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Congressman Says Job Insulated Him from Dealing with Addiction
July 7, 2009

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News Summary

U.S. Rep. John Sullivan (R-Okla.), who returned to Washington this week after a stint in the Betty Ford Center, said his drinking never affected his job performance and that being a functioning alcoholic made it harder for him to seek help, the Associated Press reported July 6.

"I've done my job very well, and that's one of the ways I fooled myself into thinking I didn't have a problem," Sullivan, 44, said. "I never was drunk on the House floor and I never was drunk at work. But I needed to get help to stop. I tried quitting on my own ... but I failed every time."

Sullivan spent a month at the California treatment center to confront a drinking problem he said was getting worse and affecting his home life. "The last couple of months, I was drinking more, mainly at home on weekends in front of my kids and my wife," he said. "There wasn't anything like a DWI or something crazy that happened. It was just a personal choice -- I wanted to eliminate alcohol in my life."

Sullivan called treatment "a wonderful experience."

"Even though it was embarrassing having it out there publicly, I don't have to keep it a secret anymore," he said of his drinking problem.

Donna Woods Bauer, director of the Oklahoma Citizen Advocates for Recovery and Treatment Association, said Sullivan's story could encourage others to seek help. "This isn't a case of a bad person getting good. It's about a sick person getting well," she said. "It's about recovery as a reality in Oklahoma. He's saying: 'I needed help. I got it. And recovery does happen.'"

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by steven on 08 Jul 09 09:18 AM EDT
Good for Rep Sullivan. I wish him well in recovery. I hope they have AA meetings at the Congress Building. I can't think of anywhere meetings are needed more!

Posted by John on 08 Jul 09 01:56 PM EDT
I am disappointed in the congressman. He is still deluded if he thinks drinking didn't effect his job performance. He sneaks off to California for 30 days without a word to his employers, uses cadillac type insurance to go to a high dollar treatment center and comes back to say it didn't effect him at work, just at home. There are many fine treatment centers in Tulsa and the surrounding area, are they not good enough for him? It's where his constituents go for treatment.

Posted by maxwood on 08 Jul 09 06:19 PM EDT
As John suggests, not everyone can afford the treatment Rep. Sullivan got. Will Rep. Sullivan support taxpayer-funded comparable treatment for someone on skid row?

Posted by Jose on 08 Jul 09 10:39 PM EDT
No matter what a person does or does not do, there will always be Nay Sayers and people like taking someone else's inventory. The truth is that Rep Sullivan is young in recovery and is where he needs to be right now. If he works his program, it will work for him. He is on the right path, let him work his program and support network. People in recovery know that he has more to do. Be happy for him and do not expect him to have it all together after just thirty days in treatment. As for his high cost treatment, there has never been any proof that the cost of treatment nor the degrees of the therapist increase the success rate of any treatment program. So if the skid row person wants help he will not be able to afford Betty Ford but he can get quality care in a caring program sponsored by a non-profit or go to AA or NA. In the United States no one who wants help has to die and alcoholic or drug addict. There is help out there.

Posted by Good for Rep. Sullivan on 08 Jul 09 11:04 PM EDT
To admit to a to having a problem well before something truly horrible happens is commendable, and to do it in the public eye is even more so. Do not beat down someone who has the courage to seek changing lifelong behaviors - even at a pricey rehab. Just because he is fortunate to be able to have great healthcare, do not begrudge the man. Jose said it nailed it when he said there is help out there for everyone - they just have to want it. I wish the congressman well.

Posted by Keith (UK) on 12 Jul 09 05:07 AM EDT
I admire the congressman. He has admitted he has a problem, used his Cadillac Medical Insurance and is now bewtter equipped to deal with these issues in Congress. Sarah Benton's book highlights the problem that high0functioning addicts have in addressing their problems but perhaps all addicts can find a reason for not facing reality. I also agree entirely with Jose who rightly points out that there is help out there for everyone and the cost is yet aother excuse others put up for not seeking the only really successful treatment. In the UK we achieve around 60% success first time in rehab and my clients achieve around 85% by treatment matching them to an appropriate clinic. You don't have to pay high fees to get good 'recovery'; our most successful clinic costs under $600 per week.

Posted by Bamaman on 13 Jul 09 01:23 PM EDT
Rep. Sullivan just needs to get honest about the effect his disease has had on his work performance. I understand he has to disclaim malfeasance to the people of his District he represents, but there is no way an active alcoholic performs at his best while using. Hopefully, he will level with his family and recovering friends, and acknowledge reality.

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