The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Addiction Doctor: Alcohol Rewires Your Brain! Alcohol Is The Reason You Feel Awful! This Many Glasses Of Wine Increases Cancer Risk By 40%!
Episode Date: May 22, 2025Are you unknowingly damaging your brain and raising your cancer risk with just one drink? Discover the alarming truth about alcohol from Dr. Sarah Wakeman, what every adult needs to know now. Dr. S...arah Wakeman is a senior medical director for substance use disorder at Massachusetts General Brigham Hospital, the number one research hospital in the world. She is also the Medical Director of the Mass General Hospital Addiction Consult Team and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She explains: How alcohol is hijacking your dopamine system. Why no amount of alcohol is good for your brain. The shocking truth about moderate drinking. How doctors are failing addiction patients on a daily basis. Why 1 in 3 people will struggle with alcohol. 00:00 Intro 02:23 Sarah's Mission 02:52 Sarah's Education and Experience 03:40 Issues With Addiction Treatment in the Modern World 04:31 What Is Addiction? 05:48 What Things Are Capable of Being Addictive? 06:47 Physiological Dependence vs. Addiction 07:25 Scale of the Problem: Why Should People Care? 08:59 Is Society Getting Better or More Addicted? 09:32 Substance-Related Deaths During the Pandemic 10:22 What Drives People to Use Substances? 12:24 Substances' Effects on the Brain 14:29 Does Trauma at a Young Age Increase Addiction Risk? 16:36 The Opposite of Addiction Is Connection 18:11 Why Addiction Matters to Sarah 19:02 Living With a Family Member Struggling With Addiction 20:43 Who Is Sarah Trying to Save? 22:57 Change Happens When the Pain of Staying the Same Is Greater Than the Pain of Change 25:53 Misconceptions About Alcohol 28:15 Is There a Healthy Level of Alcohol Consumption? 28:50 Is One Drink a Day Safe for Health? 30:38 Link Between Moderate Drinking and Cancer 33:23 Types of Cancer Linked to Alcohol Consumption 34:51 Cancer Risk Among Heavy Drinkers 35:31 Heavy Drinking and Comorbidities as Cancer Risk Factors 36:20 How Alcohol Drives Cancer Mechanisms 38:00 Alcohol and Weight Gain 38:54 The Role of the Liver 42:07 Liver's Ability to Regenerate 46:37 How Alcohol Causes Brain Deterioration 47:23 Other Organs Affected by Alcohol 48:00 Alcohol's Impact on the Heart 49:08 Body Fat Percentage and Alcohol Tolerance 50:05 Does High Alcohol Tolerance Prevent Organ Damage? 50:46 What Is a Hangover? 52:14 Balancing the Risks and Benefits of Alcohol 53:47 Is Rehab Effective for Addiction? 56:50 Psychedelic Therapy for Addiction 57:36 GLP-1 Medications for Addiction Treatment 59:03 Ads 59:59 Celebrity Addictions 1:02:24 Stigma Around Addiction 1:04:41 Addiction Cases That Broke Sarah's Heart 1:12:43 Is Empathy Positive Reinforcement for Addicted Individuals? 1:15:34 Setting Boundaries With an Addicted Person 1:18:57 Motivational Interviewing to Support Recovery 1:22:19 Finding Motivation for Positive Change 1:26:03 Habits to Support Addiction Recovery 1:29:12 Ads 1:30:18 Can the Brain Recover From Addiction? 1:34:55 Unexpected Sources of Addictive Behavior 1:35:35 How Sarah Copes With Difficult Addiction Cases 1:37:10 Importance of Language Around Addiction 1:41:40 How Labels Limit People's Potential 1:46:05 Sarah's Upcoming Book You can find out more about Dr. Sarah’s profile, here: https://bit.ly/4mxu191 Ready to think like a CEO? Gain access to the 100 CEOs newsletter here: bit.ly/100-ceos-megaphone The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb Get email updates: https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt Follow Steven: https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Research document: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11xEfVt4S6nFyJw8jTJNysBPVUra2CzWK/view?usp=sharing Sponsors: Ekster - https://partner.ekster.com/DIARYOFACEO with code DOACLinkedin Ads - https://www.linkedin.com/DIARY Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The amount of alcohol it takes to begin to cause health-related problems is much lower than you think.
Okay, so if I have this glass of wine every day...
You'd be in what we call moderate risk, which is associated with pretty much every form of cancer.
