16 min

E99: Why We Can Never Drink Again (Neuroplasticity and Permanent Changes‪)‬ Sober Powered

    • Mental Health

Gill discusses neuroplasticity. There’s an invisible line that we all cross, which marks the transition from social drinking into problematic drinking. The time it takes for you to cross the line depends on your genetics, how vulnerable your brain is to alcohol-induced changes, your life circumstances, how young you begin drinking, and more. Alcohol damages and changes our brains when we drink heavily for extended periods of time. Pathways are carved into the brain as we train our brains to rely on alcohol to socialize, relax, feel happy, or deal with hard times. In this episode she explains how alcohol changes the brain, why these changes are permanent, and how this influences relapse. She has some interesting studies to tell you about that looked at animal models of relapse after months of sobriety and how alcohol and other drugs encourage our reward system to have even more plasticity.

What to listen to next:
E46: Neuroplasticity Helps us Recover
E97: Why We Keep Believing it’ll be Different this Time
E62: Dopamine Deep Dive
E91: Do You Want to be Sober or Do You Want to Drink Without the Consequences?
E81: Why We Drink: Social Drinkers vs Problem Drinkers

Resources I offer:

Membership: Living a Sober Powered Life https://www.soberpowered.com/membership


Weekly emails on Thursdays where I explain the latest episode in more detail, share images to help you understand the concepts, share announcements, interviews, writing, discount codes and more. https://view.flodesk.com/pages/6107260617e156c4839768b5


Free resources https://www.soberpowered.com/free


 
Thank you for supporting this show by supporting my sponsors. Learn more:
https://www.soberpowered.com/sponsors
 
If you enjoyed this episode please consider buying me a coffee to support my work https://www.buymeacoffee.com/soberpowered
Sources are posted on my website
Disclaimer: all of the information described in this podcast is my interpretation of the research combined with my opinion. This is not medical advice.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Gill discusses neuroplasticity. There’s an invisible line that we all cross, which marks the transition from social drinking into problematic drinking. The time it takes for you to cross the line depends on your genetics, how vulnerable your brain is to alcohol-induced changes, your life circumstances, how young you begin drinking, and more. Alcohol damages and changes our brains when we drink heavily for extended periods of time. Pathways are carved into the brain as we train our brains to rely on alcohol to socialize, relax, feel happy, or deal with hard times. In this episode she explains how alcohol changes the brain, why these changes are permanent, and how this influences relapse. She has some interesting studies to tell you about that looked at animal models of relapse after months of sobriety and how alcohol and other drugs encourage our reward system to have even more plasticity.

What to listen to next:
E46: Neuroplasticity Helps us Recover
E97: Why We Keep Believing it’ll be Different this Time
E62: Dopamine Deep Dive
E91: Do You Want to be Sober or Do You Want to Drink Without the Consequences?
E81: Why We Drink: Social Drinkers vs Problem Drinkers

Resources I offer:

Membership: Living a Sober Powered Life https://www.soberpowered.com/membership


Weekly emails on Thursdays where I explain the latest episode in more detail, share images to help you understand the concepts, share announcements, interviews, writing, discount codes and more. https://view.flodesk.com/pages/6107260617e156c4839768b5


Free resources https://www.soberpowered.com/free


 
Thank you for supporting this show by supporting my sponsors. Learn more:
https://www.soberpowered.com/sponsors
 
If you enjoyed this episode please consider buying me a coffee to support my work https://www.buymeacoffee.com/soberpowered
Sources are posted on my website
Disclaimer: all of the information described in this podcast is my interpretation of the research combined with my opinion. This is not medical advice.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

16 min