Ryan Soave
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so these practices that we can, anything that we can build where we just kind of lean into the discomfort a little bit and then lean out, we start to build capacity. We pendulate through kind of activation and resource until we have a larger range of motion.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting. I think in the, up until sometime in the 80s, I'm not going to have this right. They didn't even... I think they didn't really see cocaine as addictive because you didn't become dependent on it like you would heroin or alcohol.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting. I think in the, up until sometime in the 80s, I'm not going to have this right. They didn't even... I think they didn't really see cocaine as addictive because you didn't become dependent on it like you would heroin or alcohol.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting. I think in the, up until sometime in the 80s, I'm not going to have this right. They didn't even... I think they didn't really see cocaine as addictive because you didn't become dependent on it like you would heroin or alcohol.
Somebody wrote a book called, I think it was Dr. Gold, 1-800-COCAINE, where they were starting to see that we could classify addiction as a psychological addiction. I might have that a little bit off, but I think it's somewhere in that neighborhood. There's not a physical detox from stimulants like amphetamines or cocaine like there is from โ heroin, opioids, or alcohol and benzodiazepines.
Somebody wrote a book called, I think it was Dr. Gold, 1-800-COCAINE, where they were starting to see that we could classify addiction as a psychological addiction. I might have that a little bit off, but I think it's somewhere in that neighborhood. There's not a physical detox from stimulants like amphetamines or cocaine like there is from โ heroin, opioids, or alcohol and benzodiazepines.
Somebody wrote a book called, I think it was Dr. Gold, 1-800-COCAINE, where they were starting to see that we could classify addiction as a psychological addiction. I might have that a little bit off, but I think it's somewhere in that neighborhood. There's not a physical detox from stimulants like amphetamines or cocaine like there is from โ heroin, opioids, or alcohol and benzodiazepines.
Coming off stimulants is really hard. It's really hard. It's really hard. Right. But there's an obsession of the mind that gets triggered. And it's this psychological addiction that they can't seem to get out of. I would imagine that you could probably describe what's happening with the huge surge in dopamine and then dropping off of it. I'm not sure exactly where it falls in that. But
Coming off stimulants is really hard. It's really hard. It's really hard. Right. But there's an obsession of the mind that gets triggered. And it's this psychological addiction that they can't seem to get out of. I would imagine that you could probably describe what's happening with the huge surge in dopamine and then dropping off of it. I'm not sure exactly where it falls in that. But
Coming off stimulants is really hard. It's really hard. It's really hard. Right. But there's an obsession of the mind that gets triggered. And it's this psychological addiction that they can't seem to get out of. I would imagine that you could probably describe what's happening with the huge surge in dopamine and then dropping off of it. I'm not sure exactly where it falls in that. But
You know, there's, they used to think that people couldn't, you know, recover from crack cocaine.
You know, there's, they used to think that people couldn't, you know, recover from crack cocaine.
You know, there's, they used to think that people couldn't, you know, recover from crack cocaine.
in working with those, I mean, there's a lot of energy that goes into just having them kind of still. I mean, I think a lot of, you know, stimulants kind of, I see it as they help the physical body kind of match with the internal state of the nervous system. I mean, I think that's one of the reasons we see stimulants work for ADHD.
in working with those, I mean, there's a lot of energy that goes into just having them kind of still. I mean, I think a lot of, you know, stimulants kind of, I see it as they help the physical body kind of match with the internal state of the nervous system. I mean, I think that's one of the reasons we see stimulants work for ADHD.
in working with those, I mean, there's a lot of energy that goes into just having them kind of still. I mean, I think a lot of, you know, stimulants kind of, I see it as they help the physical body kind of match with the internal state of the nervous system. I mean, I think that's one of the reasons we see stimulants work for ADHD.
I mean, you probably understand the biological reasons, but it seems to me that it kind of levels out their experience. I mean, I've seen people that when they take stimulants, they get really calm.
I mean, you probably understand the biological reasons, but it seems to me that it kind of levels out their experience. I mean, I've seen people that when they take stimulants, they get really calm.
I mean, you probably understand the biological reasons, but it seems to me that it kind of levels out their experience. I mean, I've seen people that when they take stimulants, they get really calm.
I remember, and again, I don't know this study, but I remember somebody referencing many years ago when I was first getting in the field that porn addiction at the time specifically related to video pornography, which is what it all is now. it was having the same impact on the brain and young men as crack cocaine.