly valued and so important to our sense of identity that we will go to great lengths to protect it. On the most basic level, when the mind processes "no drinking ever again," this prohibition is perceived as nothing less than a totalitarian clamp-down on personal liberty and processed in the same way as any such edict. It's the cognitive equivalent of "no travel allowed" or "all political speech prohibited."

We have two ways of dealing with such unwanted restrictions on liberty. The first is what scientists call "reactance," which really just means shouting "no!" People get annoyed, indignant, outraged, defiant; they bridle at the new restriction and inflate the value of what's being taken away -- in the case of an alcoholic, the freedom to drink without censure. Or -- quite differently -- people sometimes rationalize the new prohibition. They go through whatever cognitive gymnastics are needed to make this unwelcome restriction okay, to cast a positive light on the prospect of never drinking again.

These two processes are incompatible, so why does one win out over the other? Why do we jealously guard our liberty some times and other times go through mental contortions to rationalize bans. Kay and his colleagues believe it is a single factor -- the absoluteness -- that shapes our thinking. When prohibitions are the least bit tentative or vague, if they allow any loopholes, then we plot to get around them and preserve what's ours. But when restrictions have no shades of gray and no prospect of bending, we search out ways to make them palatable. The scientists tested this theory in a couple simple experiments.

In the first one, volunteers read about how a hypothetical new city speed limit would improve public safety. Then some of these volunteers read that lawmakers had already acted to lower the speed limit; according to this news story, the law would go into effect on a prescribed date. Others read that it was likely the new law would go into effect, but that it had not been enacted yet. In other words, some were presented with a fait accompli, while others were left thinking about a likely -- but not signed and sealed -- restriction on their driving rights.

Afterward, all of the volunteers -- including a control group -- rated their level of annoyance regarding the lower speed limit. They also reported how often they drove in the city, assuming that regular drivers would be more annoyed than infrequent drivers, who might see the restriction as irrelevant.

The results, reported online in the journal Psychological Science, supported the scientists' theory. Those presented with an absolute, written-in-concrete restriction were much more likely to rationalize the change. They had more positive attitudes toward the new speed limit than did controls. By contrast, those who read about a likely new limitation expressed much more annoyance; it was not yet a certainty, so they wanted nothing of it. As expected, the frequent drivers were more likely to rationalize the infringement on their liberties; they were more motivated to make the infringement acceptable.

The second experiment was similar, but with some important differences. In this case, the volunteers read about the dangers of using a cell phone while driving -- and a government plan to ban the practice. But the scientists introduced a new twist as well: Some read that it was a done deal, others that there was a small chance it would not be passed, and still others that there was reasonable chance it would be voted down. In other words, they introduced two different degrees of uncertainty.

Again, the volunteers rated how bothersome the new restriction would be, and they also rated how important this particular liberty -- driving while talking on a cell -- was to them. And again, volunteers facing the absolute certainty of a new ban were more likely to rationalize: They played down the importance of this right. Those who faced the likelihood of a new restriction had a harsher reaction. They claimed that this restricted right was very important to them, and this was the case even if there was only a miniscule chance of the new ban not being approved. These findings boil down to this: We are very reluctant to give up any bit of personal liberty, and will clutch any shred of it before we do.

Kay and his colleagues concede that life is more nuanced than these studies suggest. Some restrictions on liberty, even when they are absolute, may be too sudden or too abhorrent to be rationalized easily. That may be the case with the alcoholic, who certainly faces a horrifying prospect. The alcoholic must also dictate his or her own prohibition and with time come to the realization -- or rationalization -- that freedom isn't always liberating, and restriction isn't always oppressive.

 
 
 

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"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference." These are the first lines of what's known as the Sere...
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference." These are the first lines of what's known as the Sere...
 
 
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10:49 AM on 02/13/2012
Thanks for your perspective. I'm keenly interested in what happens in the mind of a recovering addict, and the studies you referenced are intriguing, but I respectfully disagree with the notion that the serenity prayer serves as a fait accompli for alcoholics.

If you argued that antabuse (or other parts of AA literature) helped alcoholics resign themselves to restriction, I could see the correlation. The serenity prayer, however, is not about acceptance of "lifelong, absolute abstinence;" its about daily acceptance of realities that might drive a person to drink.

