Re: Giving up drugs - it's easy!
Posted: Fri Jan 25, 2013 1:41 pm
funken wrote:Define alcoholic and addict.
funken wrote:Define alcoholic and addict.
pertinent. (spelling)funken wrote:
Why is it pertinant?
This wasn't a question-adrift though. It was in the context of your initial contention.funken wrote:Yes, perhaps I should, but you asked a question so I asked you to define the terms within it.cmcpress wrote:That's something you should be doing as it's your contention.funken wrote:Define alcoholic and addict.
Indeed they are. The burden is on you to provide those definitions.funken wrote:But on the other hand definitions are important.cmcpress wrote: But I'll play. I'm assuming of course that you want to carry on in the spirit of a debate and not get lost in semantics
Good question - define an alcoholic and then we can see.funken wrote:What differentiates an alcoholic from a normal drinker?
Possibly. However for that statement to be valid it would have to fulfill the criteria of "dependence". Which I'm not sure regular drinkers would.funken wrote:Well, you could argue that most people who drink are alcoholics, they just vary in degree.cmcpress wrote: I would define it as someone with a habitual, psychological or physical dependence on and abuse of alcohol (in the case of an alcoholic) or any other substance or behaviour (in the case of an addict). Specifically, but also not exclusively, (and this is extending the definition into a social sphere) where that dependence or abuse is harmful to themselves or others around them or prevents normal functioning (such as in the case of OCD or obsessive phobias).
What's your definition?
If we're using my definition of Alcoholism, when they become dependent on it.funken wrote: Or is there a dialectical point at which quantity transforms into quality, like heating water until it suddenly turns into steam?
Alcoholics presumably started as 'normal drinkers'. Which day in their lives did they transform into alcoholics?
Hint, I breathe easier now.funken wrote:ok fair enough, I won't pry. It just thought you wanted us to guess. Most doctors say giving up smoking is extremely difficult. They are wrong, and are not helping.Mint Invader wrote:keeping ya guessing since 1990
I actually know someone who advises the UK government on this, and they probably think the same. Bit out of touch now as they've moved away. It's amazing anyone manages to give up.
1. Are you Allen Carr?funken wrote:Allen Carr's books and clinics have helped millions of people quit smoking/alcohol/etc. They do clinics for heroin/crack cocaine etc. They offer a money-back guarantee.cmcpress wrote:pertinent. (spelling)funken wrote:
Why is it pertinant?
If you're making claims then your experience with these claims is relevant as to their basis and validity.
Again, we don't have a definition for addiction. Was your use habitual with dependence? Would you have socially transgressed if you were without cigarettes, weed or alcohol?funken wrote:Personally I have only been addicted to cigarettes, weed and alcohol. I do know or have known people who have given up heroin and other hard drugs though.
I don't think that kind of extreme, genuine addiction is a binary on/off switch but something that happens over a period of time and the severity of the dependence, and consequences of withdrawal increase with exposure to the substance.funken wrote:Whether or not there is a terrible day on which they become alcoholics, it's clear that not everything happened on this day. They must have been close to alchoholism the day before, yes?
None. Not everyone lives in a student bubble.funken wrote:How many of them tried to stop smoking nicotine, but continued to smoke weed?
Weed is not classed as anything other than psychologically addictive. There is no physical component. Alcohol and Nicotine do, though. I would suggest that if that was the extent of your withdrawal symptoms that you're addictions were mild.funken wrote:You should know from reading Allen Carr that most of these symptoms are created by the mind, and if you follow his method you will not experience them.
I was on just under 1/2 a 700ml bottle of whisky a day, and felt no withdrawal symptoms except slight insomnia.
I felt non from giving up smoking except mild irritability for a few days. I have not had a cig in 3 years and can't imagine ever having one. I never crave for one.
I smoked weed every day for 20 years and experienced no withdrawal symptoms.
Nope - this is the distinction between a mild addiction like Nicotine, and a serious addiction like Heroin. Physical addiction is chemical dependence it's of an entire other order.funken wrote:You should know from reading Allen Carr that most of these symptoms are created by the mind, and if you follow his method you will not experience them.
That's not actually a lot of whisky, believe it or not. I know guys who would regularly down 2L of the stuff a day - starting first thing in the morning. When their money ran out they would drink bottles of white cider and not eat. Their entire calorie count would come from alcohol. Most of them couldn't even eat food if they wanted.funken wrote:I was on just under 1/2 a 700ml bottle of whisky a day, and felt no withdrawal symptoms except slight insomnia.
You and me, both. Not everyone is the same. I gave up Dec 2011 - haven't had one since. Suffered about 2 weeks of mildly wanting a cig but nothing since. That's not addiction.funken wrote:I felt non from giving up smoking except mild irritability for a few days. I have not had a cig in 3 years and can't imagine ever having one. I never crave for one.
funken wrote:I smoked weed every day for 20 years and experienced no withdrawal symptoms.
Who told you that? It's not true.funken wrote:Cannabis acts on the same brain receptors and reward pathways as alcohol and nicotine.
I don't know is the short answer. It probably depends on your nature, genetic makeup, how much you took, your natural tolerance, body size, metabolism and so on. I'm not saying Psychology is not a factor because it is. But in the rainbow of addiction you were clearly low down.funken wrote:If my addictions were mild, why could I not stop them for decades? I smoked cigs for 34 years!
Because you rack disciprine.funken wrote:Cannabis acts on the same brain receptors and reward pathways as alcohol and nicotine.cmcpress wrote:Weed is not classed as anything other than psychologically addictive. There is no physical component. Alcohol and Nicotine do, though. I would suggest that if that was the extent of your withdrawal symptoms that you're addictions were mild.funken wrote:You should know from reading Allen Carr that most of these symptoms are created by the mind, and if you follow his method you will not experience them.
I was on just under 1/2 a 700ml bottle of whisky a day, and felt no withdrawal symptoms except slight insomnia.
I felt non from giving up smoking except mild irritability for a few days. I have not had a cig in 3 years and can't imagine ever having one. I never crave for one.
I smoked weed every day for 20 years and experienced no withdrawal symptoms.
Sorry chap, just not rock and roll enough.
If my addictions were mild, why could I not stop them for decades? I smoked cigs for 34 years!
funken wrote:cannabis .... They all act on the same brain receptors and reward pathways in fact. People find them hard to give up, they kill people.
Well the obvious answer is it's anecdotal / apocryphal first of all.funken wrote:So explain why heroin addicts tell him it's been easier to give up heroin than nicotine?cmcpress wrote:Nope - this is the distinction between a mild addiction like Nicotine, and a serious addiction like Heroin. Physical addiction is chemical dependence it's of an entire other order.funken wrote:You should know from reading Allen Carr that most of these symptoms are created by the mind, and if you follow his method you will not experience them.
funken wrote:It is quite a lot. It is about 12 units per day. People who are not used to it can die from little more than that. For someone who does not drink regularly, 30 units would put them in hospital.
The two things don't contradict each other. I don't make any claims to having been a cigarette addict. I read Allen Carr 7/8 years ago approx, tried to give up, didn't. Finally gave up of my own volition in Dec 2011. The biggest factor in me giving up was I stopped socialising with friends who smoked. I attribute the success of my not smoking to that.funken wrote:You said Allen Carr's book did not cure you. Now you say you stopped easily.
Heroin and Weed do not act on exactly the same parts of the brain. Heroin acts on Opioid Receptors.funken wrote:Weed acts on the same bits of the brain as heroin. The physical withdrawal symptoms for heroin are largely psychologically created.