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A new way to look at addiction? (1 Viewer)

gianmarco

Footballguy
The likely cause of addiction has been discovered

It is now 100 years since drugs were first banned, and all through this long century of waging war on drugs, we have been told a story about addiction, by our teachers and by our governments. This story is so deeply ingrained in our minds that we take it for granted. It seems obvious. It seems manifestly true. Until I set off three and a half years ago on a 30,000-mile journey for my book Chasing The Scream: The First And Last Days of the War on Drugs to figure out what is really driving the drug war, I believed it too. But what I learned on the road is that almost everything we have been told about addiction is wrong. There is a very different story waiting for us, if only we are ready to hear it.

If we truly absorb this new story, we will have to change a lot more than the drug war. We will have to change ourselves.

I learned it from an extraordinary mixture of people I met on my travels: From the surviving friends of Billie Holiday, who helped me to learn how the founder of the war on drugs stalked and helped to kill her; from a Jewish doctor who was smuggled out of the Budapest ghetto as a baby, only to unlock the secrets of addiction as a grown man; from a transsexual crack dealer in Brooklyn who was conceived when his mother, a crack-addict, was raped by his father, an NYPD officer; from a man who was kept at the bottom of a well for two years by a torturing dictatorship, only to emerge to be elected president of Uruguay and begin the last days of the war on drugs.

I had a personal reason to search for these answers. One of my earliest memories as a kid is trying to wake up one of my relatives, and not being able to. Ever since then, I have been turning over the essential mystery of addiction in my mind. What causes some people to become fixated on a drug or a behavior until they can't stop? How do we help those people to come back to us? As I got older, another of my close relatives developed a cocaine addiction, and I fell into a relationship with a heroin addict. I guess addiction felt like home to me.

If you had asked me what causes drug addiction at the start, I would have said, "Drugs. Duh." It's not difficult to grasp. I thought I had seen it in my own life. We can all explain it. Imagine if you and I and the next 20 people to pass us on the street take a really potent drug for 20 days. There are strong chemical hooks in these drugs, so if we stopped on day 21, our bodies would need the chemical. We would have a ferocious craving. We would be addicted. That's what addiction means.

One of the ways this theory was first established is through rat experiments which were injected into the American psyche in the 1980s, in a famous advert by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. You may remember it. The experiment is simple. Put a rat in a cage, alone, with two water bottles. One is water. The other is water laced with heroin or cocaine. Almost every time you run this experiment, the rat will become obsessed with the drugged water, and keep coming back for more, until it kills itself.

The advert explains: "Only one drug is so addictive, nine out of 10 laboratory rats will use it. And use it. And use it. Until dead. It's called cocaine. And it can do the same thing to you."

But in the 1970s, Vancouver psychology professor Bruce Alexander noticed something odd about this experiment. The rat is put in the cage all alone. It has nothing to do but take the drugs. What would happen, he wondered, if we tried this differently? So Alexander built Rat Park, a lush cage where the rats had colored balls and the best rat food and tunnels to scamper down and plenty of friends: everything a rat could want. What, Alexander wanted to know, would happen then?

In Rat Park, all the rats obviously tried both water bottles, because they didn't know what was in them. But what happened next was startling.

The rats with good lives didn't like the drugged water. They mostly shunned it, consuming less than a quarter of the drugs the isolated rats had used. None of them died. While all the rats who were alone and unhappy became heavy users, none of the rats who had a happy environment did.

At first, I thought this was merely a quirk of rats, until I discovered that at the same time as the Rat Park experiment there was a helpful human equivalent taking place. It was called the Vietnam War. Time magazine reported heroin was "as common as chewing gum" among U.S. soldiers, and there is solid evidence to back this up: some 20 percent of U.S. soldiers became addicted to heroin there, according to a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry. Many people were understandably terrified: they believed a huge number of addicts were about to head home when the war ended.

But in fact, some 95 percent of the addicted soldiers, according to the same study, simply stopped using. Very few had rehab. They shifted from a terrifying cage back to a pleasant one, so they didn't want the drug anymore.

Bruce Alexander argues this discovery is a profound challenge both to the right-wing view that addiction is a moral failing caused by too much hedonistic partying, and the liberal view that addiction is a disease taking place in a chemically hijacked brain. In fact, he argues, addiction is an adaptation. It's not you: It's your cage.

After the first phase of Rat Park, Alexander took the test further. He repeated the early experiments, where the rats were left alone and became compulsive users of the drug. He let them use for 57 days; if anything can hook you, it's that. Then he took them out of isolation, and placed them in Rat Park. He wanted to know, if you fall into that state of addiction, is your brain hijacked so you can't recover? Do the drugs take over? What happened is striking. The rats seemed to have a few twitches of withdrawal, but they soon stopped their heavy use, and went back to having a normal life. The good cage saved them. (The full references to all the studies I am discussing are in the book.)

