Pubdate: Fri, 24 Dec 2010
Source: Summit Daily News (CO)
Copyright: 2010 Summit Daily News
Contact: http://apps.summitdaily.com/forms/letter/index.php
Website: http://www.summitdaily.com/home.php
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/587
Author: John Fanning

AMERICA THE ADDICTED

A University of Michigan researcher has discovered that a person can 
actually become addicted to cookies. Believe it!

Let's be completely honest with one another, at least during the 
reading of this commentary, and especially as the New Year 
approaches. Have you ever stocked up just a bit more of the sweet 
things for those so called unexpected visitors? Of course, somebody 
has to "finish them up." Have you ever awakened at night, crawled 
quietly out of bed, and tip-toed to the kitchen in search of 
something sweet? I have. How many of you have bought a bag of 
pretzels, potato chips, or Fritos and promised yourself you would 
only eat three, and end up eating the whole bag? I have. After this, 
did you feel rotten about yourself the next day? I have. How many of 
you do not keep certain items in your home because you will eat it 
until it is gone? You know, like ice cream. I have.

How many of you who smoked swore off cigarettes only to return within 
minutes, hours or days? I did, many, many times. How about alcohol? 
Have you tried to quit? I tried many times before I did. I actually 
had no choice. I had to. My choices were very limited - jail, insane 
asylum or death.

I would be remiss if I didn't share with you one of the latest 
studies done on a number of drugs, and more specifically alcohol.

A recent study paid for by Britain's Center for Crime and Justice 
concluded that alcohol is more dangerous than illegal drugs such as 
heroin and crack cocaine. The substances studied, which also included 
ecstasy and marijuana was based on how destructive the drugs are to 
the individual who takes them and to society as a whole. Experts said 
alcohol scored so high because it is so widely used and has such 
devastating consequences on those who consume as well as those around 
the drinker.

Back to the calories and addiction:

Studies have been conducted showing when the brain gets a calorie 
rush there is a physical craving for a fat/sugar mixture similar to 
an opiate drug addition. Some studies suggest an additive personality 
and have profiled aspects of a psychological make-up contributing to 
addiction. More later!

Eat an apple, eat a banana, the experts tell us. Eat some celery 
sticks, carrot sticks or cucumber slices. But, we don't want these 
things. We want our potato chips, pretzels, cookies, Zingers and 
cupcakes. Be honest, have you ever stopped at a donut shop, bought a 
dozen donuts, eaten three on the way home, felt so guilty and scared, 
and threw six in the trash? I haven't, but I know someone who has.

Those of us who are addictive have suffered all the classic symptoms. 
We become filled with remorse. We vow to change our ways. We make 
pledges to have a sweet-free, fat-free day, usually a Monday. But 
unfortunately we ultimately binge.

Remember Nancy Reagan and her "just say no" campaign? It turned out 
those who said "no" were not addicts. I was more likely to say, 
"don't mind if I do, or I'll have another." Or, "do you have a 
match?" Also, in my particular case, "what are we drinking?" 
Unfortunately it is only the non-addicted who are able to just say NO.

We seem addicted to all sorts of things: drugs, alcohol, shoplifting, 
sex, gambling, video games, pornography, prescription drugs, 
chocolate, spending, and even entitlements. I know I have an 
addictive personality. Today, I am one inhale away from a carton, and 
one drink away from a drunk.

Our government has tried unsuccessfully to control our addiction. One 
only has to look at the failure of prohibition, the war on drugs, and 
the continuous war on sugar and fatty foods to realize we are a 
nation of addicts and know very little about substance abuse.

The addictive personality - the question becomes, what aspects of the 
psychological make-up contribute to addiction? A major misconception 
involving addiction, according to researchers, is the idea that 
certain substances are, all by themselves, addictive. Are there 
common threads that weave through all addictions, from hard drugs to 
cigarettes, from alcohol to overeating, from gambling to junk food?

Several noted behavior specialists report significant personality 
factors contributing to addiction. Remember, these factors are the 
extremes. Some of these are all too familiar to me. How about you?

Impulse behaviour, difficulty in delaying gratification, an 
anti-social personality.

A high value of non-conformity.

A sense of heightened stress.

A sense of social alienation.

Insecurity, depression.

I am open to the idea if we can better identify the personality 
factors, they can help us devise better treatment, and can open up 
new strategies to intervene and break the patterns of addiction.

Cookies anyone? Happy New Year!
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom