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  • You pop your eyes in.

  • You reset your nervous system.

  • Would it be correct in saying that

  • this is the most expensive rehab in the world?

  • I would say that's probably the truth, yeah.

  • You're coming here as an addict, extremely vulnerable.

  • Helps with the circulation.

  • This creates more energy.

  • It's the diagnostic and the treatment.

  • Bioresonance tests, which have no scientific backing.

  • I just don't know how you could do it.

  • How are you feeling?

  • I actually felt that the money was killing me.

  • It was very lonely.

  • If you carry on,

  • you will develop a habit.

  • Do you know what you're feeling now?

  • [High Society]

  • [The World's Most Expensive Rehab]

  • Paracelsus is the world's most expensive rehab,

  • and it costs, I think, 300 grand.

  • No, not 300 grand.

  • God, how much was it?

  • Three hundred grand a month.

  • It costs 300 grand a month.

  • There is a luxury apartment,

  • 24-hour live-in therapists, psychiatric assessment,

  • addiction assessment, brain analysis.

  • All these people around this table will be discussing me.

  • I don't know if they're gonna find that

  • that I'm basically a broken human being.

  • Growing up in central London,

  • a lot of people who work in the media,

  • it's become quite normalised,

  • the drinking and the casual drug taking.

  • Paracelsus is completely different to what I've seen previously.

  • I've tried cognitive behavioral therapy, I did AA for a while,

  • where it's all about group therapy.

  • This is like a one-on-one therapy session.

  • I'm very keen to get there.

  • -Sydney, so nice to meet you. -Welcome to Zurich.

  • Nice to meet you.

  • Welcome.

  • Thank you. Thanks so much for having me.

  • Now that I'm on my way to spend a free weekend

  • at the world's most expensive rehab,

  • I'm really interested to see whether money can solve all problems.

  • -Oh, this is great. I love it. -Do you like it?

  • I love it.

  • Do you play piano?

  • No, I can't.

  • This is the therapy room.

  • How are you, you OK?

  • Yeah, I'm good. How you doing?

  • It's all a bit crazy when you arrive.

  • Yeah, it is.

  • Yeah, a bit kind of nerve-racking.

  • Oh, it's beautiful.

  • How do you feel now?

  • I feel fine. It's obviously a strange setup.

  • Yeah.

  • -Alright. -Bye.

  • He lives in this penthouse apartment and he doesn't leave.

  • How are you feeling now?

  • Bit hungry.

  • Let's see if Magda prepared a nice juice.

  • -Please. -Thank you so much.

  • It was really weird walking into a room

  • and having a team of people waiting on me.

  • I kind of just wanted to run and hide.

  • We do, in a way, create a kind of symbolic family.

  • So Magda's like Mummy

  • and I can be a bit like Daddy.

  • Magda can cook.

  • Eating with a stranger is awkward enough

  • without them also being paid to analyze you.

  • I've got a charity for saving drowning fish.

  • Huh?

  • After some strange small talk,

  • I was straight into my first therapy session.

  • Start from the beginning.

  • My parents separated when I was about seven years old.

  • I lived with my mum and then I just remember

  • being very worried at school.

  • Started drinking when I was 13.

  • -So you began drinking alcohol at 13? -Yeah.

  • I was terrified of drugs for ages,

  • and then I just went a bit madder.

  • And then I wasn't scared of pills, suddenly.

  • And then I was like, taking it...

  • I wasn't really scared of many drugs.

  • From 17 to 21, I was just constantly pissed, or like...

  • on a comedown... I was just delusional.

  • What?

  • I'm just wondering about

  • your relationship with your dad, that's all.

  • I've come to terms with being accepting,

  • but obviously I haven't.

  • Have I?

  • You tell me.

  • I don't know.

  • So you were using coke up until last year?

  • I still do a bit of coke now and then.

  • Does it help you?

  • No, it makes me feel ****.

  • Why do you do it then?

  • Because if I'm pissed, I'll do a little line.

  • Do you want to stop?

  • Yeah. I find it really hard

  • because it's so normalized amongst everyone.

  • I just think you've got to maybe try to stay away from things that

  • currently don't really help you.

  • Next on my program is a session of

  • something called biochemical restoration,

  • which uses bioresonance technology.

  • Dr. Odell, Sydney.

  • This would be to test my intolerances

  • in order to temporarily change my diet.

  • -Woah, what have we got there? -So, this is really not so good.

  • This is the Buckwheat, you're allergic.

  • I was holding a rod,

  • my finger was tapped into something,

  • I was very bemused with what was going on at the time.

  • You are allergic against the herring.

  • You are allergic against salmon.

  • I just had salmon.

  • Duck feathers.

  • Similarly with the Metatron, they were scanning my body

  • and then they were finding the bits that weren't right within my body,

  • and then downloading some sort of treatment to my body via a computer.

  • If I see your lymph node has not enough energy,

  • I can give him energy.

