Factually! with Adam Conover - The Science of Addiction with Judith Grisel (Re-Release)
Episode Date: August 25, 2021This week on Factually we're re-releasing one of our favorite episodes, in which Adam and renowned behavioral neuroscientist Judith Grisel discuss their battles with addiction, the neuroscien...ce of how substance dependence works in the brain, and how the brain changes after recovery. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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You know, I got to confess, I have always been a sucker for Japanese treats.
I love going down a little Tokyo, heading to a convenience store,
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Hello and welcome to Factually, I'm Adam Conover.
It's so wonderful to have you join me once again
as I talk to an amazing expert about all the incredible things that they know that I don't
know and that you don't know and to have both of our minds be blown together. We're going to have
a blast. Thank you for being here. Now, this episode is a little bit different. For the past
month or so, I have been hard at work filming my new Netflix show. It's called The G Word. It's
going to be all about how the
U.S. government works, all of its promises and perils and pitfalls. It's going to be coming out
on Netflix. We do not have a release date yet, but we are finally shooting it after being paused for
over a year from COVID. And I'm very, very excited about it. Can't wait for you to see it. However,
that means that we were so busy shooting, we actually were not able to
record a new episode for this week. And so instead, we are going to be rerunning one of my very
favorite episodes from the past. I know what you're saying, Adam, it's a rerun. But come on,
we've been on the air here on the internet, on the internet air for almost two years. And we've had
so many incredible episodes. And I think a lot of you folks haven't
heard every single episode in our catalog. And so this is a good time to, you know, dip back in and
think once again about, re-appreciate one of the amazing folks I've talked to. All right,
so let's just get right to it. We are going to be presenting for you this week,
my interview with Judith Grizzell. This was an incredible interview about addiction,
my interview with Judith Grizzell.
This was an incredible interview about addiction,
about her journey with addiction,
my own journey with drinking, with quitting drinking,
the neurological background of addiction,
one of the most difficult topics in human society,
one of the most complex and difficult to understand,
and one that has really impacted both of us personally. It was a really powerful episode for that reason.
I thought a lot about my own experience. I heard from a lot of you who wrote in and wrote about your experiences as
well. And it's one of my favorite episodes we've ever done. So if you haven't heard it, I very much
hope you enjoy listening to it. If you have heard it, I hope you enjoy dipping into it again,
because there's always, I mean, I re-listened to it again for this release, and I discovered new
things upon listening to it a second time.
So without further ado, let's get into it.
She's also the author of a book called Never Enough, The Experience of Addiction.
And you can find that, by the way, at our special bookshop at factuallypod.com slash books.
And when you buy your book there, you will be supporting not just this show, but also your local bookstore.
Without further ado, let's get to my interview with Judith Griselle.
Judy, thank you so much for being on the show.
Glad to be here.
So you, as I mentioned in the intro, you had your own personal experience with addiction. If you
don't mind, I'd love it if you shared some of that story with us and sort of describe how that
brought you to your work studying addiction as a neuroscientist.
brought you to your work studying addiction as a neuroscientist.
Sure. I grew up in a pretty typical family, I think, but was maybe a little more inclined to try new things than average, perhaps. So I got my first good drink at around 13,
and I absolutely loved it. It changed the trajectory of my whole life.
and I absolutely loved it. It changed the trajectory of my whole life. And for about the next 10 years, I never said no to another taste of alcohol or any other mind-altering drug.
And as a result of that, by the time I was 23, I was homeless. I'd been kicked out of three schools.
I contracted hepatitis C from sharing dirty needles. And I'd been kicked out of three schools. I contracted hepatitis C from sharing
dirty needles. And I'd lost the respect of everybody I knew, including myself.
So I ended up in treatment, which I thought at the time was going to be like a spa because it
was in the 1980s and I didn't know anything about drug treatment. But they said I had a disease and
that if I wanted to live, which I wasn't so sure about, but if I wanted to, I needed to stop using.
And I thought actually that curing addiction would be easier than not picking up for the rest of my life.
So that's how I ended up, by persistence, getting into graduate school, obtaining a PhD, studying the brain to try to understand addiction.
And it took about 10 or 12 years before it began to dawn on me
that it wasn't so easy to cure.
But then, you know, I didn't know what else to do.
But your thought was literally,
oh man, it's going to be hard staying clean through willpower or whatever,
so I want to find a cure instead.
That was your actual motivation? Yeah. I mean, it seemed impossible to stay clean
for the rest of my life. I was so young and I really thought at the time,
why couldn't this happen to me when I'm 40 and my life is already over or something,
which is funny because I'm 56 now. But at the time time it seemed like, forget it, I had so much partying
left to do. And I just couldn't imagine wanting to live without using, I thought, am I going to
have to knit or bowl? I mean, what do people do who aren't spending all their time getting drugs
and hiding them? So yeah, it seemed relatively trivial to cure it, which is arrogant and ignorant.
That's a young person's way of looking at the world. That's a good sort of optimism to have,
I suppose.
Well, it's optimism, but it's also reflecting, I think, the perseverance and the tenacity of
most addicts. So, you know, don't tell me there's no something
to be found. You know, I'm sure I can come up with it, even if I have to hitchhike to
Houston, you know? And how do you feel now being 56, you know, that when you were 20,
23, having that feeling of, oh, it's going to be so hard to stay clean for the rest of my life.