This new theory is such a radical assault on what we have been told it felt like it could not be true. But the more scientists I interviewed, and the more I looked at their studies, the more I discovered things that don't seem to make sense—unless you take into account this new approach.

Here's one example of an experiment that is happening all around you, and may well happen to you one day. If you get run over today and you break your hip, you will probably be given diamorphine, the medical name for heroin. In the hospital around you, there will be plenty of people also given heroin for long periods, for pain relief. The heroin you get from your doctor will have a much higher purity and potency than the heroin being used by street addicts, who have to buy from criminals who adulterate it. So if the old theory of addiction is right—it's the drugs that cause it; they make your body need them—it's obvious what should happen. Loads of people should leave the hospital and try to score smack on the streets, to meet their habits.

But here's the strange thing. It virtually never happens. As the Canadian doctor Gabor Mate was the first to explain to me, medical users just stop, despite months of use. The same drug, used for the same length of time, turns street users into desperate addicts—and leaves medical patients unaffected.

If you still believe, as I used to, that addiction is caused by chemical hooks, this makes no sense. But if you believe Bruce Alexander's theory, the picture falls into place. The street addict is like a rat in the first cage: isolated and alone, with only one source of solace to turn to. The medical patient is like a rat in the second cage: going home to a life where she is surrounded by the people she loves. The drug is the same, but the environment is different.

This gives us an insight that goes much deeper than the need to understand addicts. Professor Peter Cohen argues that human beings have a deep need to bond and form connections. If we can't connect with each other, we will connect with anything we can find—the whirr of a roulette wheel or the ##### of a syringe. He says we should stop talking about "addiction" altogether and instead call it "bonding." A heroin addict has bonded with heroin because she couldn't bond as fully with anything else.

So the opposite of addiction is not sobriety. It is human connection.

I still couldn't shake off a nagging doubt. Are these scientists saying chemical hooks make no difference? It was explained to me: you can become addicted to gambling, and nobody thinks you inject a pack of cards into your veins. You can have all the addiction and none of the chemical hooks. I went to a Gamblers Anonymous meeting in Las Vegas and they were as plainly addicted as the cocaine and heroin addicts I have known. Yet there are no chemical hooks on a craps table.

But surely, I asked, there is some role for the chemicals? It turns out there is an experiment which gives us the answer to this in precise terms, which I learned about in Richard DeGrandpre's book The Cult of Pharmacology.

Everyone agrees cigarette smoking is one of the most addictive processes around. The chemical hooks in tobacco come from a drug called nicotine. So when nicotine patches were developed in the early 1990s, there was a huge surge of optimism—cigarette smokers could get all of their chemical hooks, without the other filthy, and deadly, effects of cigarette smoking. They would be freed.

But the Office of the Surgeon General has found that just 17.7 percent of cigarette smokers are able to stop using nicotine patches. That's not nothing. If the chemicals drive 17.7 percent of addiction, as this shows, that's still millions of lives ruined globally. But what it reveals again is that the story we have been taught about the cause of addiction being chemical hooks is real, but it's only a minor part of a much bigger picture.

This has huge implications for the 100-year-old war on drugs. This massive war, which kills people from the plazas of Mexico to the streets of Liverpool, is based on the claim that we need to physically eradicate a whole array of chemicals because they hijack people's brains and cause addiction. But if drugs aren't the driver of addiction— if, in fact, it is disconnection that drives addiction—then this makes no sense.

Ironically, the war on drugs actually increases all those larger drivers of addiction. I visited a prison in Arizona, Tent City, where inmates are detained in tiny stone isolation cages (the Hole) for weeks on end, to punish them for drug use. It is as close to a human re-creation of the cages that guaranteed deadly addiction in rats as I can imagine. When those prisoners get out of prison, they will be unemployable because of their criminal record, guaranteeing they will be cut off even more.

There is an alternative. We can build a system that is designed to help drug addicts reconnect with the world and leave behind their addictions.

This isn't theoretical. It is happening. Nearly 15 years ago, Portugal had one of the worst drug problems in Europe. They had tried a drug war, and the problem just kept getting worse. So they decided to do something radically different. They resolved to decriminalize all drugs, and take all the money they once spent on arresting and jailing drug addicts, and spend it instead on reconnecting them—to their own feelings, and to the wider society. The most crucial step was to get them secure housing and subsidized jobs, so they had a purpose in life, and something to get out of bed for. In warm and welcoming clinics, addicts are taught how to reconnect with their feelings, after years of trauma. One group of addicts was given a loan to set up a removals firm. Suddenly, they were a group, all bonded to each other and to society, and responsible for each other's care.

