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Drug Cravings: Explained. A Step By Step Guide To Overcoming Desire.
One of the worst enemies of sobriety are the cravings. Why is the thought of getting high such a powerful motivator for relapse? And what can you do to control it? Read below and PLEASE SHARE so it reaches more people in need!
1. The basics â few things we need to understand about the brain first.
The human body has a unique way of desiring things. To do so, a bunch of brain cells (neurons) have organized themselves in a particular way inside your skull forming a structure called the reward pathway or mesolimbic pathway. These neurons are part of the limbic system of the brain (this will become important later).
To simplify things, the reward pathway is activated when dopamine is released. Dopamine is a chemical, a molecule, (neurotransmitter) which is produced and released by the brain when we do something good for our survival - eating, working out, having sex. These are called rewarding stimuli. Each neuron has neurotransmitter receptors. They are tiny little membranes which can release specific electrical signals when touched by a given neurotransmitter. If that neurotransmitter is dopamine, it activates the dopamine receptor on a neuron and we experience pleasure and motivation to repeat the dopamine-releasing activity. Nature literally gives us a small chemical treat for being such a good boy, yes, you are, yes, you are!
2. The reward expectation signal â itâs the thought that counts!
Now, if we repeat a certain âfeel goodâ activity often enough, something magical happens. We learn that feel good activities have cues or triggers. A cue or trigger is an outside stimulus which occurs before a reward is distributed. It could literally be anything - from waling by a familiar bar spot to seeing itâs a certain time. Think of it as a physical reminder of incoming reward. Like, have you noticed that good feeling when youâre dreaming about a warm, tasty dinner on your way back from work or about your loverâs strong and capable hands? This is called a reward expectation signal.
Repeat any pleasant activity enough times and your brain learns it is good because it releases dopamine. Part of the pleasant experience of getting wasted is the increase of dopamine caused by the drugs. After years of blowing clouds for example weâve trained our brain (thus ourselves) that meth is very nice and worth doing a lot. In order to motivate us to do that pleasurable activity, when we face a cue/trigger (place/people/paraphernalia etc. associated with meth usage), our brain releases a small âtasteâ of whatâs expected to happen by giving us a boost of feel good neurotransmitters - this is the true face of desire. Like Pavlovâs dog salivated when he heard the bell but before seeing the food.
Thus, a strong associative memory is being formed and the connection between âmethâ and âis goodâ gets stronger with every reinforcement (use) and the cues/triggers multiply. Exactly here lies the problem.
3. Reward prediction error â believing false promises, again and again, and again.
Usually our brain is right in its predictions â the pleasure from eating is the same every time. But with drugs those expectations donât match reality. Itâs called reward prediction error.
A reward prediction error can be negative or positive. If you get more pleasure than expected, itâs called a positive error. In the case of getting less than expected â a negative error occurs.
But why are drugs different from food? Because unlike food all psychoactive drugs physically change and rewire the reward pathways of the brain. On a molecular level, this results in a reduction in neuronâs sensitivity to dopamine (dopamine downregulation). Less sensitivity means a less enjoyable high. Less enjoyable highs lead to an increase of doses. Increase of doses means even more dopamine sensitivity loss and less and less pleasure.
Itâs a vicious downward spiral of depression and abuse.
4. The habit â memories consume.
The anticipation mechanism explained so far is truly remarkable. Itâs final goal is to map out every outside stimulus and automate a response - to muscle memory your life in full! Itâs also useful because itâs our main motivational force. If youâve never been scuba diving for example, a promise of touring the most epic dive spots in the world wouldnât trigger as much desire and motivation as it would for a scuba diving junkie. Itâs also the reason no sober person can even remotely comprehend why people canât simply stop doing drugs even though they know the high would suck.
Letâs recap â if drugs become a problem (addiction) and people no longer get the same high (not receiving the same reward), then each time weâre faced with a drug cue/trigger, our minds recall and cling to a powerful memory driven fantasy about how good our favorite drug used to feel thus motivating us to use. Addiction is anticipating and chasing a feeling which is impossible to achieve.
This âanticipationâ is the reason why you emotionally desire things which you rationally know wonât bring the same reward. Drug addicts have a disrupted connection between the rational part (prefrontal cortex) and emotional part of their brains (the limbic system where the reward pathways of the brain are located, remember?). As a result of this disruption, drug addicts are physically unable to make reasonable choices when it comes to using [source] .Â
And thatâs why people relapse - put simply, relapse is due to a false judgement based on real past experiences. Itâs a classic âexpectations vs realityâ meme.