Do you have a different
relationship with that idea now? Oh my gosh, do I ever. It's really funny because I thought
life was just this boring thing to be gotten through without enhancing. And I have not been
bored. Literally, I have not been bored in probably 30 years I have such a
full rich life right now that it's it would sound like I was bragging if I
went through it but but I was completely wrong I was just completely wrong
because at the end of my using it was almost like living in a closet you know
all I did was worry about getting stuff and then having enough of it and
then hiding that I was using and then getting more stuff and recovering from that. I mean, it was
sort of like living in a small closet. It was just me and my misery that I was trying to escape
less and less successfully, it seemed, every day. And now, you know, it's sort of like a big adventure. I feel like I have, and, you know, not just because I'm talking to you, which is fun, but just there's a lot of wonderful stuff to experience in the world, I think. And one of the ironies, I think, of regular drug use is that it seems at first like
it's enhancing things, but pretty soon it's actually diminishing them. And I think one of
the questions, you know, I wonder if we could somehow do this calculus across the world,
but if we figured out how much is it benefiting individuals and all of us, and how much is it taking from individuals and everybody,
I have a feeling it would come out not in our favor, the way we're medicating so much away.
But it's such a, you're correct that the feeling while you're using is that it is enhancing. I mean,
I have a very different experience with
addiction, but I do consider myself to have been addicted to smoking for many years. And I just
quit drinking in the last year, as I mentioned in the intro. And my feeling with both of those
things, I relate so powerfully to what you said a little bit earlier about that thought when I was
using those substances, I would think,
how do people enjoy life without doing this? Like, if you're not smoking, life must be bad,
right? They're not enjoying what I'm enjoying out of it. And in the back of my mind with smoking,
I think I knew that that wasn't true. And when I finally quit smoking, I had that realization of,
oh, the way that I feel, the way I used to feel just after having a cigarette,
that's actually how everybody else feels all the time. That's like their baseline state.
And so that was easier to figure out about smoking. It took me an extra 10 years to learn
that about drinking. And it was the exact same lesson when I finally quit. I literally up until about
a year and a half ago thought, well, everyone who isn't drinking at the party or every comic who
isn't drinking right before they go up on stage and my own world of standup comedy, those people
are having less fun than me. And that's why I'm doing it. And now I know that that was wrong.
And so it's so interesting you say, yeah, if we were to actually measure
whether it's bringing us joy or misery, it would probably be misery, except that while we're using
it, we're like incapable of seeing that. Well, we're incapable of seeing it, but I bet most
smokers could relate to this. The best cigarette of the day is always the first one. And that one
is kind of fun and enjoyable because the brain is kind of reset a little bit overnight.
But the 10th or the 15th cigarette of the day is really smoked only to avoid the misery of not smoking it.
And it's the same with alcohol. You know, initially it makes us feel relaxed and feel some pleasure.
But really regular drinkers are drinking because if they don't drink, sort of like I described about myself, then it feels like life is bleak and there's a lot of anxiety and tension.
You can't have any fun.
I remember thinking, you know, how am I going to kiss somebody?
How am I going to dance?
How am I going to, you know, go to a concert if I'm not bloated? And in fact, it's kind of a myth
because it makes it so that without drinking, there is this, you kind of fall into a hole and
drinking just brings you up to normal, like you say.
Yeah. I also had that same thought. I mean, again, I think we had probably different relationships with alcohol in many ways, but I had that association with, well, that's how I relax at
the end of the day. I've been working hard all day long and having a drink is how I unwind.
And if I don't have that drink, I won't be able to unwind because that's what it's doing for me. And now I unwind just as well. And in fact, a little bit better.
A little bit better is the key thing because the brain adapts to your regular using so that now
it's tense and anxious and the alcohol only serves to bring you to the baseline. But you're right that in the long
run, it just perpetuates its own habit, you know? Well, tell me about, you said the first time you
had a drink, it felt you loved it. What was it about it that gave it that reaction for you?
that reaction for you? Yeah, you know, I don't know if I romanticize it. I know it sounds like I do, but I was 13. I was pretty, from the outside, everything looked great. But I think inside,
I was as insecure and anxious as a typical 13-year-old girl anyway, and maybe more. But we were in the basement of my friend's house,
and our parents had quite a stock, and we found a bottle of Gallo wine, a gallon of it.
And I don't think it was particularly wonderful wine, but-
No, it definitely wasn't. A gallon of Gallo wine, I'm sure it was not delicious.
It definitely wasn't.
A gallon of Gala wine, I'm sure it was not delicious.
But, you know, I took a big swig.
I ended up having more than half of it, I know,
because I always made sure I got at least my share, if not more.
Wow.
But the initial feeling, once it hit my brain, I guess,
I thought it was my gut that it was filling, but it was really filling a void in my mind or my brain or my soul,
whatever you want to say, so that suddenly I felt, almost for the first time, that I could recall
that life was just right, that I was enough, that I was okay, and that I could somehow
manage to negotiate things. I remember thinking,
this is how people do it. This is how adults get through the day because they can drink and it
makes everything seem somehow well. It made my stomach warm and my chest warm and my head sort of overflowing with bliss in a way, like an oceanic sense of okayness.
And, you know, it's funny because I didn't consciously realize that I wasn't okay
until I had that. And then I suddenly, almost like a cat that lives outside and suddenly gets into
the warmth in the middle of winter, you know, oh, this is what I've been missing. That's how I felt.
Like, I'm never going outside again.
And I drank.
I mean, we started drinking in school.
I eventually, at 14, I got kicked out of school.
It was a private little girls' school, and they didn't like drinking, and the nuns didn't
like it.
But anyway, they asked me to leave.
And in their defense, they were correct.
Well, you know, I think if, yes, they were correct. But I think for someone like me,
it was really an important tool. And I can see both how alcohol was a big pitfall,
but also how in a way it helped me survive my adolescence,
because it gave me a relief valve. And just like you said, at the end of the day, I had no
real tools for getting through the stress and anxiety of my 1976
life. And I think I can't imagine for kids today, I think they have even maybe more stress and
anxiety and fewer tools to get through it. So this was a way for me to cope. And from the very
beginning, I used it like a tool. And I also, I liked the high, but more than that, I liked the way it took the edge off my reality.
