RE 345: The Neuroscience of Addiction Part II
Recovery Elevator
Paul
4.7 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 27 September 2021
⏱️ 52 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Episode 345– The Neuroscience of Addiction Part II
Today we have Stacy Jo, she is 34 years old, from Oregon and took her last drink on March 6, 2020.
Highlights from Paul
Paul wants to know your interest in a alcohol-free Ukulele 101 course. If you are interested please email info@recoveryelevator.com.
Paul provides part 2 of highlights of a podcast with Rich Roll speaking with Dr. Anna Lembke. Rich Roll Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jziP0CEgvOw.
Dr. Lembke talks about how it's a known fact that when we are in our addiction, we can't accurately see the consequences or what's taking place. With abstinence, we can look back and say, OH MY
The interview focuses a lot on dopamine and why addiction has been on the rise for 30 years. Being smart or highly educated doesn't make you immune to addiction, in fact, it might even backfire because you think you know everything. More than 1/2 the world's deaths, under the age of 50, are attributable to addiction. Rates of alcoholism have gone up 50% for those aged 65 and up from the late 90's to today and have gone up 80% in women. Traditionally the rates for alcoholics were 5:1 for men to women. With Millennials, it's now 1:1. There are more burdens on women now than ever.
Dr. Lemke recommends a 30 day dopamine fast. But a huge warning of withdrawals for alcohol and benzodiazepines. How to do this? Well, we've got 345 episodes now on the HOW, but the trick is to go into the pain. Head into the storm (episode 341) and Forgive yourself.
Exact Nature exactnature.com Code: RE20
[12:41] Stacy Jo took her last drink on March 6, 2020. She lives in Eugene, OR. with her partner of 15 years. Her primary hobby is anything that has to do with yarn. She has worked in the restaurant industry for 20 years until the pandemic hit, she recently was just at the University of Oregon.
Around the age of 20, after a breakup and miscarriage, Stacy Jo feels there was a switch in her drinking. That was the same time her service industry career normalized and it all went hand in hand.
In 2018 Stacy Jo started some serious attempts to quit drinking but it wasn't until the beginning of the pandemic in 2020 that she was able to get good footing.
Stacy Jo joined Café RE when she was around 4 months sober and says she did it as a reward for herself.
She says her partner hated her drinking, and that it became a pretty big division between the two of them. Stacy Jo also got a Driving While Ability Impaired (right below a DUI) when she was 28.
She feels like she slept the 1st three months of sobriety. She treated herself like a toddler and allowed herself to sleep and snack.
Stacy Jo is grateful for the pandemic and her restaurant shutting down. It allowed her to get away from the normalcy that is part of the service industry and to have the space to get on solid ground.
She does not get cravings any longer, but says she is not so cocky to say that she won't again.
Odette's Summary
Odette reminds us that change starts with us. Recovery is our responsibility.
Remember you are not alone and together is always better.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Recovery elevator episode three hundred and forty five and I feel like there was always people that were having more of a problem than I was and so it was really hard for me to tell when it kind of became an issue. |
| 0:13.7 | Life is always working in your favor. You can't heal the same environment, you can't sick. |
| 0:29.5 | Welcome to the Recovery elevator podcast. My name is Paul Churchill. Thank you so much for joining us today. On today's episode, we've got Stacey Joe. I love that name. |
| 0:39.1 | She's 34 years old. She's from Oregon and she took her last drink on March 6th, 2020. For some reason, when I read the name Stacey Joe, I thought about Casey and Joe Joe. |
| 0:50.1 | You guys remember that group? That song? What is it? All my life. I'm pretty sure it's all my life. Okay, let's move forward. |
| 0:58.1 | Hey, I've got an idea listeners and I want to gauge interest before creating it. It would be an alcohol-free ukulele 101 course. |
| 1:06.1 | I'm thinking we'd meet once per week for eight to ten weeks. The ukulele is a beautiful instrument that you can learn pretty quick. |
| 1:13.1 | So in this course, you'll learn how to play the ukulele, how to tune it, the chords, some scales and some basic songs. |
| 1:21.1 | We'll also be connecting with others who are quitting drinking and you may find yourself learning an acord and sharing your rock bottom moment in the same session. |
| 1:29.1 | So if you'd seriously be interested in this course, email info at recoveryelevator.com and let us know. |
| 1:36.1 | And if there's enough interest, I'll put this course together. |
| 1:40.1 | Earlier this week, China banned gamers under 18 from playing online video games on school days and will only give them a three hour limit on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays in public holidays. |
| 1:52.1 | Gamers will have to officially register with gaming companies so they can monitor them. So play times over kids. |
| 1:59.1 | And the reason why they are doing this is because the online games have been shown to be quite addictive. |
| 2:04.1 | In fact, South Korea opened up the first online gaming rehab facility a couple years back and many countries have followed suit. |
| 2:12.1 | It turns out, online gaming, where you're in a fantasy world and all your problems in the real world go away, can be quite addictive. |
| 2:19.1 | Does this sound familiar listeners? Well, the same thing happened to me when I drank alcohol. Thankfully, I never got tuned up while playing Call of Duty. |
| 2:27.1 | I imagine that that would have been quite dangerous for me. |
| 2:30.1 | Okay guys, and before we head into our topic today, let's hear from Café Ari. |
| 2:35.1 | For years, I tried to control my drinking on my own, but I always felt alone and like I needed something else. |
| 2:40.1 | When I discovered Café Ari, I realized there were so many people just like me looking for a better life. |
| 2:46.1 | Café Ari is a private, unsearchable Facebook group that provides 24-7 access to a community of people whose goal it is to live a life without alcohol. |
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