BLOG 440 DRUG ADDICTION
The inability to control is the bottom line when it comes to
addiction. A person’s brain and behavior are greatly affected. When you become
addicted, you continue to use the drug or carry on the habit despite the
consequences. A person can become powerless to legal or illegal drugs and
substances such as alcohol, nicotine, opioids, and/or marijuana. The brain
starts to receive altered messages and all it can think about is the rewarding
feeling the drug produces. The functioning of the neurotransmitters becomes
distorted. The viscous cycle of tolerance starts to happen, and the person
becomes persistent on experiencing the same high or an even better high better
each time.
Addiction doesn’t just happen instantly. It builds its way
into someone’s life. Cigarette smoking can start just at parties or social
events, but then the person finds themselves keeping a pack in hand and
reaching for a smoke more and more frequently. The risk of addiction varies by
drug and certainly affects how quickly one forms the habit. Sometimes a person
is prescribed a medication, and they become hooked after use (especially opioids).
Painkillers cause a high risk for addiction.
Addiction is the accumulation of more and more of the user’s
choice. The person needs higher doses to get high. Hence, drug addiction is
also called substance abuse disorder. When a person tries to stop, they crave more
and feel withdrawl symptoms. Some of the symptoms that person has become
addicted to their drug of choice include the following:
1.
Having intense urges to use/take the drug.
2.
Drug use starts to prevail over responsibilities
like work.
3.
Daily use of the drug, sometimes even several
times per day.
4.
Continuing to use the drug despite any physical
and health consequences.
5.
Doing whatever it takes to obtain the drug,
which are behaviors you normally wouldn’t do.
6.
Spending lots of time going to get the drug in
addition to time spent taking it.
7.
Spending excess money on the drug rather or not
you can afford it.
8.
Doing things you shouldn’t under the influence
of the drug, such as driving.
9.
Making sure you always have available supply of
the drug.
10.
Feeling withdrawl when you don’t take the drug.
The main factors that cause addiction are your environment
and genetics. Being exposed to the drug creates risk to partake. Traumatic life
events can also cause a person to turn to drugs to deal with the situation. Feeling
overwhelmed by stress can also cause drug use to help this feeling subside. Many
addicts follow in the footsteps of their relatives. The reason people become
addicted to drugs is an individualized experience.
Many addicts enjoy drugs and don’t want to stop, while
others want and know they need help. The willpower to stop becomes a problem.
Addiction is much more complicated than just deciding to stop and then you
instantly doing it. The brain has to be re-wired to believe it can and will function
without and the body has to feel committed to this process as well. There is
help and hope and those in recovery help others. Addiction is a serious problem
with serious consequences so most of the time testing the waters is never
advisable because you may not be able to turn back.
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