But was it still doing that so many years later? I mean, what you're describing sounds
wonderful. And if that's what drinking was like all the time, then I don't think I would have
quit either. You know, it was never that good again. So I had to smoke pot while
I drank, and then I had to take Coke and smoke pot while I drank. And then I had some downers
to go with the Coke and the weed and the booze. So no, I never really could get quite there again, but I spent really 10 years trying to titrate that same feeling.
And, and I, you know, what ended up happening was that there were fewer and fewer days without it.
But if I should have a day where I wasn't using, I, it was, it was tedious and frustrating and bleak and uninspired so that, you know, only altering my mind and psyche with drugs brought any solace and joy.
Like you said, I thought it was joy. Actually, I probably mistook the thrill for joy, just like I mistook being wasted for a sense of peace.
When I passed out, I thought that meant I was okay with myself.
But yeah, maybe I overdid it.
So yes, there were diminishing returns over time.
I overdid it. So yes, there were diminishing returns over time. So that by the very end,
I got clean and sober on July 9th in 1986. My 23rd birthday was in June. And I remember about that time thinking, gosh, I'm just turning 23, but I feel like I'm 123. I feel like there's nothing left to live for.
I've sort of seen it all, and it's either brutal or boring.
And so talking about your work now as a neuroscientist,
when you look back on that time in your life,
do you now have more insight into what was actually going on with you? Like on those days where it
felt so tedious, do you now know, oh, here's what was going on in my actual brain?
Yes, I absolutely do. And it turns out it's a pretty simple fundamental principle that the
brain adapts to any drug that alters the way it functions by producing the exact opposite effect.
So, for example, alcohol, like we've been saying, helps produce relaxation. It helps you sleep.
It helps you have some fun. to be tense and insomniac and unhappy so that when you drink those you kind of come out even
so the brain is really about the business of homeostasis or keeping things stable in a sort
of a middle state the reason that's so important is because you wouldn't be able to tell if something critical happened, either something terrific or something terrible happened, if you were kind of bouncing all over the place in terms of your feeling state.
So if you're wasted on opiates, let's say, and your child gets hit by a bus, you know, you wouldn't be able to tell. Or you get
hit by a bus, let's say you get hit by a bus. So you can't tell because you're so, you know,
nodding out. So therefore, the brain counteracts that so that you can have this stable baseline.
So if the bus comes, you know it. Unfortunately, it does that by producing the opposite effect so that you only feel normal with the drug.
I go back and forth about whether I'm a caffeine addict today.
I drink caffeine every morning reliably first thing.
And because of that, when I wake up in the morning, I don't wake up in the morning.
I drag myself from bed. The dogs and cats and children and husband all get far away until I get about three-quarters of the way through the first cup, which only takes a few seconds.
And then I'm normal.
Then I can put a sentence together.
Then I can smile and say good morning.
But my brain is ready for that caffeine so that if I don't get it, I can't wake up.
Just like if you don't get the alcohol that
you regularly have, you can't relax and have fun. If you don't get the weed, nothing is interesting.
If you don't get the heroin, you're suffering. Well, it strikes me that we, and I mentioned in
the intro to this show, we talk about all those different drugs completely differently. I mean,
first of all, I'm also addicted to caffeine. I've quit three different addictive drugs in my life.
I was on Adderall, otherwise known as amphetamines during college. I was addicted to that. I had to
quit it. I quit smoking and I quit drinking. And I'm familiar with those feelings of what it feels
like to quit those things. And a little bit after I quit drinking, I tried quitting caffeine too.
And I actually found that intolerable. And I said, I'm going to continue drinking. I switched from coffee to tea, but I otherwise, you know, I'm sort of right back up to my baseline. So that's an addiction that we sort of all accept.
Oh, please. And the great news is that one of the criteria for addiction is that it has to be harmful to you and or society.
And caffeine is actually beneficial overall, unless you're trying to get pregnant, which I don't think you are, or pregnant.
There's no deleterious effects for most people of a normal amount. In fact, it may protect against Parkinson's disease and give some benefit
to other parts of our physiology. So you're kind of off the hook. Yeah, drink away.
So it has positive effects beyond that bounce back, get yourself to baseline homeostasis effect
that you were describing. Right. And the thing about nicotine and cigarette addiction
is it'll kill you, as will alcohol addiction, as will others. Or they cause you to ignore your
children or forget about your job. Whereas caffeine has all these physical and mental benefits. It
makes us cognitively sharper. Now, I should say, in all fairness, that one of the other criteria of addiction is that you have a denial of the problem. So it's possible that I know I'm and I think both of us are dependent on caffeine, but whether or not we're addicted is still open because the drug is not hurting us or anybody else.
So from a more medical perspective, it requires that definite harm.
Yes.
Well, I was going to say also you mentioned marijuana, THC earlier, and that's a drug that you included in that group of drugs that we have that homeostatic response to.
But that's a drug that we are, in our discourse about it,
we treat it as non-addictive.
People say, oh, no, yeah, pot's not addictive.
But then I've known people throughout my life where I think,
wait, maybe this person kind of does seem that they're addicted to it,
despite that sort of folk wisdom about it.
Is pot addictive or not?
Yes. period. Full stop. Because there's five criteria, so it has to be harmful. Usually there's denial, but then you have craving,
tolerance, and dependence. And dependence happens when you take away the marijuana and you see the opposite effect so that you're in a kind of withdrawal state.
In my case, even though I loved alcohol, especially that first time, and I used everything I could get my hands on, I smoked marijuana all day, every day.
It was my absolute favorite drug.