An independent study by the British Journal of Criminology found that since total decriminalization, addiction has fallen, and intraveneous drug use is down by 50 percent. Decriminalization has been such a success that very few people in Portugal want to go back to the old system. The main campaigner against the decriminalization back in 2000 was Joao Figueira, the country's top drug cop. He offered all the dire warnings we would expect from the Daily Mail or Fox News. But when we sat together in Lisbon, he told me that everything he predicted had not come to pass—and he now hopes the whole world will follow Portugal's example.

This isn't only relevant to the addicts I love. It is relevant to all of us, because it forces us to think differently about ourselves. Human beings are bonding animals. We need to connect and love. The wisest sentence of the 20th century was E.M. Forster's, "Only connect." But we have created an environment and a culture that cut us off from connection. The rise of addiction is a symptom of a deeper sickness in the way we live, constantly directing our gaze toward the next shiny object we should buy, rather than the human beings all around us.

The writer George Monbiot has called this the "age of loneliness." We have created human societies where it is easier for people to become cut off from all human connection. The Internet offers only a parody of connection. Bruce Alexander, the creator of Rat Park, told me that for too long, we have talked exclusively about individual recovery from addiction. We need now to talk about social recovery; how we all recover, together, from the sickness of isolation.

But this new evidence isn't just a challenge to us politically. It doesn't just force us to change our minds; it forces us to change our hearts.

Loving an addict is really hard. When I looked at the addicts I love, it was always tempting to follow the tough love advice doled out by reality shows like "Intervention": Tell the addict to shape up, or cut them off. Their message is that an addict who won't stop should be shunned. It's the logic of the drug war, imported into our private lives. But that will only deepen their addiction, and you may lose them all together. I came home determined to bind the addicts in my life closer to me than ever, to let them know I love them unconditionally, whether they stop, or whether they can't.

When I returned from my long journey, I looked at my ex-boyfriend, in withdrawal, trembling on my spare bed, and I thought about him differently. For a century now, we have been singing war songs about addicts. It occurred to me that we should have been singing love songs to them all along.
A very interesting read. I wonder how much is truly factual but it does seem to make some sense.

TL;DR -- It's environment that affects addiction, not the drug itself.

 
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I kind of buy this.

It's not bulletproof, because it acknowledges the 17% or so chemical addiction that people cannot seem to break. But, think about the life of someone who is addicted to an illicit drug. They didn't get to the point of using through happiness and being surrounded by people who love them, who they loved back, when they started. Rather, whatever it may be, something is not well in their lives which causes isolation. Whatever drug the user uses fills the void of this isolation. I see what the article is saying: the bigger problem is for the user to find a place of happiness that doesn't involve the drug that they're using, where the drug fills the void. Sure, chemical dependence is a strong part of breaking the addiction, and why many don't. But, I think there's alot more to be said for the user's psyche and finding happiness than what we're led to believe.

Great article, thanks for posting.

 
Long read.

But, anything that gets society to re-think the war on drugs strategy is a good thing. If anything, the "war on drugs" has made things much much worse for both individuals and society.

 
read somewhere that more than half of people quit drugs/alcohol either 100% or drastically reduce consumption to normal levels on their own without any treatment. I find that fascinating.

the AA model of addiction as a disease is a failure, they have less than 20% success rate. The model above seems more likely to succeed long term.

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
not sure, but I think Portugal might know

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
Hugs
 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
Send the addicts to the polar circle to chop ice cubes for the Chinese before it melts away. It would give them a meaningful existence together with their peers

ETA: and hugs and seal puppies

 
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My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
Hugs
Absolute ####### nonsense...are you people real?
 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
Hugs
Absolute ####### nonsense...are you people real?
You're why we can't have nice things.

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
one of the reasons why so many drug users/alcohol abusers relapse is their homelife. you can get all the education on addiction, counseling, support etc but then you go home and your mom is an addict and abusive, your dad is in prison and all your friends are addicts... you basically have zero chance.
Completely agree. The problem is, how do you fix that?
Shoot the parents

 
I don't disagree, but I think of some of the addicts I know well, and their "cage" was their own mind. Being in their own head was very unpleasant.

 
There is an alternative. We can build a system that is designed to help drug addicts reconnect with the world and leave behind their addictions.

This isn't theoretical. It is happening. Nearly 15 years ago, Portugal had one of the worst drug problems in Europe. They had tried a drug war, and the problem just kept getting worse. So they decided to do something radically different. They resolved to decriminalize all drugs, and take all the money they once spent on arresting and jailing drug addicts, and spend it instead on reconnecting them—to their own feelings, and to the wider society. The most crucial step was to get them secure housing and subsidized jobs, so they had a purpose in life, and something to get out of bed for. In warm and welcoming clinics, addicts are taught how to reconnect with their feelings, after years of trauma. One group of addicts was given a loan to set up a removals firm. Suddenly, they were a group, all bonded to each other and to society, and responsible for each other's care.

