Drug Recovery - Think You Can?
People begin experimenting with drugs for a variety of reasons but why do some get addicted where others do not?Genetics plays a small role but there is also a strong psychiatric aspect of addiction that is extremely powerful.
Our brains are complex and every thought we have can eventually rule our life.
Because we only use about 12% of our brain for our every day thoughts and reasoning, we often forget that the other 88% is available to help guide us.
It's very important to begin harnessing the power of our subconscious in a drug recovery plan.
What am I talking about? Well, the psychiatric implications of drug addiction are ever present and can cause destruction in the lives of anyone suffering from drug/alcohol abuse.
Mental health professionals have known for quite some time that what we think and believe can control our lives and mental health.
It's now time for you to learn that yourself.
Here's an example.
You may try to justify your own drug habit or alcohol use as being okay if you were raised by a parent that was an alcoholic or pot-head.
You reason that if it was OK for them then it's alright for you.
That's the learned model of drug addiction.
It becomes a certain mindset and not only is it a habit and means of coping, it's also familiar to you.
There's also scientific proof that drug addiction becomes a brain problem.
The effect that drugs have is that when you start using them, your brain gets used to the release of chemicals that they cause.
They produce feelings and emotions often at greater levels than your brain can do on it's own.
Since our minds are so complex and adaptable they quickly learn: Hey, I don't have to do so much work on my own.
I don't have to expend energy to produce these feelings anymore.
That's why abusers experience such great lows when they quit the drugs.
The mind isn't producing the chemicals it needs anymore to experience feelings because drugs do that for you.
When the drug isn't being used your brain will start "telling" you that you have to have that drug to function.
And you will believe it.
That's why if you can get a handle on the psychiatric implications of a drug addiction you can most certainly beat it.
Some people can do it alone but most of the time you will need help.
Denial is a strong emotion and drug/alcohol dependent people usually suffer from it in spades.
So meeting with someone either a counselor, health professional, or mentor can help get you started toward recovery.
When looking to treat drug addiction you will want to find a program that treats both the mind and body.
Depending on the drug of addiction you will usually need some help with detoxing so you can minimize the withdrawal symptoms.
Those symptoms alone make many people relapse.
You will then need to address the mind to successfully defeat the grip that drug addiction has on your mind, you, and your life.
Our brains are complex and every thought we have can eventually rule our life.
Because we only use about 12% of our brain for our every day thoughts and reasoning, we often forget that the other 88% is available to help guide us.
It's very important to begin harnessing the power of our subconscious in a drug recovery plan.
What am I talking about? Well, the psychiatric implications of drug addiction are ever present and can cause destruction in the lives of anyone suffering from drug/alcohol abuse.
Mental health professionals have known for quite some time that what we think and believe can control our lives and mental health.
It's now time for you to learn that yourself.
Here's an example.
You may try to justify your own drug habit or alcohol use as being okay if you were raised by a parent that was an alcoholic or pot-head.
You reason that if it was OK for them then it's alright for you.
That's the learned model of drug addiction.
It becomes a certain mindset and not only is it a habit and means of coping, it's also familiar to you.
There's also scientific proof that drug addiction becomes a brain problem.
The effect that drugs have is that when you start using them, your brain gets used to the release of chemicals that they cause.
They produce feelings and emotions often at greater levels than your brain can do on it's own.
Since our minds are so complex and adaptable they quickly learn: Hey, I don't have to do so much work on my own.
I don't have to expend energy to produce these feelings anymore.
That's why abusers experience such great lows when they quit the drugs.
The mind isn't producing the chemicals it needs anymore to experience feelings because drugs do that for you.
When the drug isn't being used your brain will start "telling" you that you have to have that drug to function.
And you will believe it.
That's why if you can get a handle on the psychiatric implications of a drug addiction you can most certainly beat it.
Some people can do it alone but most of the time you will need help.
Denial is a strong emotion and drug/alcohol dependent people usually suffer from it in spades.
So meeting with someone either a counselor, health professional, or mentor can help get you started toward recovery.
When looking to treat drug addiction you will want to find a program that treats both the mind and body.
Depending on the drug of addiction you will usually need some help with detoxing so you can minimize the withdrawal symptoms.
Those symptoms alone make many people relapse.
You will then need to address the mind to successfully defeat the grip that drug addiction has on your mind, you, and your life.
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