4.8 • 621 Ratings
🗓️ 9 September 2021
⏱️ 45 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
There are a lot of negative consequences that can come from behavioral addictions. They include everything from financial problems to legal repercussions to health issues. Whether it’s gambling, gaming, sex, or pornography, it’s important to understand why some people are susceptible to certain behaviors. In fact, the same mechanism that influences chemical addiction could be responsible for behavioral addiction as well.
On this episode, Duane speaks with Amanda Giordano, a licensed professional counselor and associate professor at the University of Georgia, who specializes in addiction counseling both in chemical addiction and behavioral addiction. Amanda is the author of a clinical reference book titled A Clinical Guide to Treating Behavioral Addictions.
Today, she imparts her expertise in this field, explaining how the changes in the brain associated with behavioral addictions are actually very similar to the changes associated with chemical addictions.
In other words, instead of becoming addicted to a chemical that originates outside of the body, the body is addicted to the release of its own neurochemicals (dopamine in particular). Once the brain’s reward system is activated, it releases neurotransmitters which can become very difficult for some people to abstain from as they become their primary means of regulating their emotions.
Hence, for some susceptible individuals, a rewarding behavior can become an addiction where there’s a loss of control over that behavior. The behavior is continued despite negative consequences and it becomes compulsive for that individual. They experience cravings or a mental preoccupation with the behavior when they're not engaging in it.
In this episode, you will hear:
Key Quotes:
[04:24] - “There are changes in the brain associated with behavioral addictions that are very similar to changes associated with chemical addictions.”
[06:37] - “Instead of becoming addicted to a chemical that originates outside of the body, we're really becoming addicted to the release of our own neurochemicals.”
[09:29] - “The brain can reset, but it takes time… It takes a little bit of time for the brain to reset and to again, start functioning the way it did prior to the start of the addiction.”
[14:42] - “There are a lot of negative consequences that can come from behavioral addictions, everything from finances to legal repercussions to health issues.”
[17:25] - “The chronic elevation of dopamine tricks the brain into thinking this must be a really important activity and must be necessary for my survival.”
[30:26] - “If we can find alternative, healthier, more adaptive ways to regulate our emotions, then we might not need to turn to some of these problematic behaviors.”
[42:13] - “Isolation, shame, and secrecy are some of the weapons that addiction uses to keep us silent and keep us sick."
Supporting Resources:
Email: [email protected]
Amanda’s blog:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/contributors/amanda-l-giordano-phd-lpc
A Clinical Guide to Treating Behavioral Addictions:
https://www.amazon.com/Clinical-Guide-Treating-Behavioral-Addictions/dp/0826163165
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5):
https://www.amazon.com/Diagnostic-Statistical-Manual-Mental-Disorders/dp/0890425558
Irresistible by Adam Alter:
https://www.amazon.com/Irresistible-Addictive-Technology-Business-Keeping/dp/1594206643
Episode Credits
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Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Addictive Mind podcast. |
0:09.2 | My name is Dwayne Austerlund, and I'm your host, and we are on to another episode. |
0:16.3 | Today, our guest is Amanda Giordano. |
0:19.9 | She is a licensed professional counselor and associate professor at the University of Georgia, |
0:26.5 | and she specializes in addiction counseling. |
0:30.4 | And she is the author of a clinical reference book titled A Clinical Guide to Treating Behavior Addictions, and that is what we're going to talk about |
0:40.6 | today. So Amanda shares her expertise about behavior addictions. We go into the neurobiology, |
0:50.6 | why certain people are more susceptible to behavior addictions, and even what is the difference |
0:57.4 | between a high interest in a behavior and it becoming addictive. So she shares all her expertise |
1:05.5 | in this field, and we really go in depth and talk about it. |
1:16.4 | This episode is a little bit longer than normal, but it was just such a great conversation and so much good information that she was sharing. |
1:20.4 | I just wanted to keep asking her questions. |
1:22.9 | I hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did, and I hope that you get a lot out of it. |
1:29.8 | So with that, let's go ahead and start this episode. |
1:35.9 | Hello, everyone. |
1:37.0 | Welcome to the addicted mind. |
1:39.1 | My guest today is Amanda Giordano and she is the author of the new book, A Clinical Guide to Treating Behavioral |
1:48.3 | Addictions. And that is what we are going to talk about today. Amanda, I'm so excited to |
1:53.6 | have you on the podcast. I have a lot of questions. Yes. Thanks for having me. Yeah, please |
1:58.4 | introduce yourself. Yeah. So my name is Amanda Giordano, and I'm an associate professor at the University of Georgia. |
2:05.9 | And I specialize in addictions counseling. |
2:08.2 | I'm also a licensed professional counselor. |
... |
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