An independent study by the British Journal of Criminology found that since total decriminalization, addiction has fallen, and intraveneous drug use is down by 50 percent. Decriminalization has been such a success that very few people in Portugal want to go back to the old system.
I guess this is the crux of the theory. It may be true, but I have a question:

- if you have a child (adolescent or teen) who is being pushed narcotics, what do you do to stop this? Under this program can you call the cops and have the scumbag dealer taken away or not?

 
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The author was on with Bill Maher last week.

Anything like this that sheds light on the insane War on (Some) Drugs is a positive development.

 
Tldr. What's it say about twitter? 140 letters. That's about my limit on reading things.

 
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Addiction is a habit, not a disease:

http://www.salon.com/2015/06/27/addiction_is_not_a_disease_a_neuroscientist_argues_that_its_time_to_change_our_minds_on_the_roots_of_substance_abuse/

The mystery of addiction — what it is, what causes it and how to end it — threads through most of our lives. Experts estimate that one in 10 Americans is dependent on alcohol and other drugs, and if we concede that behaviors like gambling, overeating and playing video games can be addictive in similar ways, it’s likely that everyone has a relative or friend who’s hooked on some form of fun to a destructive degree. But what exactly is wrong with them? For several decades now, it’s been a commonplace to say that addicts have a disease. However, the very same scientists who once seemed to back up that claim have begun tearing it down.

Once, addictions were viewed as failures of character and morals, and society responded to drunks and junkies with shaming, scolding and calls for more “will power.” This proved spectacularly ineffective, although, truth be told, most addicts do quit without any form of treatment. Nevertheless, many do not, and in the mid-20th century, the recovery movement, centered around the 12-Step method developed by the founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, became a godsend for those unable to quit drinking or drugging on their own. The approach spread to so-called “behavioral addictions,” like gambling or sex, activities that don’t even involve the ingestion of any kind of mind-altering substance.

Much of the potency of AA comes from its acknowledgement that willpower isn’t enough to beat this devil and that blame, rather than whipping the blamed person into shape, is counterproductive. The first Step requires admitting one’s helplessness in the face of addiction, taking recovery out of the arena of simple self-control and into a realm of transcendence. We’re powerless over the addictive substance, and trust in a Higher Power, and the program itself, to provide us with the strength and strategy to quit. But an important principle of the 12 Steps is that addiction is chronic and likely congenital; you can be sober indefinitely, but you will never be cured. You will always remain an addict, even if you never use again.

The flourishing of the 12-Step movement is one of the reasons why we now routinely describe addiction as a “disease.” To have a disease — instead of, say, a dangerous habit — is to be powerless to do anything except apply the prescribed cure. A person with a disease is unfortunate, rather than foolish or weak or degenerate. Something innate in your body, particularly in your brain, has made you exceptionally susceptible to getting hooked. You always have and always will contain a bomb, the important question is how to avoid setting a match to it. Another factor promoting the disease model is that it has ushered addiction under the aegis of the healthcare industry, whether in the form of an illness whose treatment can be charged to an insurance company or as the focus of profit-making rehab centers.

This conception of addiction as a biological phenomenon seemed to be endorsed over the past 20 years as new technologies have allowed neuroscientists to measure the human brain and its activities in ever more telling detail. Sure enough, the brains of addicts are physically different — sometimes strikingly so — from the brains of average people. But neuroscience giveth and now neuroscience taketh away. The recovery movement and rehab industry (two separate things, although the latter often employs the techniques of the former) have always had their critics, but lately some of the most vocal have been the neuroscientists whose findings once lent them credibility.

One of those neuroscientists is Marc Lewis, a psychologist and former addict himself, also the author of a new book “The Biology of Desire: Why Addiction is Not a Disease.” Lewis’s argument is actually fairly simple: The disease theory, and the science sometimes used to support it, fail to take into account the plasticity of the human brain. Of course, “the brain changes with addiction,” he writes. “But the way it changes has to do with learning and development — not disease.” All significant and repeated experiences change the brain; adaptability and habit are the brain’s secret weapons. The changes wrought by addiction are not, however, permanent, and while they are dangerous, they’re not abnormal. Through a combination of a difficult emotional history, bad luck and the ordinary operations of the brain itself, an addict is someone whose brain has been transformed, but also someone who can be pushed further along the road toward healthy development. (Lewis doesn’t like the term “recovery” because it implies a return to the addict’s state before the addiction took hold.)
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“The Biology of Desire” is grouped around several case studies, each one illustrating a unique path to dependency. A striving Australian entrepreneur becomes caught up in the “clarity, power and potential” he feels after smoking meth, along with his ability to work long hours while on the drug. A social worker who behaves selflessly in her job and marriage constructs a defiant, selfish, secret life around stealing and swallowing prescription opiates. A shy Irishman who started drinking as a way to relax in social situations slowly comes to see social situations as an occasion to drink and then drinking as a reason to hole up in his apartment for days on end.

