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Overcoming Prescription Drug Addiction: A Guide to Coping and Understanding (Addicus Nonfiction Books)
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The Dual Diagnosis Recovery Sourcebook : A Physical, Mental, and Spiritual Approach to Addiction with an Emotional Disorder
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Addict In The Family: Stories of Loss, Hope, and Recovery.
Addict In The Family: Stories of Loss, Hope, and Recovery.
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Alcohol, Other Drugs and Addictions: A Professional Development Manual for Social Work and the Human Services
Alcohol, Other Drugs and Addictions: A Professional Development Manual for Social Work and the Human Services
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Why do people use drugs?

Why do people opt to use chemical stimulants when they're so bad for you? The reasons of drug addiction are as varied as the amount of drugs that are available for use. There is no one reason for drug addiction just like there is no consistent personality-type of a drug user.
 

People who have a record of drug use or abuse in their families are certainly at higher risk for drug addiction problems. It has been shown time after time that the offspring of alcoholics and drug-dependent persons are far more likely to exhibit addictive leanings than kids of non-addicted parents. This is commonly attributed largely to environmental factors and substitute learning.

The children of alcohol addicted persons or drug addicts see their mothers and fathers running away from from problems abusing artificial stimulants.When they come up against problems themselves they are naturally more likely than their peers to reach for the same crutch.

This is not to say though that genetic reasons are irrelevant. Certainly newborns of addicted mothers can be born with a craving for liquor or narcotics, and many suppose that the 'addictive personality' is something that is etched in the genetic makeup of the abuser.

Sometimes however there is no sad background account behind addiction. Often with an addiction to prescription drugs, the dependent person began taking the medically prescribed drugs because they were overcoming some type of legitimate illness. Over time though they started to feel that they weren't able to do without their drug, and that if they stopped taking their tablets, the pain would recur.

People who have low self-regard are certainly more susceptible to to drug addiction. Such persons may feel they have no control over their lives and will turn to chemical stimulants as a way to cope. They habitually feel they can't satisfy the persons around them so they have to alter themselves in order to fit in. The change is made easier by using artificial stimulants because the artificial stimulants transform them into someone and something that they are not. Stress is often blamed as the number one cause of drug addiction.

Life is taxing for every person. Some of us however are more able to cope with this than other people. Some turn to drugs as an easy way to get over their worries. Once a person starts consuming chemical stimulants to overcome anxiety it can be hard to stop the cycle because the anxieties are still there once the high is gone, so the user feels he or she needs more chemical stimulants to bring extra support. That type of cycle can lead to long-term addiction.

Part of the reason for the pervasiveness of drug addiction is simply because they are so easily accessible. Even for those who don't have any communication with their neighborhood dealers of illicit substances, alcohol and prescription drugs are easy to get hold of and can prove just as effective (and damaging).

So why do persons use drugs? The straightforward answer is that people use artificial stimulants in order to control their moods, but as to why some people need so desperately to control their moods while others manage to cope without drugs, there is no simple answer.

For more information on why people take drugs visit us at http://www.addictiontodrugs.org/drug_addiction.php


 

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