And if I could only have one drug, it would
be marijuana. And it was so hard to give up. It took me actually nine years before I stopped
craving it. So it was a really, probably my most important relationship was with marijuana. So I
just thought it was perfect. Anyway, I won't go on and on about that. But and the reason I loved it so much is I didn't really get anxious. I didn't really get paranoid.
I got really interested. So the world was so much more interesting. And I have a kind of a deficit
in novelty. So I'm always looking for, you know, have a low tolerance for boredom, let's say. And marijuana was the perfect antidote to boredom because even if I was waitressing or just driving across town, you know, it could be a magical experience if I was stoned enough.
is that I got tolerant to that effect.
So things were less and less wonderful.
I remember the first time I got stoned even more fondly,
maybe than I remember the first time I drank.
I was at a mall.
This was in the 80s, you know, so malls were,
maybe it was in the 70s, but just coming on board.
They're kind of all the same, but it was just an absolute joy.
Better than Disney World for sure.
And laughed and just thoroughly had probably the best time of my life.
But after smoking less chain smoking for about 10 years, I could only enjoy things a little bit if I was wasted. And if I had to be straight,
oh my gosh. I mean, it was as if the world was in black and white. There was just no color,
no vitality, nothing at all interesting. In fact, I could sort of, like I am now,
I could only drag myself out of bed with the promise of a bong hit, you know.
And I know now why that happened, because the receptors in my brain, the proteins in my brain that respond to THC downregulate or kind of disappear with chronic using.
with chronic using. And so that the THC has less and less of an effect, which is kind of not a huge problem today because people can get such high potency THC that with the fewer receptors that
are there, they can still stimulate them. It's only such a big problem, I think, when you take the drug away. And I have talked to hundreds of people
who are parents or students or retirees for whom life without smoking is bleak and boring
and colorless in a way. And so they can't withdraw, just like I'm sure quitting cigarettes was not fun.
This is not fun.
And they feel like the returns are diminishing because the brain is adapted to produce the exact opposite state. interesting and um seem really relevant and tasty then um without it things are boring and bland
and uh you know you're kind of stuck so unfortunately that is the message of all
regular drug use and i think um you know if you're a 50-year-old and you start smoking now, it's probably not so harmful, but I am pretty concerned about people in their teens for two reasons, I guess.
One is that their brains are developing, so when they're developing, they're laying down structures and pathways.
And if you're doing that under the influence of drugs, then the drugs
influence that organization and they do so in a permanent way, perhaps to make things less
interesting for a lifetime. But also, kids are kids because they're supposed to be finding
what is important to them. What is particularly exciting. Do they like this
guy or that girl or this job or this artist or this music or this town? You know, those sorts of
explorative experiences help set their identity. And if you're exploring with a bong on the couch,
you're less likely to figure out who and what you are and want to be. And I think
you don't really get that opportunity again. Teen, the adolescent period is the adolescent
period because the brain is primed to take those experiences and mark what you care about in a way that determines your trajectory, really, or helps at least constrain your trajectory.
So I think we're missing an opportunity there.
Well, let me ask because you were using that drug during those adolescent years.
that drug during those adolescent years. And you also, you know, you talk about a lot of ways in which you felt it was helping you cope, that you were using it as a tool. Do you say that
fear that you just expressed about teenagers because of your own experience?
Yeah, I really do. I ended up in treatment by mistake. And for most kids, you know, they have a strong liver and they're kind of adaptable, so they're resilient in a way. And I was pretty resilient.
that I would have been able to get through with anything like what looks like the success that I've had.
So I think that the fact that I started early drove me to an addictive state pretty early. But the fact that I stopped basically just about the time I was 23,
I still had a few years of strong brain plasticity to depend on. And I think that really
helped me get clean. So, and, and I, you know, I think I've done okay, but, and an N of one is no
experiment, but I might've done better. You know, I've right of not taken so long to write my book,
or maybe I'd have three books or, you know, I don't, I, there write my book, or maybe I'd have three books. Or, you know, there's a lot of ways, I think.
So it's hard to know.
Yeah.
But I will say, I guess one message sort of related to this is that, again, I think that the first little while without marijuana was so painful and so lonely because it was like I lost my best friend.
Our relationships with those substances feel so personal.
Like when you used the word relationship earlier and I related to that.
Yeah, and I think in a lot of ways it's better than a person because we control the dose.
We control the time that it comes.
We don't have to put up with its shit so much.
We get to use it the way we want. control the time that it comes. You know, we don't have to put up with its shit so much.
We just, you know, we get to use it the way we want. So I think I did feel like I had lost my best friend.
And, but now I can see that I have lots of interests
and lots of kind of peak experiences
that don't involve drugs.
So I think the brain does adapt back.
Now, whether or not my brain, my husband is not an addict.
And, you know, he smoked some weed, I think, and he's, you know, occasionally drinks.
I think would describe me as someone who has to step really hard on the pleasure pedal to get something out of it, which might be part of my strength too. But I think I did
alter my brain in such a way that I'm less satisfied than he is with the same kinds of
things. Now, that's not all bad, but it's not all good either.
Well, that brings me to my next question, because you describe, you know, this sort of very singular
experience you had when you were 13 years old, where it, you know, the drug made you feel that
you were okay. I did not have that profound of an experience the first time I
had a drink. And I'm sure some folks listening probably feel the same way.
