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Cynthia M's avatar

Your last paragraph is the most telling of all.

The rise in dopamine is the key. I learned early on that sweet foods did it for me. They do nothing for my husband. I can drink wine and not have any rise in dopamine or desire for more. Why?

Avoiding sugar and overeating in general are just about impossible to overcome long-term if you learned early in life to self medicate in that way. I was so sensitive to hurt feelings and rejection as a child that I had to find a way to alleviate that deep pain. Desserts were readily available and tasted really good.

A number of times I have controlled overeating sweets for significant periods, but eventually the need for overeating sugar becomes unbearable, and bingeing returns with a vengeance. It is ultimately my way to cope with life, good and bad. It makes happy times happier, hard times better, and daily life manageable.

I'm convinced that psychological addiction is more difficult to overcome in the long term than physical addiction. It's a heavy cross to bear.

Thanks for writing about this difficult issue.

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Amy Sukwan's avatar

This was beautifully written and so true. My sister in law died of a heroin/fentanyl overdose in 2016. She'd been prescribed some painkillers following on from a back injury in a car accident. I was so young and naive and into holistic medicine that I was always suggesting this or that instead to get her off of the pills. I thought it was like a magic switch that could make it go away. I still remember her telling me one day "I just wish you could step inside my body for one minute so you could understand how much pain I'm in." My first husband likewise struggled with pain and most commonly self medicated with alcohol for it. Keeping on the move with a constant change of environment seemed to work best for him. It's in all of us and I'm forever in gratitude for my good health, but I see how lacking in empathy I was at the time. We always judge harshly the bad habits we don't have...

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