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BridgeTheGap

(3,615 posts)
Thu Jun 21, 2012, 08:28 AM Jun 2012

Why Our Brains Are Prone to Addiction -- A Neuroscientist Explains

Memoirs of an Addicted Brain may be the most original and illuminating addiction memoir since Thomas De Quincey's seminal Confessions of an Opium Eater. What makes it such a standout from the genre's overflow of self-indulgent mediocrities isn’t merely its supple intelligence and subtle style but the unique perspective of the author. From the age of 15 until his recovery at 30, Marc Lewis spent most of his waking life under the influence of every drug he could get his hands on, developing an extreme addiction that cost him everything but his life. Once clean, he found his vocation as a neuroscientist, focusing on the drug-based brain changes driving cravings and relapse.

Lewis’ twin expertise as a longtime addict and a brain scientist enabled him to produce a memoir mapping, in remarkably lucid and vivid detail, entirely new ground. Weaving together his objective accounts of drugs' effects on the brain with descriptions of his mind's subjective experience, he brings to light how the very shape of intoxication on one substance or another provides mirrors the shape of the specific chemical reactions taking place inside your skull.

These pioneering observations fit effortlessly into the overall narrative, which is as over-the-top suspenseful as David Carr’s classic The Night of the Gun. From alienated adolescent introduced to alcohol and marijuana in a Machiavellian prep school, Lewis makes the leap to college at Berkeley in 1968 at the peak of psychedelia; never one to moderate, he gobbles hallucinogens by the handful and then moves on to shooting heroin, barely escaping death by OD.

His early 20s find him backpacking through Southern Asia, sniffing nitrous oxide in the jungle, buying heroin hot off the factory line and paying nightly visits to opium dens (read excerpt). Back home in Toronto, he marries badly and begins stealing opiates from the science labs and medical centers where he is earning a PhD in psychology. Easily outfoxing the experts he works with, he has years in which to perfect his criminality and deepen his addiction until he is busted and sentenced to recovery. But as his marriage unravels, he relapses, injecting oxycodone and methamphetamine on a daily basis while working at a psychiatric hospital.

http://www.alternet.org/story/155658/why_our_brains_are_prone_to_addiction_--_a_neuroscientist_explains?akid=8963.260941.vW-jv-&rd=1&t=8

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Why Our Brains Are Prone to Addiction -- A Neuroscientist Explains (Original Post) BridgeTheGap Jun 2012 OP
It's a great book, I've read it. K&R LiberalLoner Jun 2012 #1
Wow Stargazer09 Jun 2012 #2
Well it certainly describes his experience Warpy Jun 2012 #3

Stargazer09

(2,132 posts)
2. Wow
Thu Jun 21, 2012, 08:47 AM
Jun 2012

I need to read that! Anyone who goes from drug addict to scientist deserves as wide an audience as possible.

Warpy

(111,277 posts)
3. Well it certainly describes his experience
Thu Jun 21, 2012, 12:12 PM
Jun 2012

but I sincerely doubt we can scale it up to the rest of the human race.

Lewis would have done better to study those of us who tried all that shit and didn't get addicted, who walked away from it without a struggle, something he was incapable of.

I shoved morphine into IVs for years. Most people wanted that stuff out of their heads within three days, even if they were still in significant pain.

Until and unless they get interested in the boring, normal brain, capable of dependence but not addiction, they won't begin to understand the phenomenon.

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