Each of these people, Lewis argues, had a particular “emotional wound” the substance helped them handle, but once they started using it, the habit itself eventually became self-perpetuating and in most cases ultimately served to deepen the wound. Each case study focuses on a different part of the brain involved in addiction and illustrates how the function of each part — desire, emotion, impulse, automatic behavior — becomes shackled to a single goal: consuming the addictive substance. The brain is built to learn and change, Lewis points out, but it’s also built to form pathways for repetitive behavior, everything from brushing your teeth to stomping on the brake pedal, so that you don’t have to think about everything you do consciously. The brain is self-organizing. Those are all good properties, but addiction shanghais them for a bad cause.

As Lewis sees it, addiction really is habit; we just don’t appreciate how deeply habit can be engraved on the brain itself. “Repeated (motivating) experience” — i.e., the sensation of having one’s worries wafted away by the bliss of heroin — “produce brain changes that define future experiences… So getting drunk a lot will sculpt the synapses that determine future drinking patterns.” More and more experiences and activities get looped into the addiction experience and trigger cravings and expectations like the bells that made Pavlov’s dogs salivate, from the walk home past a favorite bar to the rituals of shooting up. The world becomes a host of signs all pointing you in the same direction and activating powerful unconscious urges to follow them. At a certain point, the addictive behavior becomes compulsive, seemingly as irresistibly automatic as a reflex. You may not even want the drug anymore, but you’ve forgotten how to do anything else besides seek it out and take it.
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Yet all of the addicts Lewis interviewed for “The Biology of Desire” are sober now, some through tried-and-true 12-Step programs, others through self-designed regimens, like the heroin addict who taught herself how to meditate in prison. Perhaps it’s no surprise that a psychologist would argue for some form of talk therapy addressing the underlying emotional motivations for turning to drugs. But Lewis is far from the only expert to voice this opinion, or to recommend cognitive behavioral therapy as a way to reshape the brain and redirect its systems into less self-destructive patterns.

Without a doubt, AA and similar programs have helped a lot of people. But they’ve also failed others. One size does not fit all, and there’s a growing body of evidence that empowering addicts, rather than insisting that they embrace their powerlessness and the impossibility of ever fully shedding their addiction, can be a road to health as well. If addiction is a form of learning gone tragically wrong, it is also possible that it can be unlearned, that the brain’s native changeability can be set back on track. “Addicts aren’t diseased,” Lewis writes, “and they don’t need medical intervention in order to change their lives. What they need is sensitive, intelligent social scaffolding to hold the pieces of their imagined future in place — while they reach toward it.”
 
I'll buy that since I don't believe in addiction. You can quit anything if you have the willpower. Only wusses get 'addicted'. Hell, I've had the Michael Jackson drug a couple of times for procedures and that #### is fantastic but I have no interest in dying for it. Cocaine? You have to be an absolute idiot to even try that. Marijuana - absolutely not addictive. I've smoke tons in high school and college. Haven't had any since. Good #### though. One I realized that lack of caffeine was causing headaches, I quit drinking anything with caffeine in it. I was never addicted to it.

 
I was with this until the last statement about medication. I was a devoted smoker for over 20 years. I didn't even want to quit, just knew I should and kind of wanted the desire to quit. I started taking Chantix and within a matter of days the addiction was gone.

I had tried to quit at other times and did, once, in year 3 after a religious experience, but ended up going back to it because of habit. I also had tried the patch and Zyban at different times to no avail. I also very much enjoyed smoking. I would go back to it again if I didn't know how addictive it is.

I haven't had a single puff in about 9 years now. Without the medication I never would have been able to overcome the addiction.

Ps: praying to St. Macmillan Kolbe was also instrumental, fwiw.

 
I'll buy that since I don't believe in addiction. You can quit anything if you have the willpower. Only wusses get 'addicted'. Hell, I've had the Michael Jackson drug a couple of times for procedures and that #### is fantastic but I have no interest in dying for it. Cocaine? You have to be an absolute idiot to even try that. Marijuana - absolutely not addictive. I've smoke tons in high school and college. Haven't had any since. Good #### though. One I realized that lack of caffeine was causing headaches, I quit drinking anything with caffeine in it. I was never addicted to it.
Your opinion sounds reasonable but nothing you have described here is addiction. Addiction is a whole other level, and will power alone isn't enough to break the chains.
 
I'll buy that since I don't believe in addiction. You can quit anything if you have the willpower. Only wusses get 'addicted'. Hell, I've had the Michael Jackson drug a couple of times for procedures and that #### is fantastic but I have no interest in dying for it. Cocaine? You have to be an absolute idiot to even try that. Marijuana - absolutely not addictive. I've smoke tons in high school and college. Haven't had any since. Good #### though. One I realized that lack of caffeine was causing headaches, I quit drinking anything with caffeine in it. I was never addicted to it.
Your opinion sounds reasonable but nothing you have described here is addiction. Addiction is a whole other level, and will power alone isn't enough to break the chains.
What that article I posted discussed was that addiction is real but not a disease, rather a neurological and behavioral issue. It's easy to say "Look at me, I quit drugs because I have willpower!" but once someone teaches themselves to become too dependent on a drug then no degree of willpower can overcome it.