5. Breaking the habit â mindfulness.
So far it seems like this post is nothing but bad news. However, the structural changes of the brain which are caused by substance abuse and the anticipations of rewards are temporary. Just like memories, if these neurological pathways arenât used, they degrade and disappear. This is why itâs easier to say âNah, Iâm not usingâ on day 100 than on day 2. On day 2 the connections are too strong and resisting the urge takes more energy. Â
How do we get to day 100? I suggest mindfulness. Mindfulness is the psychological process of purposely bringing our attention to experiences occurring in the present moment without judgment, meaning, without emotional engagement. It is at the core of meditation and sports. The idea behind mindfulness is to gain back control of the rational brain by shutting down the emotional signals.
6. Step By Step Guide To Handling Cravings
For you, a person with solid understanding of the biochemical and neurological processes happening inside your own brain, being mindful when having cravings should be easy. Letâs say youâre experiencing them right now.
[DISCLAIMER: The following guide is intended for sober people who are having cravings. If youâre high right now and craving more, this technique could be beneficial for you, however, thereâs no guarantee it will work as the mechanism of those cravings is slightly different and substance-specific. Try it anyway.]
Step 1: Go to a private, preferably quiet place. Lay down or sit comfortably. Take a couple of slow, deep breaths in and slowly exhale. Do this with your own rhythm and pace. Focus on your breathing. Youâre goal is to be here now. Present tense. Not worrying about the future, not obsessing over the past. You want to be here and now, and youâre channeling your mental energy towards yourself in this present moment. When you inevitably catch yourself thinking of something else, acknowledge that thought without getting involved with it as you would acknowledge an ant on the pavement. Then gently bring your conscious attention back to your breath. The first couple of times youâll fail miserably at this. Everybody fails. The key is to keep on playing this game of cat and mouse - to catch yourself when youâre losing focus and to bring said focus back to your breath. Thatâs it. After doing this for 2-5 minutes, proceed to step 2.
Step 2: Acknowledge the drug related thoughts and desires youâre experiencing right now.
Step 3: Â Acknowledge those are cravings.
Step 4: Visualize the cravings as a group of neurons firing electrical and chemical messages inside your head right now. Realize youâre not motivated to do drugs. Instead, youâre simply remembering how awesome past drug uses were. Therefore, understand that your brain creates an expectation of how exactly as awesome you will feel if you use now â these are the reward expectation signals.
Step 5: Remember how this neurological system works. Realize in the case of drugs it will never be as good as it was - be mindful of the reward prediction error.
Step 6: Now, imagine all your craving thoughts as if belonging to someone else. Think of them as a second foreign voice inside your head. Observe that voice from a distance. Youâll feel emotionally attached to the voice and thatâs normal. However, try to distance yourself from any attachments by having a conversation with the voice. Disagree with everything it says. Counter each pro-argument with a counter-argument. For example, when you start visualizing epic drug highs, counter with the realization that those concepts are an unachievable utopia, a promise of a dreamworld with a colorful facade behind which is only regret. Realization of the consequences requires activation the prefrontal cortex and thatâs what weâre trying to do here - quite our emotions and give voice to our reason.
Step 7: Gradually realize the junkie voice in its frustration is recycling the same âin favorâ arguments youâve already put down. Slowly, distance yourself from that voice. Return your focus on your breath and observe how the cravings fade away into the distance. If you catch yourself thinking of using, acknowledge that thought without getting emotionally involved with it as you would acknowledge an ant on the pavement. Then gently bring your attention back to your breath.
Optional step 8: Explore your entire body now in a session of mindfulness meditation. Focus on your toes. Note how it feels to have toes and be mindful that those are your toes. Thatâs you. Now. Do this for every body part. If you get disturbed by side thoughts, acknowledge them and gently bring the focus back on your breath. After breathing a few times and clearing your head, return to the body part you were exploring before the thoughts.
Remember -Â involvement with our thoughts is what gives them power. Without our attention, they die. Our thoughts may seem in control but thatâs an illusion. Our thoughts are a product of our behavior, meaning, it is us who are controlling them.
Please SHARE this post so it reaches more people in need.
Suggestions for further reading:
1. Dissecting components of reward: âlikingâ, âwantingâ, and learning
2. Wanting and Liking: Observations from the Neuroscience and Psychology Laboratory