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Originally Posted by Forthesevenlakes
I've often wondered about this same thing. For example, would a person who does not naturally produce enough endorphins, become more productive when they find opiates? For the first time in their life they'd feel "normal" and capable of taking on the world. Or, is this good ol' SWIM whispering justifications for drug use into my ear? Who can say? Itd be interesting to check post recovery dopamine levels in former cocaine addicts, endorphins in opiate users, etc. to see if these things ever get to "normal" levels after drug use, too.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sklander
This is an incredibly interesting subject that SWIM ponders a lot. Some people just simpy don't start out with the base chemicals to do what they need to do and need a boost, whther that boost be amphetamines, opiets, benzos, or weed, that person needs that substance to be regular like the rest of it us. These peolpl are addicts. They're simply pople ith enough courage to come forward and say, "I need something to get normal, I know that what I am doing is not correct."
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SWIM finds the posts in this thread and others very interesting. What prompted SWIM to reply was the statement Sklander made. SWIM believes this to be true, because he spent most of his life (aware of this at a very young age) wondering why he didn't seem to be able to think, feel, process like other people seemed to. As if something was missing. So, SWIM just did the best he could with what he had. SWIM was nearing his middle-age when finally he talked to a doctor that said, "You, SWIM are clinically depressed!" SWIM replied, "It can't be true! I have been tested, evaluated, poked and prodded many times before, and was told, that his brain chemicals were normal!" But, SWIM's doctor kept urging that he try anti-depressant therapy, so SWIM, did. After about three-weeks, SWIM realized that he had been living life in a major depression. Since SWIM remembers feeling this way since early childhood, he feels it is something he was born with, like a birth defect. It is hard for people who haven't experienced life this way to accept this premise. If SWIM could have made it different without any help, he would have. Addiction/dependency is more of a risk for some people than others, just merely saying, I won't do this anymore is not enough. Sometimes the desire to stop is not enough, essential, but help is needed.
Just MHO