Some people can do a lot of drugs and not develop that tendency but others can develop it almost immediately. Everyone is different and should be treated that way and not denigrated for lack of willpower.

Because it's so much of behavioral issue I believe the reason rehab centers fail, especially with long-term drug users, is that people don't stay there long enough to truly change the way their mind works. A 30 day rehab is an absolute joke in my opinion. I would start with one month of rehab for every year the person has been using drugs.

 
With all the new science on the brain it's becoming increasingly clear that the brain is completely malleable. How we treat depression, anxiety and addiction will do a complete 180 over the next decade. I suspect within the decade meditation will be a part of every school curriculum and training your brain will be as important as training your body

 
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The likely cause of addiction has been discovered

It is now 100 years since drugs were first banned, and all through this long century of waging war on drugs, we have been told a story about addiction, by our teachers and by our governments. This story is so deeply ingrained in our minds that we take it for granted. It seems obvious. It seems manifestly true. Until I set off three and a half years ago on a 30,000-mile journey for my book Chasing The Scream: The First And Last Days of the War on Drugs to figure out what is really driving the drug war, I believed it too. But what I learned on the road is that almost everything we have been told about addiction is wrong. There is a very different story waiting for us, if only we are ready to hear it.

If we truly absorb this new story, we will have to change a lot more than the drug war. We will have to change ourselves.

I learned it from an extraordinary mixture of people I met on my travels: From the surviving friends of Billie Holiday, who helped me to learn how the founder of the war on drugs stalked and helped to kill her; from a Jewish doctor who was smuggled out of the Budapest ghetto as a baby, only to unlock the secrets of addiction as a grown man; from a transsexual crack dealer in Brooklyn who was conceived when his mother, a crack-addict, was raped by his father, an NYPD officer; from a man who was kept at the bottom of a well for two years by a torturing dictatorship, only to emerge to be elected president of Uruguay and begin the last days of the war on drugs.

I had a personal reason to search for these answers. One of my earliest memories as a kid is trying to wake up one of my relatives, and not being able to. Ever since then, I have been turning over the essential mystery of addiction in my mind. What causes some people to become fixated on a drug or a behavior until they can't stop? How do we help those people to come back to us? As I got older, another of my close relatives developed a cocaine addiction, and I fell into a relationship with a heroin addict. I guess addiction felt like home to me.

If you had asked me what causes drug addiction at the start, I would have said, "Drugs. Duh." It's not difficult to grasp. I thought I had seen it in my own life. We can all explain it. Imagine if you and I and the next 20 people to pass us on the street take a really potent drug for 20 days. There are strong chemical hooks in these drugs, so if we stopped on day 21, our bodies would need the chemical. We would have a ferocious craving. We would be addicted. That's what addiction means.

One of the ways this theory was first established is through rat experiments which were injected into the American psyche in the 1980s, in a famous advert by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. You may remember it. The experiment is simple. Put a rat in a cage, alone, with two water bottles. One is water. The other is water laced with heroin or cocaine. Almost every time you run this experiment, the rat will become obsessed with the drugged water, and keep coming back for more, until it kills itself.

The advert explains: "Only one drug is so addictive, nine out of 10 laboratory rats will use it. And use it. And use it. Until dead. It's called cocaine. And it can do the same thing to you."

But in the 1970s, Vancouver psychology professor Bruce Alexander noticed something odd about this experiment. The rat is put in the cage all alone. It has nothing to do but take the drugs. What would happen, he wondered, if we tried this differently? So Alexander built Rat Park, a lush cage where the rats had colored balls and the best rat food and tunnels to scamper down and plenty of friends: everything a rat could want. What, Alexander wanted to know, would happen then?

In Rat Park, all the rats obviously tried both water bottles, because they didn't know what was in them. But what happened next was startling.

The rats with good lives didn't like the drugged water. They mostly shunned it, consuming less than a quarter of the drugs the isolated rats had used. None of them died. While all the rats who were alone and unhappy became heavy users, none of the rats who had a happy environment did.

At first, I thought this was merely a quirk of rats, until I discovered that at the same time as the Rat Park experiment there was a helpful human equivalent taking place. It was called the Vietnam War. Time magazine reported heroin was "as common as chewing gum" among U.S. soldiers, and there is solid evidence to back this up: some 20 percent of U.S. soldiers became addicted to heroin there, according to a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry. Many people were understandably terrified: they believed a huge number of addicts were about to head home when the war ended.

But in fact, some 95 percent of the addicted soldiers, according to the same study, simply stopped using. Very few had rehab. They shifted from a terrifying cage back to a pleasant one, so they didn't want the drug anymore.