But you're also describing how, in a way, our brains are hardwired for addiction,
that these are, you know, the homeostasis is something that all of our brains do. So to what extent do you feel that you had your experience
because you're a special type of person? That's how we talk about alcohol culturally, the sort
of folk understanding of it is some people are alcoholics and everyone else is a moderate drinker
who will never have a problem. There's that model. And I could see fitting your story into that,
but you're also describing a universal
quality of our brains that lead anyone to addiction. So I'm curious about how you
weigh those two ways of looking at it. Yeah, it's a great question and one that
science is constantly trying to help understand. One way to think about it is, let's say you need 100 points to be a
bona fide addict or alcoholic. Some people are probably born with 90-some. They've got a long
family history with lots of addiction in it. They got a bad set of genes. Maybe they also are born into a stressful environment with not a tight-knit family
and lots of drugs and alcohol around. So they really don't need much. Other people might be
born with very few points, but if they use enough of any mind-altering substance, they will become dependent. And if that mind-altering substance
is an addictive drug that's abused, like the ones we've been talking about, then they're going to
have diminishing returns and they'll need the drug to feel normal. I think that one of the
problems scientists have had is that addiction is not a single gene or a single cause.
It's so complex that even though we know it runs in families,
we think there are probably hundreds of genes each contributing a tiny, tiny amount.
So you might have had some really protective genes.
I'd be curious about your initial experience. Did you have a lot to drink or just a little? and he was right. I drank four Zimas and I remember throwing up and having a great time.
And it was enjoyable, but I was sort of, oh, I drink at parties and stuff like that.
It wasn't until, it's really interesting. I started taking, I was diagnosed with ADD as a
kid and I was occasionally medicated for that. But in college, I decided to take it seriously.
And I was like, I'll get an Adderall prescription.
I started taking that.
And that led me to develop a daily habit of drinking and smoking because they sort of felt like they fit together.
Like I would drink to sort of cool down at the end of the day.
And I wasn't – I was never a binge drinker who would pass out or anything like that.
But I would – I'd have a couple drinks every night,
more while I was in college, and then by the time I was in my 30s, two,
a couple of whiskeys, and then that's it. And so that was how those things sort of
fit together. And it's funny for me because there was a point in my life where in my mid-20s where
I would start my day by taking
an Adderall and then I would have a cup of coffee and then I would smoke a cigarette.
And then I would have a couple more cigarettes. Then later in the day, I'd take a little more
Adderall and have some more coffee, some more cigarettes. And then I'd drink to fall asleep.
And there was, I was about 25 and I realized, wait, this isn't sustainable. I realized this is,
this is like maybe a little bit of a house of cards. And I started sort of systematically taking it apart. I quit Adderall first, which was like a
week-long withdrawal period where I slept for a week and couldn't focus on anything. And then I
quit smoking. And then it took me an extra 10 years to finally quit drinking.
But I think back at that time of my life, and I wonder, well, that was not super hardcore, but that was more than any of my friends were doing.
And I wondered why didn't I fall further down the slippery slope because I – in retrospect, it seems like I could have, but I'm not sure why.
I was able to sort of pull myself out of it without needing to go to, say, a treatment program or anything like that.
Well, I can point to two things at least.
One is that the fact that you threw up the first time you got drunk, even though you liked it.
Yeah.
People who get sick or who don't feel wonderful are protected.
So there's pretty good evidence that the first drink,
the experience to the first using, predicts a little bit your outcome.
And the second thing was that you were 25, which is barely mature probably,
and yet you saw that you were on a slippery slope.
So I would suggest that you were smarter than me too, because I think I would have had to
be at least 55 to see it.
Yeah, I didn't see it myself.
But I think we reflect the two, we reflect kind of the two extremes.
I think I might have been born an addict and you might have been the kind that gets addicted by regular use, which is what will
happen. And you were fortunate or smart enough to notice it and to sort of back off. But I think,
um, you know, in both cases, what we described was that, you know know there was less and less benefit
yeah and more and more compulsion and at that point that's you know
irrational well I have so many more questions about this but we have to take
a really quick break we'll be right back I don't know anything.
I don't know anything.
So, Judith, I have so many more questions about this.
One is, just going back to my own experience with Adderall specifically,
I have such complex feelings about that drug because it was prescribed to me.
Starting as a child, they prescribed me Ritalin and I went on and off of it. And then, you know,
I finally ended up on Adderall. And when I first started taking it, it was, I felt a huge benefit from it that, you know, I, I again was diagnosed with ADD. I had trouble focusing. I had trouble
doing the things that I wanted to do. Like I wanted to be paying attention in school because I loved my college experience, but I found myself
unable to focus the way I wanted to. And when I took it, I felt that benefit, right?
But then years later, I realized, well, actually, maybe this isn't giving me the benefit
quite that I want. Now I'm trying to do creative work. And, you know, it's very helpful for, I don't know, it was helpful
for like, programming a website or something like that, which I was doing freelance at the time,
but not for writing or for the sort of spacious thinking I wanted to be doing as a creative.
And I also knew that I was just straight up addicted to it, that if I didn't have it every single day, I would feel withdrawal symptoms and I'd be – I'd be sleepy and upset.
And so when I look back at it, I'm like, well, on the one hand, I really felt that I benefited from it.
On the other hand, I think it was completely fucked up that it was given to me as a child.
And so I have trouble knowing what to
think about it. And you also described your experience with alcohol as something that
helped you cope. And so I guess I'm wondering, how do we think about
addictive substances when sometimes it does feel as though we're receiving a true benefit from them?
receiving a true benefit from them? Wow, it's a great question. First of all, I think alcohol helping me cope was helping me cope with sort of normal teenage angst. And I think that ADD and
ADHD can be very serious and debilitating. So for some people, it really does impair their ability to learn in school
and in that way kind of derail their whole lives
because they aren't successful in fourth grade,
then they aren't successful in eighth grade,
and then they don't get into college.
So it's a serious problem.
On the other hand, and it is treated with these drugs,
and most people feel that if you take low doses as prescribed, the benefits outweigh the costs.
