According to this study, you’re a “Chipper”, you lucky dog.
This may explain why some are so easily addicted while others are not.
According to this study, you’re a “Chipper”, you lucky dog.
This may explain why some are so easily addicted while others are not.
I honestly think that there’s something about individual body chemistry that predisposes some people to be addicted to certain things and not others. For example, I can’t understand why anyone would even want to smoke. But I’m a sugar addict, and the only way to keep from eating about 10 bags of Oreos a day was for me to finally quit, cold turkey. I can literally never have one single bite of anything with sugar of any kind in it (including all artificial sweeteners.) It will set me off into a binge. If sugar was illegal and I hadn’t quit, I would probably steal and kill and whore to get it. To me, it is a drug. Frankly, I think it has some of this effect on everyone, which is why it’s the major component of 8 of the top 10 foods Americans eat, but I doubt too many people have the addiction to it that I have. I’m addicted to exercise, too, but that’s a pretty harmless one. Got to have it every single day!! Don’t try to keep me from my aerobox class!!!
I read an interesting article yesterday that pondered the question of WHY more people aren’t addicted to exercise, since it does mimic the effects of opiates in the brain. The authors concluded that it might be mainly because the opiate effect is delayed, and you really don’t get the behavorial reward in a serious way until you’re pretty hardcore. Unlike smoking.
[FTR–Smoked cigarettes in college; stopped long ago but still smoke the very occasional cigar or pipeful].
I think what got me started was the fact that tobacco was so cheap that I could afford the best. There’s not much of anything that you can afford the best of when you’re a college student, so that was an attraction. I couldn’t afford Dom Perignon champagne, but I could have Dunhill cigarettes and Yenidje pipe tobacco. I enjoyed smoking; it was worth doing for the taste and the feeling of stimilation it provided. But I didn’t have any trouble giving it up; I must be one of those non-addictive types.
The illegal drugs mentioned above I think have the additional lure of forbidden fruit; a certain type of person will think that if something is so strenuously prohibited and prosecuted against it must be inordinately attractive to use.