There is nothing to think about once you become a gambling addict, your sense of thinking will be shut down, and the only thing left in your brain is when you will make it with gambling, you will keep dreaming about how you will buy a mansion and Lamborghini.
If you put in the strength to change a gambler, you could get somewhere for a few days and weeks, and once you leave them alone, they will start dreaming of the possibility that they could win a shot, a single shot will turn into 100s of a failed attempt and money would have been spent too many times already.
For the same reason, when a person feels like this, they must undergo psychological treatment quickly because otherwise they will continue to endanger their lives, a person who is addicted and has a lot of money, because it is not that much that affects them. he spends and spends his money and that is like nothing, but for a person who is not a millionaire and who plays and loses a lot, there will come a time when he has no more money to play with and that is when he begins to look for money from where O In order to continue playing, he lends, steals, spends what belongs to his family, and may fall into depression, that is what must be avoided.
As I have said before, things when it comes to money and addiction can change a lot, because at one point an addicted person is capable of looking for money from the most difficult corners, whether it is looking for bank loans, loans with relatives, money loans with friends, and the worst thing is that instead of winning in the casino, the opposite happens and despair is greater, these things are like that, it is what should be avoided.
It's true; people battling addiction often find themselves in financial quicksand. The situation intensifies for those who don't have the 'moneybags' privilege. There's an urgent need to address this - fast.
Now, let's tackle the thorny issue of 'financial disparity'. For the wealthy addicts, the loss is negligible (talk about a convenient safety net!). But, for the not-so-lucky, it's like hitting a double-whammy. Losing money is bad enough; getting into debt compounds the problem, turning life into a grim version of 'Deal or No Deal'.
The spiral of despair, as you mentioned, is a perilous pitfall. It's like a constant losing streak in the most ruthless casino—life. And the drive to keep finding money from 'difficult corners', ah, that's the dicey part. I agree, it's an 'avoid at all costs' scenario.