And I think one of the criteria for addiction is that the costs outweigh the costs. And I think one of the criteria for addiction is that
the costs outweigh the benefits. So in that way, it's nuanced and like you say, complex.
But I do think that it's important to ask maybe why are so many kids unable to focus or
kids unable to focus or be still and learn? And to answer that, I think it's maybe you can remember the bell curve or the normal distribution. And so our ability to focus and stay still is distributed
normally. Some people are really great at it and natural programmers, let's say, and others like me
are probably somewhere in the middle. And then there are some people who are naturally less able
to do that. And that's just not valued, that lower tail in our society and certainly in our schools
and our curricula. So it's really important to be able to
sit still for nine hours a day and keep sharp pencils and things. And I think we have to ask
about the context for those kids too. You know, I laughed a couple of years ago, there was a new
treatment for ADHD, which was literally playing outside. I'm not kidding. As if it suddenly dawned on medical science that maybe watching screens and having sugary snacks after being in school all day wasn't the best strategy.
Yeah.
And I think you bring up a couple of really important points.
You said that when you quit, you slept for a week and couldn't focus on anything.
Yeah. You said that when you quit, you slept for a week and couldn't focus on anything. So there was this adaptive change. By taking something that keeps you awake and keeps you focusing, your brain produces a tolerance to that. And so you have to kind of change things around and then wonder what it would be like. And importantly, if you wonder what it's like and you decide to stop taking it, what it's going to be like is the exact opposite state. So you wouldn't be able to tell
if you had ADHD still because the withdrawal from stimulants is an attention deficit and
hyperactivity disorder, right? So, you know, in some cases it's helpful. In some cases, maybe we're over prescribing and it might be better to find other strategies. And I think the last thing that I really love about what you said is that it was good for some things, but not for your creativity.
Yes. And one of the things I've learned in 30 years of studying psychopharmacology is that there is no free lunch, that whatever we do, there's sort of something to be paid back.
And I think that in this case, there is a cost.
And maybe, you know, I have a good friend who's on these.
She's an adult and a very successful scientist who's been diagnosed
and who takes these drugs. And she came to visit me for a while and she got involved in some project
and she was absolutely driven. And my house is kind of chaotic and there's a lot of messes and
we're not great planners. And it was really obvious that we were on two totally different tracks.
really obvious that we were on two totally different tracks so that I think maybe relationships take a little sloppiness. I mean, if you're really focused and crisp, it's hard to be in
relationship because people are such a mess. And so it almost helps to be a little loose around
the edges for certain things like creativity, maybe like relationships,
maybe like exploration. So I have to wonder, what does society's values of productivity
and efficiency have to do with the epidemic of attention deficit disorders?
That's a really good question.
And we'll move on from this.
But yeah, I felt that, you know, one of the things, for instance, since you mentioned
relationships was it made me bad in a comedy writer's room because I'd become fixated on
a certain idea and a certain way of doing something and say, no, I want to execute that.
Let's do that now.
And other folks would be, no, that idea is not the best.
Let's think about something else, you know.
execute that. Let's do that now. And other folks would be like, no, that idea is not the best.
Let's think about something else, you know? And that's like a necessary part of being in a collaborative comedy environment is, you know, sort of having a looseness and being able to
move from idea to idea and having spontaneous thoughts and not staying on one thing for too long. It's sort of the polar opposite of, you know,
the thing that I was incredibly good at when I was on Adderall was solving crossword puzzles.
I did so many crossword puzzles, like that sort of focused attention, I would almost do them
compulsively. And that's like kind of the opposite of creative work is ticking those boxes over and over again.
And yeah, that was why I eventually stopped was I realized it was not helping me with that part of my life.
Since I'm a professor at a liberal arts college, I might say that I wonder how the high use of these drugs is affecting higher education in general.
Less creativity, more focus, more filling in the blanks and jumping over the hurdles but less uh kind of going around the
edges and maybe real scholarship yeah and the thing is that at the same time those drugs i
think are being taken because of the high work requirements that, you know, I was under a lot of pressure to produce at my very loosey-goosey liberal arts school.
There was more work assigned than I could reasonably do.
And so that was one of the reasons I was like, I'm trying to get ahead of this.
So let me start, you know, getting a prescription for this drug.
And again, it helped at some things, but, you know, not in others.
Well, so speaking of, I just want to, I have so many questions about addiction generally. One thing we haven't spoken about yet are addictions that we commonly
understand, behaviors that we commonly understand as being addictive, but which aren't related to a
particular drug. For instance, even on our show, Adam Ruins,
everything we've talked about how slot machines are designed to create an addictive response.
And I want to know how that sort of fits into the framework you've laid out about how
our brains are sort of designed for addiction in a way. Does that fit in?
our brains are sort of designed for addiction in a way.
Does that fit in?
Oh, sure, absolutely.
Gambling is very addictive,
and it's addictive like a substance for the same reason,
which is that there is a very small group of neurons or nerve cells in the center of the brain
kind of going from the top of your spinal cord
or a little bit beyond it
to about two inches behind your
eyeballs. And these neurons release dopamine in the nucleus accumbens. And this is sometimes
called the mesolimbic dopamine pathway. And every single drug that's addictive releases dopamine
in that mesolimbic pathway. And so does gambling. And it does so for the same reason,
which is that it's giving the brain the idea that something meaningful or salient is happening.
And one thing that's meaningful is the surprise of what's going to happen when I pull this slot arm one more time
or when I open the door or when I push the button and these things stop.
So it's a pathway designed to get us to pay attention to things that are newsworthy.
And certainly gambling is designed to give you occasional news
And certainly gambling is designed to give you occasional news in the same way that your email is designed to give you sort of regular news alerts.
It's addictive.
Yeah.