So say that I'm drinking two of those a day.
If you're drinking two of those glasses, we're talking like a 40% increase.
But even drinking that amount, your risk of breast cancer would increase by about 5%.
This amount?
Mm-hmm. Which for many people is very normal.
So there's a lot of misinformation out there about how much should you drink,
which I think people don't know.
But I can take you through everything, so.
Dr. Sarah Wakeman is a Harvard professor
and addiction expert.
Leading the charge against one of the biggest
public health crises of our time.
Addiction, bringing facts, empathy, and hard-earned truth.
One in three people may have a problem with alcohol
at some point in their lives.
And globally, 2.6 million people every year
die from alcohol-related causes because pretty
much every organ in the body is impacted by it.
You can see here, this is a 43-year-old person where their brain looks the way a 90-year-old
with dementia would look because of that brain damage over time from alcohol use.
But what drives people to use substances?
It's probably the most important question.
And if we look at studies, one is about 40 to 60 percent genetics.
And the other half of the equation is trauma and so we hear someone talk about alcohol
gives them pain relief whether that's emotional or physical that's a very real
thing that's because your sort of natural painkiller system is activated by
drinking it's an anti-anxiety and a pain medication sort of all in one so when
you think about how we treat addiction where are we going wrong the biggest
problem is that we people haven't been given the evidence and tools to understand
addiction, but also many rehabs don't offer the things that we know are actually effective.
And what is it that people need?
Great question. One of the most effective tools we teach people is something called
a cup. And they found that people drank much less after it.
Wow.
I find it incredibly fascinating that when we look at the back end of Spotify and Apple
and our audio channels, the majority of people that watch this podcast haven't yet hit
the follow button or the subscribe button wherever you're listening to this. I would
like to make a deal with you. If you could do me a huge favour and hit that subscribe
button, I will work tirelessly from now until forever to make the show better and better
and better and better. I can't tell you how much it helps when you hit that subscribe button. The show gets bigger which means we
can expand the production, bring in all the guests you want to see and continue to doing
this thing we love. If you could do me that small favour and hit the follow button, wherever
you're listening to this, that would mean the world to me. That is the only favour I
will ever ask you. Thank you so much for your time.
Dr Sarah Wakeman, with all the work that you do, what is the mission that you are on?
My mission is really to change the way people think about and understand alcohol and drug
problems, and also to give people the evidence and the facts, both to understand addiction,
which are sort of problems related to alcohol and drug use, but also to just understand
the science around, for example, how much should you drink? Is drinking healthy? Is it not healthy? There's a lot of misinformation
out there and I want to give people the tools to make the right decision for them in their lives.
And who are you and what is your sort of body of experience and education?
So I'm a medicine doctor by training. So I still do some general medicine like in the hospital,
take care of pneumonia and heart failure and in the outpatient setting, take care of people's diabetes
and depression.
But I train especially in addiction medicine.
So I'm board certified in addiction medicine.
And that's been kind of my life's work.
I work in a big academic medical center in Boston, Massachusetts,
where I would say my kind of focus professionally
has been thinking about how do we bring addiction care back
into the medical system so that it's not this separate and unequal and often very poorly
done sort of siloed system, but actually just a part of the healthcare that people get.
And then I train people. So I'm program director of our fellowship program. So I train doctors
who want to be specialists in addiction medicine.
When you think about how we treat addiction in the modern world, what are some of your
gripes?
Where are we going wrong?
Oh, how much time do we have?
I feel the last year.
Where do we begin? I mean, I think at its core, the biggest problem is that we've all been taught
and sort of infused in this idea that addiction is an issue of behaving badly, that it's an issue of morality,
that people really need to kind of knock it off and pull themselves up by their bootstraps,
and that this is like a criminal legal issue,
that it's an issue of willpower.
And so if you believe those things,
then why would you think that someone
should get medical care?
Or why would you treat them with compassion and kindness
if you think that they're doing something wrong?
And so really reframing how we think about addiction
based on all of the science we have
and what effective treatment looks like, which often is very different than what people may have experienced
if they were trying to access care for themselves or a loved one.
And what is an addiction? What falls into the bucket of addiction? You know, because
I use my iPad a lot, I use my phone a lot. Is that an addiction?
Yeah, it's a great question because we use that term colloquially a lot.
You know, I'm addicted to Netflix or whatever.
So addiction is really defined by use despite consequences.
