Tag

Prefrontal Cortex

3 episodes tagged "Prefrontal Cortex".

How Addiction Made Me Ignore Everything
1:13
Addiction & Recovery

How Addiction Made Me Ignore Everything

🔥 Relapse Isn’t Random. It’s Brain Science Breaking Down. Let’s be clear—your brain doesn’t just accidentally relapse. It forgets. It rewrites the story. It deletes the memory of the chaos: The blackout The broken relationships The jail cell The shame And suddenly, all it remembers is that false promise of relief. That’s not nostalgia—that’s neurological sabotage. 🧠 A 2018 study in Frontiers in Psychiatry found that relapse is often caused by a triple-threat combo: Chronic stress Environmental cues Weakened prefrontal cortex activity (aka the adult part of your brain that’s supposed to say, “Hey, dumbass—put the bottle down.”) But when cortisol spikes and life starts swinging, that inner adult gets hijacked. You're not “making a choice”—you’re reacting. You’re looking for the next escape, and your brain is handing you a grenade with a smile. That’s the definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over, expecting different results. Sound familiar? Here’s your wake-up call: Relapse is not weakness. It’s a malfunction of the system. And systems can be rebuilt.

Alcohol Recovery Understanding Your Body's Recalibration Process
1:22
Addiction & Recovery

Alcohol Recovery Understanding Your Body's Recalibration Process

🧠 “Your Brain in Early Sobriety: Recalibration, Impulse, and Oversharing” | Recovery Psychology Short When your body becomes physically and mentally dependent on a substance, sobriety isn’t just a decision—it’s a neurological battle. Suddenly, all the emotions, trauma, and stressors you numbed with alcohol or drugs? They’re back. Raw. Unfiltered. Undeniable. And now you have nothing to mute them. Your body enters what I call the recalibration phase. That can last up to 2 years. Yes—years. During this time: 🧠 Your prefrontal cortex—your decision-making center—is sluggish. 🔔 Your amygdala—the emotional panic alarm—is hyperactive. You ignored the part of your brain that said, “Slow down,” and instead lived in survival mode. That’s not weakness—that’s adaptation. But now, you’ve got to retrain your system. This is why you're impulsive. Why you overshare. Why your emotions feel like they’re on a hair-trigger. So stop beating yourself up. You're not failing—you’re healing. And this is where accountability comes in. Folks further down the recovery road can look at you and say: “Chill the F out. You’re not crazy. You’re recalibrating.” And in group settings like AA or NA, sharing is encouraged—but as we’ve said repeatedly, there's a line. Know the difference between processing and performing. You’re allowed to speak—just don’t let your amygdala grab the mic every time.

Social Media Oversharing Validation & the Amygdala's Role
1:27
Addiction & Recovery

Social Media Oversharing Validation & the Amygdala's Role

⚠️ “Your Brain Is Oversharing to Survive” | Panic Responses & Oversharing Short Let’s break this down: oversharing isn’t just bad judgment—it’s a survival response. It’s your brain panicking. It’s evolutionary. You’re not “crazy”—you’re wired for connection at all costs. 🧠 When you’re anxious, your prefrontal cortex (the part of your brain that filters TMI like, “maybe don’t tell the Uber driver about your sex life”) goes offline. Then your amygdala—your emotional panic button—takes the wheel. And trust me, when the amygdala’s driving, you’re not looking for truth—you’re begging for safety. And then we add…