Carlston said:
Dirty Apple said:
It's been a long held annoyance of mine that people will attach the word addiction to anything. I refuse to refer to anything that doesn't bear an adverse biological dependance as an addiction. Cocaine, nicotine, alcohol, perscription drugs, these are legitimate addictions. Gambling, television, and, of course, gaming aren't addictions, they're more in line Obsesive/Compulsive disorders. Show me one case where an individual has suffered withdrawal symptoms from lack of gambling, and I'll reconsider my position. Until then, it's only an addiction if there are negative physical aspects to its long term use and eventual removal.
This annoyance also applies to those who insist on re-branding addictions as diseases.
Last time I checked, one can't simply starve out lymphoma and hepatitis. As terribly awful as heroine withdrawal must be, it is survivable. I would love to be in the room and hear the self perscribing hop-head tell the Multiple Scelrosis patient that they belong in the same group.
Both of theses recent movements are just retconned attempts at buying into a higher funding level, and I think it's pathetic.
It's called Ican'tbeAccountableForMyOwnActionsitis.
Gambling lures people in with the promise of greed. But It is not something that you can't stop because it changes the chemicals in your brain...
sure it can, dopamine is the basis of almost all addictions. If you win a 5000 dollar jackpot, your body would no doubt flood you with so much dopamine that you'd feel higher then if you had just freebased.
Your brain remembers that feeling, and wants to feel it again, so you gamble, and lose, and then your dopamine lowers, making you depressed. And everytime you lose, you know that if you try again, you just might have that magical orgasmic experience of winning 5000 dollars or even more next time, so you keep gambling, even if it hurts you.
Almost all addictions (and all habits even - that's really no different then an addiction) are caused by a dopamine imbalance.. Sure, some chemicals can assist or make an addiction stronger, forming addictions and habits is central to the way the human brain works.