So continuing to do something in your life despite bad things happening to you because of it.
So we talk of addiction, we talk of the four C's as a way to remember it.
So one C is loss of control, meaning like you've tried to change and you haven't been able to.
So you've tried to cut back or you've tried to stop and you couldn't.
The other is compulsive use.
So your use is like spiraling out of control that you're kind of using in a way that isn't
really attached to your rational thinking.
The next is consequence, so continued use despite negative consequences, either in your
life, your job, your relationships, your health.
And then the last C is craving, which is this sort of strong psychological urge to want
to use. Like you can't get the idea of having a drink out of your mind. And so it's really
those four C's that we think about. And then we make the definition based on how many criteria
people meet out of this 11 list of different criteria. And then based on that, people can
have a mild, use disorder, moderate or severe. And so moderate severe is really what we think
of as addiction, but it's not used despite bad things happening to you.
And what things are capable of being addictive?
Yeah, lots of things. I mean, I focus mostly on alcohol and drugs. So alcohol, obviously,
probably most common. I think we'll talk about that a lot today, which I'm excited about.
And certainly when we look worldwide, 400 million people have an alcohol use disorder,
meaning addiction to alcohol.
That's a lot of people.
The other are drugs, so that can be opioids,
like heroin, or pain pills, or fentanyl.
It can be cocaine, or stimulants,
like methamphetamine, or prescription stimulants,
sedatives that people may take for anxiety,
like benzodiazepines, cannabis.
And so there's a whole sort of range of substances
that can be addictive.
And how addictive a substance is really
related to sort of how much dopamine is released
in the brain.
I know you've had a wonderful episode with Dr. Lemke
about dopamine.
So you've talked about that a bit.
And there are different sort of addictive indices
of different substances.
So cannabis is less addictive than methamphetamine,
for example.
But all of those substances can
cause addiction in people.
Even beyond that, I wonder sometimes in my life if I'm addicted to other things like,
I mean, I drink coffee every day, certainly get a craving to drink it now.
Yeah, well, there's, you know, a couple important pieces there is your coffee drinking causing
harm in your life in any way?
No, I think it's, I think it helps.
It may be helping you, right?
Okay, so it's not.
Yeah, so it's not addiction.
So there's a difference between physiologic dependence, meaning like if you don't drink
your cup of coffee, you're going to get a headache, and addiction, meaning that you're
spending all your day and all your money buying more and more coffee.
We don't really see this, but buying more and more coffee despite, you know, your girlfriend
nagging you about it and you're late to work because you're purchasing coffee.
We don't really see that so much with coffee, but that would be sort of addiction.
How big is the problem? So if you were to frame, like, why should we care? Why should
the person listening to this care? Because I imagine it's the case that many people
here don't have an addiction that fits into the category of having severe consequence
for their life. I also imagine some people are under the impression that addiction is
something that happens to other people. So can you frame the situation for me and explain to me why we should all
care about this and the, I guess the scale of the impact it's having?
Well, I guarantee you that many people listening have been touched by addiction, either personally
or in their lives. Because of stigma, we tend not to talk about that, but the scale is huge.
So globally, 2.6 million people every year die from alcohol-related
causes. So that's 7,000 people today will die from an alcohol-related death. Another 600,000 people
die from drug-related deaths annually. So that's like 1,600 deaths today from drug-related causes.
And then when we look at the criteria of sort of meeting criteria for a substance use disorder or
addiction, it's about 400 million people worldwide
for alcohol and 80 million people for drug use.
So it's incredibly common.
If you think about alcohol, some studies estimate
that the lifetime prevalence,
meaning over the course of your life,
how likely are you to at some point
develop alcohol addiction?
Somewhere between 15 and 30% in some studies.
So one in three people may have a problem with alcohol
at some point in their life. So this touches all of us. We just don't talk about it because
of stigma and because of these mental images of kind of othering that it's only those people
who are injecting heroin who have addiction or that person who has the shakes every morning
and is drinking as soon as they wake up who has a problem with alcohol.
In which direction are we going in as a society? Are we getting better or are we getting more
addicted?
Yeah, great question.
The pandemic was not kind to addiction.
So we saw rates of alcohol and drug use and deaths related
to those increase significantly after the onset
of the COVID pandemic.
That has started to level out.
So for drug use related deaths, we're now back
at the pre-pandemic levels.