Bruce Alexander argues this discovery is a profound challenge both to the right-wing view that addiction is a moral failing caused by too much hedonistic partying, and the liberal view that addiction is a disease taking place in a chemically hijacked brain. In fact, he argues, addiction is an adaptation. It's not you: It's your cage.

After the first phase of Rat Park, Alexander took the test further. He repeated the early experiments, where the rats were left alone and became compulsive users of the drug. He let them use for 57 days; if anything can hook you, it's that. Then he took them out of isolation, and placed them in Rat Park. He wanted to know, if you fall into that state of addiction, is your brain hijacked so you can't recover? Do the drugs take over? What happened is striking. The rats seemed to have a few twitches of withdrawal, but they soon stopped their heavy use, and went back to having a normal life. The good cage saved them. (The full references to all the studies I am discussing are in the book.)

This new theory is such a radical assault on what we have been told it felt like it could not be true. But the more scientists I interviewed, and the more I looked at their studies, the more I discovered things that don't seem to make sense—unless you take into account this new approach.

Here's one example of an experiment that is happening all around you, and may well happen to you one day. If you get run over today and you break your hip, you will probably be given diamorphine, the medical name for heroin. In the hospital around you, there will be plenty of people also given heroin for long periods, for pain relief. The heroin you get from your doctor will have a much higher purity and potency than the heroin being used by street addicts, who have to buy from criminals who adulterate it. So if the old theory of addiction is right—it's the drugs that cause it; they make your body need them—it's obvious what should happen. Loads of people should leave the hospital and try to score smack on the streets, to meet their habits.

But here's the strange thing. It virtually never happens. As the Canadian doctor Gabor Mate was the first to explain to me, medical users just stop, despite months of use. The same drug, used for the same length of time, turns street users into desperate addicts—and leaves medical patients unaffected.

If you still believe, as I used to, that addiction is caused by chemical hooks, this makes no sense. But if you believe Bruce Alexander's theory, the picture falls into place. The street addict is like a rat in the first cage: isolated and alone, with only one source of solace to turn to. The medical patient is like a rat in the second cage: going home to a life where she is surrounded by the people she loves. The drug is the same, but the environment is different.

This gives us an insight that goes much deeper than the need to understand addicts. Professor Peter Cohen argues that human beings have a deep need to bond and form connections. If we can't connect with each other, we will connect with anything we can find—the whirr of a roulette wheel or the ##### of a syringe. He says we should stop talking about "addiction" altogether and instead call it "bonding." A heroin addict has bonded with heroin because she couldn't bond as fully with anything else.

So the opposite of addiction is not sobriety. It is human connection.

I still couldn't shake off a nagging doubt. Are these scientists saying chemical hooks make no difference? It was explained to me: you can become addicted to gambling, and nobody thinks you inject a pack of cards into your veins. You can have all the addiction and none of the chemical hooks. I went to a Gamblers Anonymous meeting in Las Vegas and they were as plainly addicted as the cocaine and heroin addicts I have known. Yet there are no chemical hooks on a craps table.

But surely, I asked, there is some role for the chemicals? It turns out there is an experiment which gives us the answer to this in precise terms, which I learned about in Richard DeGrandpre's book The Cult of Pharmacology.

Everyone agrees cigarette smoking is one of the most addictive processes around. The chemical hooks in tobacco come from a drug called nicotine. So when nicotine patches were developed in the early 1990s, there was a huge surge of optimism—cigarette smokers could get all of their chemical hooks, without the other filthy, and deadly, effects of cigarette smoking. They would be freed.

But the Office of the Surgeon General has found that just 17.7 percent of cigarette smokers are able to stop using nicotine patches. That's not nothing. If the chemicals drive 17.7 percent of addiction, as this shows, that's still millions of lives ruined globally. But what it reveals again is that the story we have been taught about the cause of addiction being chemical hooks is real, but it's only a minor part of a much bigger picture.

This has huge implications for the 100-year-old war on drugs. This massive war, which kills people from the plazas of Mexico to the streets of Liverpool, is based on the claim that we need to physically eradicate a whole array of chemicals because they hijack people's brains and cause addiction. But if drugs aren't the driver of addiction— if, in fact, it is disconnection that drives addiction—then this makes no sense.

Ironically, the war on drugs actually increases all those larger drivers of addiction. I visited a prison in Arizona, Tent City, where inmates are detained in tiny stone isolation cages (the Hole) for weeks on end, to punish them for drug use. It is as close to a human re-creation of the cages that guaranteed deadly addiction in rats as I can imagine. When those prisoners get out of prison, they will be unemployable because of their criminal record, guaranteeing they will be cut off even more.

There is an alternative. We can build a system that is designed to help drug addicts reconnect with the world and leave behind their addictions.