And we could prevent addiction if we lesioned that pathway so we just got rid of those neurons.
But then we wouldn't find life so interesting or meaningful. So you can see that drugs work and gambling and email in a way because they co-opt
this pathway of interest and meaning. Right. Yeah, it's hijacking something that our brains
do in order for us to survive. It's really interesting because the way
you describe that, we so often talk about the substances as being addictive, that there's,
you know, something inherent in the chemical in the plant that is what causes the addiction. But
really what you're describing is this is something the brain does to itself by the natural process of how it's evolved to work.
That's right.
Yes.
The addiction occurs in the brain just like if a tree falls in the forest and there's no ear to hear it, does it make a sound?
The answer is no.
Right.
Because the sound is in the ear, is in the brain responding to the ear.
If there's heroin in a syringe, but no junkie in the, does there, I'm sorry, this is a terrible metaphor.
I'm trying, I was trying to make it work.
No, no.
If there's no brain, if there's no opiate receptors to respond.
So one of the things, just to clarify a little bit.
So one of the things, just to clarify a little bit, so every single addictive drug activates that mesolimbic pathway to produce pleasure and meaning and import.
And we like that so much we keep going back, just like we go back for sex and chocolate cake.
However, drugs also have their own independent effects. like opiates interact with opiate receptors, THC interacts with cannabinoid receptors, alcohol interacts with GABA receptors and other places in the brain. And those receptors and places in the
brain will adapt too. So we lose the sensitivity to meaning, sort of like listening to very loud music makes us deaf to sound.
Stimulating these, taking these addictive drugs or gambling over and over makes you kind of numb
to pleasure and news. But it also produces changes in other areas that make withdrawal
unique. So for instance, with regular cigarette smoking, you can't concentrate when you're
quitting. With regular opiate use, you feel miserable when you're quitting. With regular
marijuana use, the world is bleak and boring when you're quitting.
And how should we think about behaviors that, there are certain behaviors that people seem to do compulsively,
but it's less clear whether it's an addiction per se. I'm thinking of sex addiction, which my
understanding is there's conflicting studies on whether or not sex is something that we should
consider addictive. Or, you know, for instance, I know there's a lot of debate about video game addiction, for example, which strikes me as a problematic classification because certainly a video game that mimicked a slot machine's addiction mechanics might be addictive.
But there are plenty of other games that don't have such mechanics, but yet which someone might play to the exclusion of their job, for example.
yet which someone might play to the exclusion of their job, for example? How do we think about those gray area issues or are those gray areas for you? Yeah, I can point to three things maybe.
The first, when evaluating whether or not something's addictive, is to ask whether or not
the costs outweigh the benefits. So I think a criteria for addiction is that
it's taking more than it's giving. And in other words, there's diminishing returns.
And the second thing is whether or not there's withdrawal when you put it away. So my way of
saying this is whether or not you're on a dead end path. And I think if when you have sex, you're satisfied and you look forward to it again, but you don't withdraw afterwards, then it's very different than a bag of cocaine.
Where the main effect of getting through the bag is that you want another bag.
main effect of getting through the bag is that you want another bag. So, if there's not this kind of evidence of dependence, you know, where you can enjoy things without it, then you're less likely
to be addicted. And the third thing is that addictions go from having a choice about using to a compulsion.
So for me, when I described the closet I was living in,
it was because I was compelled to get high and use every day.
It didn't matter kind of what it took.
I had to escape my reality.
And so I felt less and less free. It was not even possible for me. It would occur to me to get some alcohol and then I was getting the alcohol, you know, if I had to dig around for coins in the gutter, you know. And I think that if you're compulsively acting as people who are addicted or to anything will, then, yeah, it's a problem.
And we know that this can happen with a wide range of substances and behaviors. But as we've
already touched on, there is a really vast difference in the way that our society treats
all these different substances, you know, where, you know, we've
talked about, you know, the difference between alcohol and cigarettes or, you know, even in,
again, I grew up in a world where everyone said who was using pot, everyone said it wasn't
addictive. That was like received wisdom. No one ever questioned that, which strikes me as very odd now, considering what you've said about it.
So how do these societal ideas of addiction form,
and how do they get in the way of our treating addiction properly?
It's hard to say how they form.
I would say, as a bottom line, that there is no relationship generally between the science, the neuroscience of
the drug use and the policy. And I think that there's maybe a strong relationship between the
policy and people's beliefs. So I have a nephew who thinks that alcohol is pretty okay, but in his state, marijuana is illegal, so that's not okay.
And I think that we don't have a great fidelity to science when it comes to making policy.
We didn't think that cocaine was addictive until 1986.
We didn't think that cocaine was addictive until 1986.
And that's because one of the criterion were dependence. That meant that you had withdrawal.
And we thought that the withdrawal had to be physical withdrawal,
like you see with alcohol or opiates,
where you're having the shakes or the sweats and diarrhea.
And cocaine doesn't produce physical withdrawal at all.
It just produces a kind of psychic misery. And because you couldn't see that from a half a block away, we thought, well, cocaine must not be addictive.
you take the drug to do it, it produces the opposite effect. And the more you take it,
and the younger you are when you take it, the stronger the opposite effect will be.
And so dependence is one of the criteria for addiction. And if you have dependence,
and it's hurting your life, which is the hardest part to see. You know, it's always the last thing people will acknowledge.
Then it's addictive.
So I guess I don't mean to sound quite so cynical, but I wouldn't trust the news pundits or the, you know, I would make your own informed decision. And, you know, for instance, marijuana was interesting because there was this belief
that it caused kind of an amotivational syndrome, you know, and the question for scientists was,
do people sit on the couch watching cartoons all day because they're stoned?
