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Duncanpup

(13,689 posts)
Thu Oct 19, 2023, 06:07 AM Oct 2023

This message was self-deleted by its author

This message was self-deleted by its author (Duncanpup) on Fri Oct 20, 2023, 12:37 AM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.

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This message was self-deleted by its author (Original Post) Duncanpup Oct 2023 OP
Here's a hug for you, dear Duncanpup. democrank Oct 2023 #1
That's interesting! viva la Oct 2023 #2
Oh, those cravings are physiological, all right. ShazzieB Oct 2023 #3

democrank

(11,250 posts)
1. Here's a hug for you, dear Duncanpup.
Thu Oct 19, 2023, 06:34 AM
Oct 2023

Keep trying……5 minutes, 1 hour, a half day. A zillion people care about you and I’m one of them.

viva la

(3,775 posts)
2. That's interesting!
Thu Oct 19, 2023, 06:37 AM
Oct 2023

I'm glad this is helpful. The efficacy of this drug suggests that the cravings of addiction really are physiological or neurological.... not some moral weakness.

In Europe, BTW, naltraxone in low doses is used to treat a neurological condition like MS.

ShazzieB

(18,670 posts)
3. Oh, those cravings are physiological, all right.
Thu Oct 19, 2023, 03:01 PM
Oct 2023

I've read that when a person becomes addicted to something, the substance in question actually hijacks the pleasure centers of the brain, such that the addictive substance becomes the person's main, if not only, source of pleasure.

If a person stays sober long enough, the brain can gradually rewire itself to where it's possible to feel pleasure "normally," but the cravings can become incredibly strong in the meantime. And every time someone "falls off the wagon," the process has to start all over again. I suspect that's why relapses are so common and why there are so many people who have a really hard time achieving long term sobriety.

That is my admittedly limited layperson's understanding of the matter, but it makes a lot of sense to me. I know even less about naltrexone, but it sounds like the drug may be helping with the rewiring of the pleasure centers, providing something that allows the brain to function more notmally without the drug of choice sooner than it would be able to otherwise, or both. Or maybe something else altogether, but whatever it is, it works, and it sounds like something close to a miracle to me.

I wish it had come along in time for my alcoholic dad. He found AA to be helpful and was on the wagon most of the time while I was growing up, but every so often life would get to be a little too much, he'd succumb to the siren call of a frosty class of beer, and boom, there he was in relapse land. After which he would beat himself up for his "lack of self control."

I'll bet naltrexone could have helped him a lot. It's too late for him, but I'm glad it's there for alcoholics and other addicts now, and I hope it gets wider and wider use, because it sounds amazing.

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