by Ram
Red by Melina Meza |
Furthermore, with addictions, the body and the mind “wire in” the continuous repetitive task by incorporating it as a “normal” function. This creates the conditions of tolerance and withdrawal. When the addiction is to smoking or drug abuse, the body continually adapts to the substance and requires increasingly larger doses to achieve the distinctive effects. This is “tolerance” On the other hand, “withdrawal” refers to physical and psychological symptoms that arise when reducing or abstaining from the addictive behavior on which the body has become dependent. Withdrawal symptoms kick in due to biochemical and hormonal imbalances due to the lack of the addictive behavior. Thus, an addictive behavior may be associated with an immediate gratification but is also characterized by a delayed harmful effect (short-term reward versus long-term penalty).
The consequences of an addictive behavior on the body and brain include a large range of injuries, health problems, brain damage, and birth defects. Substance abuse and dependence trigger negative outcomes including injuries, illnesses, accidents, domestic violence, disabilities, medical problems and death. Treatment options include self-help groups, detoxification-inducing drugs to combat addiction, antibody therapy, vaccine therapy, and deep brain stimulation among others. However, true recovery is a very long journey. Some individuals will remain steadfast, some will relapse, and some will always be “chronic relapsers.”
But now there’s the good news that rehabilitation therapies that use yoga and meditation are likely to have a higher success rate when it comes to helping overcome addiction and relapse. The practice of yoga and meditation exert positive influence on addictive behaviors and helps addicts to understand their true nature. In addition, yoga and meditation helps addicts develop a detached awareness of thoughts since any attachment to them becomes the cause for suffering. Individuals with an addictive behavior and who have a regular practice of yoga and meditation have less blame and disrespect toward themselves and exhibit more respectful, caring, and loving behaviors.
Yoga and meditation also appear to be beneficial in specific type of eating disorders that constitute addiction as they change the addict’s perspective of their own disturbing personalities. In one such study, Exploring the therapeutic effects of yoga and its ability to increase quality of life, female yoga practitioners not only exhibited positive feelings and sense of well-being but they also reported less self objectification, greater satisfaction with their body images and reduced messy eating attitudes compared to non-yoga practitioners. Similarly in a recently published paper A computational hypothesis for allostasis: delineation of substance dependence, conventional therapies, and alternative treatments, a group of scientists used a computational model of addiction, a literature review and an in silico experiment to suggest that rehabilitation strategies that include yoga and meditation with drug and behavior therapies are more helpful than all other methods to help people overcome addiction. The authors argue that a combination therapy that include yoga and meditation alter the reward-anti-reward states of the addict’s neural network system, which in turn help to provide higher cessation rates and lower relapse rates. In addition to overcoming addiction, yoga and meditation also stimulate the three aspects of healthy aging namely: decreased morbidity, independence and mental equilibrium or equanimity (see Meditation: Effects on Gene Expression). What a cheap but effective method to empower ourselves. A perfect New Year’s resolution is to incorporate yoga and meditation into our lives! Don’t you agree?
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