That's the stereotype of marijuana users is it makes you lazy, which is very funny in contrast
to what people thought it
did in, you know, when it first came to the U.S., the reefer madness years where people thought it
made you go become insane and violent. Even that cultural understanding has flipped over time. But
sorry, please go on. Yeah, no, it's okay. So does marijuana make you lazy or does it just the case
that people who like to sit around on the couch
and watch cartoons also like to smoke weed? Which is it? Which is it? So in my case, I think that
by regular smoking and downregulation of those places in the brain that respond to THC,
those places in the brain that respond to THC, I became less and less interested so that things that were pleasurable needed to be cartoons rather than my work or my regular friends or my family,
for sure. So, yeah, I think we're in a tough spot about that because what mostly seems to drive policy is economics, not neuroscience.
Yeah, I mean, you mentioned cocaine, and that makes me think of the incredibly disparate way that powder cocaine and crack cocaine were treated in the 80s and I think continuing today like really devastating effects. And it was, that's largely an economic
and of course, you know, racial, uh, uh, difference between those drugs.
For sure. And you can see it with THC too. Many people are in prison for, uh, trafficking,
you know, marijuana and, you know, they're getting out now, but all of a sudden it's the greatest thing ever.
And who's got all the stock and all the farms and all the, you know, special shops? Mostly,
yeah, not those people who were in prison. I mean, weed shops literally look like Apple stores now.
Exactly. Yeah, because there's lots of money to be made. And I think that shouldn't be mistaken for saying that the drug is harmless.
Yeah. Do you have an opinion on marijuana, you know, say that, you know, the legalization of marijuana and other drugs, you know, given your very nuanced understanding of the neurobiology behind them?
Well, laws didn't stop me from using, and I don't think they're all that effective.
I do think we should be skeptical about who's benefiting from the laws.
But I'm more for education.
So I guess my hope is that informed consumers will make better choices and that's going to be increasingly hard because really the markets are sort of brutal and they, um, you know, push what's economically beneficial.
economically beneficial. And I guess people are going to have to think about whether or not this is good for them. Cigarettes are a perfect example. You know, when it finally got through that
nicotine was addictive and causing cancer and so many deaths, we sort of slowly back down, but then it spread to other countries.
So now it's still increasing cigarette use in third world countries, for instance, and they're coming mostly from the U.S., but also from their own places.
Same with alcohol.
We know it's really damaging, but there's so much money being made. So I hope that people just look a little bit critically at the benefits to themselves, to economic interests, and maybe to their communities before embracing everything wholeheartedly.
Right. Well, I guess what I'd ask to finish this up here is even just thinking about alcohol, it's so complex because we've talked about how alcohol negatively affected your life, affected my life. We know it causes enormous numbers of deaths every year, enormous amounts of misery are caused by alcohol addiction. But we also know that we
tried a grand national experiment with eliminating it. And honestly, if you go back and look at the
history of the temperance movement, like a lot of the temperance movement had a good argument,
you know, that alcohol was causing domestic abuse, for instance. And we know that it does.
We know that alcohol is linked with domestic abuse now. And so we experimented with outlawing it. That was a failure.
And so now we're in a place where we're awash in alcohol advertising.
Drinking habitually, as habitually as I did, is completely normalized.
And so it often sort of makes us feel a little rootless about how should we feel about this drug?
Is this drug a normal part of life or is it not?
Yeah, lots to say there.
I think what happens when things are restricted
is that some people, probably those already prone,
used more.
So when the speakeasies were in vogue,
there were fewer people drinking,
but those who did drink, drank more. And I'm kind of that way. I think if I go on a diet, I always gain weight. So something about the restriction is not good. And in general,
laws haven't worked. Laws haven't worked and the war on drugs hasn't worked.
So I think the answer is maybe not on the supply side as much as it is on the demand side.
And that is something that's going to require a better understanding of ourselves and the long-term consequences.
Unfortunately, we're doing the experiments on ourselves to find that out.
But my hope is that by focusing on how the brain adapts to drugs,
people will appreciate that, oh, you know, I took that sleeping pill.
It worked great the first day.
It worked really good the second day.
The third day, it was also good.
But by the second week, I know I can't sleep without it and I'm not sleeping that
great so I I think that is the the way that the it's just a function of how the
brain is organized and what it does and so my maybe it's naive, but I think that the way forward should definitely
include education. And it would be terrible if we're building roads on all the tax money we're
making from drugs and not putting it into treatment and education.
And my last question is, do you have any advice for the person listening who is maybe having that realization about the substance or behavior of their choice where they're listening to this, where they're realizing, oh, maybe I am not sleeping that well or I'm not enjoying this that much and I've become dependent on it. Do you have any advice for a next step for that person?
person? Well, I always like to start with the cheese. So let me go to the last step. And that is something that both of you and I have said, that once we're over the drug use, life is as
wonderful or at least as it was before. So there is hope for the long term. In the meantime, though,
it's a hard road to kind of climb out and my advice would be to get with
other people who've managed to do it and talk to them yeah thank you so much i could i could talk
to you about this for another hour but i'm afraid that's all the time we have so thank you so much
for coming on the show judith it's really been wonderful thank you adam it's been great bye-bye
well thank you once again folks for
listening to this episode thank you for Judith for being
on the show and that is it for us
this week on Factually I want to thank our producers
Chelsea Jacobson and Sam Roudman
our engineer Ryan Connor
Andrew WK for our theme song the fine folks
at Falcon Northwest for building me the incredible custom
gaming PC that I'm recording this very
episode for you on you can find me online at Adam Conover or adamconover.net. And thank you so much
for listening. And hey, you know, sometimes I say it, sometimes I feel like it's kind of a cliche,
but I'll say it at the end of this episode, just because I feel like it. Please remember to stay
curious. that was a hate gun podcast