Logo arch
Follow La Paloma on FacebookFollow La Paloma on Twitter
Confidential 24 Hour Helpline
877-345-1887
What happens when you call?
line
La Paloma Logo Resources Banner

More Articles

La Paloma Article Archives

Archive for August, 2010

Brain Holds Clues to Addiction

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Brain Holds Clues to AddictionResults from a new study may have us one step closer to unlocking the connection between the brain and root causes of addiction.

Experts have long believed that the brain holds clues to the root causes of addiction. A new National Institutes of Health (NIH) has uncovered an early step in the cascade of brain events leading up to addiction.

Proteins and Addiction

(more…)


Meditation’s Rewiring Power

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Meditation's Rewiring PowerResearch continues to prove the benefits of meditation, including in a treatment setting.

The benefits of meditation have long been espoused, but some need to see concrete research before they accept these types of assertions. Fortunately, there is plenty of research to draw on, including a new study that shows that meditation can help people find peace by rewiring the brain.

A technique called integrative mind-body training (IBMT) has been shown to produce dramatic changes in the brains of volunteers just hours after learning the method, according to Behavioral Health Central. Scans revealed that neuron connectivity was boosted in a part of the brain important for regulating emotions and behavior, the report said. (more…)


When Overdose Isn’t Addiction

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

When Overdose Isn't AddictionOverdose isn’t always a sign of addiction, sometimes it’s just a cry for help.

So often, when we hear about an overdose, it’s by someone who is battling a substance abuse problem. Often times those overdoses are accidental, merely the result of an addicted person taking too much of a substance that was stronger than anticipated or laced with something they were unaware of. Other overdoses by addicted persons are a desperate effort to escape the pain of their disease through death.

Overdose isn’t always a sign of drug use, though. Reports recently surfaced that the wife of TV personality Larry King attempted suicide in May 2010 by overdosing on prescription drugs as a result of a purported bout of depression. (more…)


Will Legal Drugs Fix Mexico?

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Will Legal Drugs Fix Mexico?Is legalization the answer to Mexico’s drug woes? The country’s former president seems to think so.

Amid a growing violence problem in Mexico, due in large part to drug-related gangs, the country’s former president, Vicente Fox, has spoken out in favor of legalizing drugs. In the proposal, published recently on his website, the former Mexican leader argued that legalization would help disrupt the illegal markets responsible for so much violence and death, a trend that has cast a pall over the sunny nation’s travel industry and left more than 28,000 dead.

“So, drug consumption is the responsibility of the person who consumes; of the family who is responsible for educating; and of the education system and the socioeconomic context,” Fox said in his online statement.

Serving as president of Mexico from 2000 to 2006, Fox advocated for the legalization of production, sale and distribution of drugs. It’s not a view shared by current president, Felipe Calderon, who has waged an all-out war on the drug cartels. Government reports estimate that the death toll has passed 28,000 since Calderon replaced Fox in 2006. (more…)


The Addict Self

Friday, August 20th, 2010

The Addict SelfFor those trying to get clean, it can often feel like a battle between two very different personalities.

For anyone who has watched a loved one struggle with addiction, it can seem at times like the addicted person has a split personality. Of course, it’s not a clinical split (they’re not schizophrenic), but even experts recognize the duality of thoughts, emotions and behaviors that plague someone in the midst of substance abuse.

Ironically, this battle between these two selves – often referred to as the “healthy self” and the “addict self” — can become the most pronounced during the treatment or recovery process. Why is this? Once an individual is no longer dealing with the physical aspects of addiction and reacting to the chemicals impact on the body, the residual addict feelings and emotions are easier to see. These two sides of a recovering addict fight against each other and are a threat to long-term sobriety. (more…)


CARF logo