Richard had an unusually hard time maintaining a job. To be sure, due to his indolence and lack of motivation, he was out of work far more regularly than he was in a state of employment. And when he did get a job, he had an exceptionally hard time getting to work on time, he commonly got less than optimal performance appraisals, and he called off sick so often that he commonly got fired three or four weeks after he started working.
Not unexpectedly, one of the results of Richard's disgraceful work history was the fact that he was virtually broke much of the time. Despite Richard's disgraceful work track record and financial disregard, then again, by some means he made it his business to drink in an irresponsible manner from day-to-day.
So it came as no big surprise when Richard got arrested for a fourth DWI. When he went before the court, the judge explained to Richard that his alcohol-related actions was unacceptable and, as a consequence, he was going to sentence Richard to serve eight months in the county jail.
During his time behind bars, Richard was expected to learn more about alcoholism facts such as alcohol related consequence and alcohol deaths, about the hurtful outcomes of excessive and hazardous drinking, and he was required to get alcohol rehab. The judge emphasized the fact that unless Richard gets quality alcohol therapy and learns how to live a life of sobriety, he will most likely be spending a considerable amount of time placed behind bars.
Richard said that he comprehended what the magistrate was asserting but he still asserted that placement in the municipal jail was not the best response. The magistrate saw things from an entirely different vantage point and claimed that it was his obligation to keep alcoholics off the streets who drive under the influence and who get arrested for one or more DWIs. To back this up, the judge outlined some honored, thoroughly evaluated alcohol abuse and alcohol dependency statistics that underscored some of the negative effects that are correlated with excessive drinking such as
alcohol related deaths.
Even though Richard comprehended that he drank excessively, he never thought that he was a person who was dependent on alcohol. So it was quite a shock when Richard began having chronic alcoholism symptoms and alcohol withdrawal symptoms around eight hours after getting locked up in the county jail.
To manage his alcohol withdrawals in a safe manner, Richard was life flighted to a drug and alcohol rehabilitation hospital for alcohol detox and then brought back to jail. While locked up in the county jail Richard got alcohol rehabilitation but because he received this rehab as something that was mandated for him, he neglected to take ownership of his hazardous drinking.
When his time in jail was finished, the magistrate without indecision told Richard that he would be under strict observation and would be required to take periodic random breathalyzer alcohol tests. After hearing how Richard did not take ownership of his drinking situation and how he reluctantly followed the therapy modus operandi while in jail, the magistrate knew that it was essentially a matter of time before he would be seeing Richard once again in court about his hazardous and abusive drinking behavior.
As the judge thought about Richard's circumstance, he couldn't help but think about how some people never "get it" and discover how to live in a mature and effective manner.