The Chemistry of Drug Uses: Why Trauma Increases the Risks with Karen Williams
Date and Time
Wednesday Jun 5, 2024
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM CDT
June 5th 12:00-1:30 pm
Location
Virtual via Zoom
Fees/Admission
$10 per person
Contact Information
Caelan Sauberan
Staff@thrivingfamiliesalliance.org
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Description
When we are talking about drugs, we are talking about “external psychoactive chemicals”, i.e., substances (legal/illegal) we take into our bodies to change/alter our perceptions, moods, consciousness, cognition, and/or our behavior. We usually take external chemicals because we are seeking is relief from physical or psychological discomfort/distress/pain. Trauma throws us “off-balance” and into a state of discomfort/distress/pain, and we want relief immediately. If we do not have a pain-relieving habit - - something we can do automatically without thinking about it – we are more likely to “take something” that gives us immediate relief. All psychoactive drugs - - whether acquired off the street or prescribed - - only work because they match one or more of our bodies' own nerve receptors for our own “internal psychoactive bio-chemicals” - - the chemicals we make inside our bodies. The problem is that most of us know nothing about our basic neurochemistry – our brain chemistry - - or that there are ways to increase our internal doses of our own psychoactive bio-chemicals, so we want/need less – or none - - of these external psychoactive chemicals. This is called practical science.