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Index Page » Health & Hygiene » Smoking Control
 

Quitting Smoking Hijacked By The Nucleus Accumbens

 

The what? Let's take something easier - the dorsal striatum, or locus coeruleus. Still gobbledygook? Not to medical specialists.

If you think quitting smoking is difficult, think of it as a chemical reaction to certain stimuli, that's all. The nucleus accumbens is the name given to part of your brain's pleasure centre where dopamine is produced. Dopamine creates that feel-good mood - simple as that.

Here's a story of a no-good nicotine dragon

He's hiding in the tobacco. Your cigarette is lit. Fire! nicotine dragon comes alive and hitches on to the tiny particles of tar in the inhaled smoke. Down and around he goes, sucked into your airways, then effortlessly slithers into your bloodstream and zooms to your brain about 7 seconds later. Nicotine dragon gets off at the nucleus accumbens and hails a passing receptor cell and hops aboard, flicks a switch to let out happy little neurotransmitters, particularly dopamines. These molecules rush around for about 30 minutes or so, having a bit of a party and making you feel warm and fuzzy, then they get bored and go back to sleep, leaving you with the bill. So then you buy another round because you liked that party

Some of your other party pals had a ho hum sort of time, and some an even better time. Their nucleus accumbens didn't have any or many receptor cells to attract any nicotine dragons, or on the other hand, they sent their dragons to latch on to receptors in their dorsal striatum, which made them feel good in other ways.

Your hippocampus will also have been active. That's your memory center, and it works hard to remind you of all the agreeable memories associated with smoking. And when quitting smoking, your locus coeruleus, an alarm centre of the brain, notices a shortage of its favorite drug and sets off, well, an alarm, chemically, to go and get a fix quick smart.

Remember the dorsal striatum? It's part of the brain region associated with motivation. This means it produces neurotransmitters such as dopamine in response to the emotional triggers of smoking, rather than the nicotine trigger. So your other party buddies - and maybe you too - tried to get their kicks by subconscious associations with smoking andmaybe being with friends, having a break, soothing angry feelings, loneliness, boredomor even just having a coffee. These ingrained habits are what make you a smoker in the psychological sense.

This party life is weary after a while. Up and down, high and low, lots of time, energy and money to go where up and down again - a prisoner.

What to do? You can't think of anything worse than a day without smoking. Apart from two days without smoking. You'll just have to make you own party arrangements when quitting smoking, that's all.

Start off with those little dopamines. Make them yourself by exercising. It can sometimes take a few days of getting stuck into exercise before the brain clicks in and revs up those little critters, and from then on it's high, high all the way. You've heard of "runners high," and now you can have it too, with any exercise from cycling to walking.

Meditation or some deep reflective time is another proven way to wake up those brain pleasure centers. There again it can take a bit of practice to go really deeply "into yourself", but it's such a fantastic feeling - thanks to dopamine and those other neurotransmitters your brain produces.

Laughing, love, friendship, peace, chocolate, fun, being creative, excitement, giving and sharing will all give your nucleus accumbens or dorsal striatum a buzz. You've just forgotten or neglected how good life can make you feel.

Fill up your previous smoking time with other interests, walk by the sea, go to a new night class. Occupy your hands with healthy snacks or a craft, stress toy, puzzles and so on. Successfully quitting smoking permanently, simply means putting new habits and pleasurable memories into your brain.

Concentrate and keep shifting your focus on the new pleasures of quitting smoking and how good it feels and how much better your future is, rather than on any temporary feelings your old smoking habit gave you. After a few weeks your new pleasurable feelings will now be programmed into your sub-conscious and you will safely think and act as a non-smoker.

You're not going to let a few odd sounding brain parts get the better of you are you?

Author: Megan Carter
 
Author Bio:

Megan Carter

Megan Carter has spent over 12 years helping smokers quit their habit. She has enjoyed witnessing many thousands of grateful former smokers obtain dramatic relief and a new free life.

The knowledge Megan gained from originally running and facilitating live courses, led her to develop her own website and offer worldwide, the most up-to-date method to quit smoking. Her Quit for Good Program is a hard-hitting, non drug approach and involves dealing with the positive rather than the negative aspects of quitting, behavior modification, cognitive therapy, aversion techniques and a complete guide to the physical, emotional and habitual side of tobacco addiction.

She has also written and continues to produce a number of informative and unique resources to help ex-smokers stay happy and enjoy the ride, including such topics as; weight, staying smoke-free, occupying hands, conversation starters, pregnancy, and helping someone else to quit.

Megan gets immense satisfaction out of taking the fear away from smokers who are faced with being banned left, right and center. It's a new era for smokers and she shows how it can be turned into a life-saving opportunity.

Megan has a wealth of smoking cessation experience, plus she welcomes new enquiries about providing exclusive articles and Q & A feedback information, and running local workshops.

This article can be searched using: stop smoking, effects of smoking, no smoking, smoking facts, smoking cessation, facts about smoking
 
 
 

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