This isn't theoretical. It is happening. Nearly 15 years ago, Portugal had one of the worst drug problems in Europe. They had tried a drug war, and the problem just kept getting worse. So they decided to do something radically different. They resolved to decriminalize all drugs, and take all the money they once spent on arresting and jailing drug addicts, and spend it instead on reconnecting them—to their own feelings, and to the wider society. The most crucial step was to get them secure housing and subsidized jobs, so they had a purpose in life, and something to get out of bed for. In warm and welcoming clinics, addicts are taught how to reconnect with their feelings, after years of trauma. One group of addicts was given a loan to set up a removals firm. Suddenly, they were a group, all bonded to each other and to society, and responsible for each other's care.

An independent study by the British Journal of Criminology found that since total decriminalization, addiction has fallen, and intraveneous drug use is down by 50 percent. Decriminalization has been such a success that very few people in Portugal want to go back to the old system. The main campaigner against the decriminalization back in 2000 was Joao Figueira, the country's top drug cop. He offered all the dire warnings we would expect from the Daily Mail or Fox News. But when we sat together in Lisbon, he told me that everything he predicted had not come to pass—and he now hopes the whole world will follow Portugal's example.

This isn't only relevant to the addicts I love. It is relevant to all of us, because it forces us to think differently about ourselves. Human beings are bonding animals. We need to connect and love. The wisest sentence of the 20th century was E.M. Forster's, "Only connect." But we have created an environment and a culture that cut us off from connection. The rise of addiction is a symptom of a deeper sickness in the way we live, constantly directing our gaze toward the next shiny object we should buy, rather than the human beings all around us.

The writer George Monbiot has called this the "age of loneliness." We have created human societies where it is easier for people to become cut off from all human connection. The Internet offers only a parody of connection. Bruce Alexander, the creator of Rat Park, told me that for too long, we have talked exclusively about individual recovery from addiction. We need now to talk about social recovery; how we all recover, together, from the sickness of isolation.

But this new evidence isn't just a challenge to us politically. It doesn't just force us to change our minds; it forces us to change our hearts.

Loving an addict is really hard. When I looked at the addicts I love, it was always tempting to follow the tough love advice doled out by reality shows like "Intervention": Tell the addict to shape up, or cut them off. Their message is that an addict who won't stop should be shunned. It's the logic of the drug war, imported into our private lives. But that will only deepen their addiction, and you may lose them all together. I came home determined to bind the addicts in my life closer to me than ever, to let them know I love them unconditionally, whether they stop, or whether they can't.

When I returned from my long journey, I looked at my ex-boyfriend, in withdrawal, trembling on my spare bed, and I thought about him differently. For a century now, we have been singing war songs about addicts. It occurred to me that we should have been singing love songs to them all along.
A very interesting read. I wonder how much is truly factual but it does seem to make some sense.

TL;DR -- It's environment that affects addiction, not the drug itself.
http://www.myaspergerschild.com/2009/08/aspergers-syndrome-and-substance-abuse.html





Pain, loneliness and despair can lead to problems with drugs, sex and alcohol/drugs/rock 'n roll.

 
About half way through, but I like where it's headed even though I think it mischaracterizes liberals and conservatives, and mostly as a device to attempt to assert credibility to itself....

 
My life is awesome, but I still eat pot cookies like they're cookies. :shrug:
Article seems to be focusing on the higher tier isolating drugs, like uppers (cocaine, meth, etc.) and opiates. I know it mentions nicotine, but personally I basket drugs mentally into life ruining (coke, meth, opiates) vs. social drugs people in better places with their lives might use (beer, weed, tobacco) to relax. I'm 100% positive people in bad places in their lives to begin with could find a bad, isolated path in both buckets, but speaking for a majority of users, I feel this article is leaning more towards the life ruining bucket of drugs.

That could be totally wrong, but it's how I'm interpreting this article/how it's making sense to me at least.
Perhaps part of it is the reason for the drug use. Is it an escape, or an "enhancement" - is it social use or anti social. Is it in some way therapeutic (relaxation) rather than a crutch or again, as escape?

 
About half way through, but I like where it's headed even though I think it mischaracterizes liberals and conservatives, and mostly as a device to attempt to assert credibility to itself....
WHAAAAT?

You read that and what you come away with is liberal and conservative? Come on man.

 
Great post.

Contrast this with most of the Republican candidates stances on the "drug war." Their position is ### backwards, which disqualifies many of them from consideration of my vote.

 
About half way through, but I like where it's headed even though I think it mischaracterizes liberals and conservatives, and mostly as a device to attempt to assert credibility to itself....
WHAAAAT?

You read that and what you come away with is liberal and conservative? Come on man.
It's a cheap self-aggrandizing tactic, and the article didn't really need it to make it's points. I also don't think it's an accurate assessment. I think that is a legitimate criticism. Other than that, it's good.

 

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