Acceptance of what can't be changed--as opposed to numbing the discomfort with alcohol--requires serenity. Recovering alcoholics in AA are appealing to a higher power to be endowed with that serenity; for most, it's not an expression or understanding of a certain fate.

Does it work, over time, on the subconscious attitude toward lifelong abstinence? Possibly for some, but I would argue that persons using a day-at-a-time approach to sobriety are much more comparable to persons in the study's control group. It's not a done deal. Drinking is still an option (i.e., maybe the speed limit proposal will be dropped).

You reference the mind's reaction to "no drinking ever again," but such a mandate (even self-imposed) would be of little help to most recovering alcoholics unless access to alcohol were completely removed. It is not signed and sealed and remains a day-by-day or hour-by-hour choice--again, no fait accompli.
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
09:55 PM on 02/12/2012
What is this religious woowoo doing in the science section?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:49 PM on 02/13/2012
As a source of banner-ad revenue for gullible-popular products, and possibly pay to play?
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
06:56 PM on 02/13/2012
Yeah, given I block all the ads I don't think about things like that.
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03:10 PM on 02/12/2012
Perhaps next they can study how effect burnt offerings are?
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07:29 PM on 02/12/2012
That should be "effective"
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01:23 AM on 02/12/2012
There needs to be more science behind the actual longevity of the " prayer" , does it mold your brain , or your chemistry , over a longer period of time ? I always saw the meetings as some sort of egocentric pitty potty , always reinforcing the " alcoholic " as a life long condition , never overcoming the "condition' . No cure , just a stop gap , limbo land , boo hoo !!!
05:18 PM on 02/09/2012
It's really just one day at a time...
04:23 PM on 02/09/2012
I don't think one can accurately compare alcoholism to restriction of liberty. Alcoholics have lost the choice in drink. Most who recover reach a "jumping off" point, can't live with it, can't live without it. Until an alcoholic admits they are powerless over alcohol, little or nothing can be done to recover from the seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. Alcoholism exists in about 10% of the population. The 90% that isn't, doesn't experience the phenomenon of craving that the alcoholic feels, which is stronger than any will to not drink. The idea that an alcoholic can quit when they want to is an old idea that still persists. If conventional thinking is applied as the article suggests,

"The human mind, he and his colleagues say, sees all restrictions, prohibitions and bans as fundamental limits on personal freedom. Personal freedom is so highly valued and so important to our sense of identity that we will go to great lengths to protect it. On the most basic level, when the mind processes "no drinking ever again," this prohibition is perceived as nothing less than a totalitarian clamp-down on personal liberty and processed in the same way as any such edict. "

it puts alcoholic drinking on a level that is irrelevant to the disease. Alcoholics have 2 choices, live a spiritual life or die an alcoholic death. Many have found recovery by not drinking one day at a time, sometimes 1 hour at a time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roy m
"Fighting for a fair and, balanced America"
07:22 AM on 02/10/2012
"Alcoholic death"that is a fallacy. Alcoholics have been found to have a genetic marker that makes them more substitutable to been one.Alcoholics need to learn cooping skills, find out why they do what they do and learn to avoid that situation. Stress is a big factor for me,stress on the job and stress about money, keep that in check then I'm not looking for a drink. Also people get into bad habits stop drinking for a while and see that you really don't need a drink as bad as you thought.Then it's easier to so no. Drinking doesn't fix the hurt it's only a band aid so you need to fix that hurt ,you need to learn cooping. Something that twelve step program doesn't teach you.Xannex seems to help take the edge off so you don't need a drink.So I figured out that my drinking is due to anxiety something I got fro being a kid with ADHD getting yelled at too often made me worry to much.People like that like to make people laugh so they feel better and aren't as stressed.That's why you hear about those sad comedian stories,they self medicated and end up dying.Why do you drink? How can I coop with that problem?Do I have an addictive personality do I drink coffee cup after cup do I smoke cig after cig all signs of an addictive personality. smoking is crunch for anxiety. People must learn cooping skills.
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R2D2-51
Flower Power Forever
05:33 PM on 02/08/2012
I would like to know however the biological component of "Control" that finds it's way into our hormones.
Or is it a learned human characteristic developed through social means.
11:17 AM on 02/08/2012
Many think of the serenity prayer as a 're-set' button to use throughout the day, a way of reigning back in those reactive feelings which surface immediately when we don't like something. Heard this in a meeting just yesterday: "There is no knot that patient hands cannont untie."