  • What?

  • It's the diagnostic and the treatment.

  • So you just click a button?

  • Computer is creating, there is--

  • It's so bizarre.

  • There is something behind.

  • It's in, behind.

  • I had never experienced or heard of anything like these tests.

  • And this is hundred percent gold and it helps to quit the allergies.

  • Oh, wow.

  • I mean, I'd just been given a solid gold sticker

  • to heal my previously unknown herring and duck feather allergies.

  • I love herring.

  • When does it start kind of working?

  • Oh, it started immediately.

  • OK, thank you.

  • You're welcome.

  • So far, the main things that set Paracelsus apart from

  • other elite rehabs are the strange body assessments

  • and the 24/7 live-in therapist, Louis.

  • I wanted to find out more about

  • where these novel approaches came from,

  • so I met with the company's founder.

  • What do you get for that price tag that other places can't provide?

  • Many things.

  • So, what's the thinking behind the live-in therapist?

  • It's basically something we invented.

  • If we have one client at a time, that person cannot stay alone.

  • How do your clients receive that?

  • Initially, it can be annoying,

  • but I think all of them very quickly come to really appreciate the role

  • and the person of the live-in therapist.

  • Stuff like bioresonance, how does it work?

  • To be honest, I was quite skeptical initially

  • when when we started working with it

  • because to understand the mechanisms is immensely complex,

  • and it's not something that you can tie directly back to what's taught

  • in medical school today.

  • We never rely fully on it.

  • We always double check with the labs.

  • But the bioresonance, we can really start immediately

  • with the right treatment applications.

  • I'm just gonna google a few things around bioresonance tests.

  • Small dessert.

  • Oh, thank you so much.

  • So enjoy.

  • -Thank you. Thank you. -You have a rest.

  • Bioresonance, electrodermal testing,

  • there is little or no scientific rationale for these methods.

  • I just feel that when you're in a desperate position

  • as an addict coming here, you will take these bioresonance tests...

  • and not question them.

  • When maybe you should.

  • Hello?

  • Oh, Magda.

  • Dinner is served.

  • Dinner is served, please.

  • That's your room, this is my room.

  • If at any time during the night you need to talk,

  • just come and get me.

  • It's 6:30 am, and I'm being taken to the Dolder Grand,

  • which is the off-site spa for the Paracelsus.

  • It's probably the most luxury spa I've ever been to.

  • It would definitely work for the 300-grand-a-monthers.

  • I mean, you've got everything here.

  • Definitely keeps up a certain standard of living

  • which I'm sure everyone's used to.

  • I'm not used to hot stone baths.

  • And now, try to relax.

  • OK, I don't know if I can relax.

  • **** hell!

  • I can't do it.

  • ****! ****!

  • ****. OK, can I come out?

  • Oh, ****.

  • Oh, I've got frostbite.

  • This does feel like the antidote to unhealthy sesh living,

  • but also what you might use to refresh

  • and get right back on it the next day.

  • I'm hoping Louis's not going to take me aside at breakfast,

  • it's getting quite intense having him...

  • Any five minutes spare you have in between testing,

  • Louis's there...

  • wanting to have a chat about how you feel.

  • And, quite frankly, now I just don't feel up for chatting.

  • How are you?

  • I feel fine.

  • So how are you really?

  • What do you want me to say for how I am?

  • I mean, I'm fine.

  • There's not much more I can...

  • Just in time for the next meal,

  • a dietitian arrives to tell Magda the 1,000 things

  • I now supposedly can't eat.

  • Fish, I know is struck off quite a lot,

  • but there are still a few things left here which would be ideal for you.

  • I don't know if you're big on shellfish.

  • No, not really.

  • In addition, so food-wise, lots of fruits were taken off.

  • A lot of nuts were taken away.

  • Ultimately, variety is key.

  • How does the way you manage your diet

  • help overcoming substance abuse problems?

  • It wouldn't help you overcome a substance abuse,

  • but it would help with the person's mood.

  • Thank you so much.

  • Even though Magda's food is pretty good,

  • my mood is just not improving.

  • -No using the phone. -Pardon?

  • No using the phone.

  • It felt more intense today.

  • Yeah, I did nearly tell Louis to **** off.

  • I love Louis, but I just don't know how you could do it

  • every day.

  • I just feel a bit claustrophobic

  • and completely surrounded by people I don't really know.

  • You know, you can't go out for walks.

  • I don't like it.

  • Hello?

  • This is intermittent hypoxic therapy.

  • We do cycles of low oxygen, this creates more energy.

  • It's just a lot of really good effects.

  • Would it have any effect on cravings?

  • Some people do experience less of an appetite.

  • But what about cravings for alcohol?

  • Cravings for alcohol? I have not heard that.

  • I'm beginning to feel skeptical about how any of these treatments

  • and lifestyle changes are really going to help overcome

  • any real issues.

  • Does it help addicts?

  • I wouldn't do cupping for addiction treatments,

  • then I would do acupuncture.

  • I've got something shooting in my back.

  • I didn't know if I was being a massive cynic

  • or whether all of this was actually a bit daft.

  • You pop your eyes in.

  • Yes.

  • Oh, yes.

  • Now what?

  • You reset your nervous system.

  • Resetting your nervous system,

  • I've never heard that one before.

  • I've hurt my eyes.

  • But maybe when you're paying this absurd price,

  • you need a parade of novelties to either keep you occupied

  • or feel as though you're getting your money's worth.

  • Kidneys are fine.

  • -Liver is fine. -Great.

  • In order to show me

  • just how effective their treatment actually is,

  • Paracelsus have organised for me to meet a former client.

  • Paracelsus, it was for me

  • the most important decision

  • I have made in my life.

  • What were your issues?

  • I had mainly alcohol and cocaine.

  • Most of the people I know who have those types of issues,

  • they don't want to be in any group sessions.

  • They're concerned about reputation.

  • No one in my life or in my circle

  • even noticed that I was in treatment.

  • How much were you spending on your drug habit and drink habit?

  • There was no problem to spend £50,000 in a night, or more.

  • People who live this type of lifestyle,

  • they also spend a lot of money on inviting other people.

  • I was really able to party for three days

  • and go to work like nothing happened.

  • Can you describe what your life was like

  • when you were at your lowest point during addiction?

  • The last time I chartered a yacht from Cannes to Sardinia,

  • I remember that at some point

  • I was throwing up overboard

  • and people they were lying there and they were all messed up,

  • and I didn't even remember where they came from.

  • It was very lonely.

  • My life was going too fast

  • to nowhere.

  • I looked at the Mediterranean Sea

  • and there was a beautiful sunrise.

  • And I felt like, “You gotta change something.”

  • And is that when you came to Paracelsus?

  • Day after that, yes.

  • So I stayed, I think, for two months.

  • And then I came back and used Paracelsus as my support system.

  • And how much did you spend in total?

  • It was like $800,000 to $1 million, yeah.

  • Can you give us a rough idea of how wealthy you are?

  • Well, I don't know, but I would say

  • it would be enough to stay for the rest of my life with Paracelsus.

  • It's easy to see how Paracelsus could become a temporary escape

  • for people whose lives of debauchery have no budgetary limits.

  • People of that power, money can keep them going for a long time.

  • So the rock bottom is when they end up in the emergency room

  • or sometimes in the morgue.

  • It's hard for the average population to really have empathy

  • for somebody who has it all, who can afford everything

  • to actually be allowed to suffer and have problems.

  • At some point, that kind of lifestyle becomes a bit dull.

  • Boredom is a big factor when you have a lot of wealth

  • and really no purpose.

  • You need a reason to get out of bed in the morning.

  • And that's not just to go to the next party,

  • that purpose doesn't last very long.

  • That really isolates.

  • And in the end, it's that loneliness

  • and the pain that comes from that loneliness

  • and often also associated boredom

  • that leads to this pain and inner void

  • and then people start to self-medicate.

  • You were seven years old and you probably were fully aware

  • of the tension between your mum and dad.

  • And then the anxiety kicks in.

  • Just letting it all go on drugs and crazy and...

  • and that just made it worse.

  • It never went away.

  • Do you know what you're feeling now?

  • -It's quite intense, isn't it? -Of course.

  • Yeah, it's been a really--

  • I think we were talking about your dad.

  • I think that's what's gone on.

  • Do you want us to leave?

  • Yeah, alright then.

  • If you carry on with that acceptance of

  • It's London and it's part of the scene,

  • and I'm just going to do it,”

  • that process of engaging may increase

  • and then you will develop a habit.

  • You know, the idea of abstinence is that

  • when you're trying to rewrite neural pathways, is the way to go.

  • You're giving yourself every opportunity

  • to create new experience.

  • And it's the new experience which challenges the neuroplasticity,

  • which then creates the change in the brain.

  • The sheer quantity of treatments on offer at Paracelsus

  • can often feel like a way to justify the price tag.

  • But the main focus is therapy.

  • And if it eventually forced me to engage with my issues,

  • it can do the same for the one percent.

  • As much as we love to pile in on rich people,

  • I guess wealth can sometimes be a gilded cage that leads to isolation.

  • But for those of us who can't hire a team of people

  • to make us feel better whenever we want,

  • a church hall and a few chairs are just as good.

  • And there's probably a reason it's unusual for therapists

  • to sit with you for all your meals

  • and refer to themselves as your symbolic dad.

  • I'm excited to get back. I'm excited to have a glass of wine.

  • I probably shouldn't say that.

You pop your eyes in.

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世界上最昂貴的康復中心|上流社會------。 (The Most Expensive Rehab in the World | High Society)

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    andli 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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