But there was a very significant
increase during the time of the pandemic. And that's really not surprising when we
think about what are the things that drive people to use alcohol or drugs in a problematic way.
I was looking at some of the life expectancy graphs and this one in particular I found quite
shocking, I'll throw it up on the screen, but it shows that obviously, you know, we would expect that there was a drop in life expectancy
during the pandemic. But even when you compare it to other countries, it's not as significant. So
I'm wondering why in your view, there was such a significant decline in life expectancy during
the pandemic. Yeah, so obviously COVID was one driver. One of the main other drivers was
substance related deaths. So actually immediately following the onset of the pandemic, so beginning March, April of 2020,
we saw a 23% increase in alcohol-related mortality and we saw the highest rates ever we've seen of
drug-related overdose deaths. And that actually impacted US life expectancy up until this year.
This is the first year that we've seen that change. At the essence of what's actually going on there because addiction is downstream from
something else. What is actually going on?
Yeah, so that's a really great question. What drives people to use substances? It's actually
probably the most important question even in my work. If you don't understand what someone's
substance use is about or related to, how are you ever gonna address it or help them address it?
So trauma is probably the single biggest driver.
So you often hear things like cannabis is a gateway drug.
I would say trauma is the gateway drug.
If we look at many, many studies,
there are kind of two different things
that drive someone's risk of addiction.
One is genetics.
It's about 40 to 60% genetic,
similar to diabetes in terms of someone's risk.
That's not a done deal, obviously. There are people with strong genetic risks who never
develop addiction and people without that who do. The other half of the equation is based on kind of
your exposures and your experiences. And one of the number one drivers is what we call adverse
childhood experiences. So there are this famous study called the ACEs study, which stands for
adverse childhood experience, and it's been replicated.
There's a recent one done actually in Europe as well
that looks at the number of adverse childhood experiences
you have, and it's a linear track increase
in terms of your risk of substance use disorder.
So if you think about what's happening
in the brain with substances,
when we use alcohol or drugs,
all sorts of feel-good hormones are released, right?
Dopamine, your endogenous opioid system,
which is literally your natural pain reliever.
And if you take someone who's experienced trauma,
there's great relief that people can find in substance use.
And so we saw that in the pandemic,
like what was going on in the pandemic.
People were scared, they were bored, they were lonely,
they were stuck at home,
they didn't have their usual routine.
Some people were losing people that they loved.
And so we saw all of this escalating substance use.
And it was actually most pronounced in people who are frontline workers.
So that could be a health care provider.
It could also be someone working in a grocery store or a convenience store
who had to work through the scariest times of the pandemic.
And also people who are caregivers.
So those are kind of the two groups that had the biggest increase
in their substance use during the pandemic.
What is going on in the brain? You referenced it a little bit there. You referenced that
dopamine makes you feel good. So, you know, very naively, I would assume in the case if
you feel bad, dopamine makes you feel good, you want more dopamine. But is it more complicated
and nuanced than that?
Yeah, well, alcohol is a really complicated one because alcohol has lots of different
effects on the brain. So any drug or substance that can cause addiction is going to release dopamine. That's sort
of a primary driver of many things that we find rewarding, whether it's sex or food or
alcohol or drugs. But alcohol also, so it binds to the part of our brain, a system called
GABA, which is sort of our anti-anxiety system. So it's the same system that anxiety medications
like people may have heard of Ativan or Larazapam or Xanax,
these medications that are kind of sedatives and anxiety meds,
alcohol acts on that part of the brain.
And it actually then causes a release
of your endogenous opioids in your brain,
so like your brain's natural painkillers.
So that's actually why one of the medications that's
effective in helping people stop drink actually
just blocks the opioid response in the brain, which
doesn't make sense when you first hear about it until you understand these neural mechanisms,
that actually your sort of natural painkiller system is activated by drinking. So when you
hear someone talk about alcohol gives them pain relief, whether that's emotional or physical,
that's a very real thing. That's a powerful system in our brain that gets activated when
you're drinking. Okay. So if I'm having a stressful time at work and work is making me anxious and is crippling
me then I'm more likely to want to have a big blowout on the weekend because that's
effectively a pain medication.
Totally.
It's an anti-anxiety and a pain medication sort of all in one.
You know, and I think often this is part of the area where I think just getting more awareness
and education about alcohol is so important because we see that as a way of treating ourselves,
right?
And it's very easy to have that get out of control.
And I think especially if in your head you think, as long as I'm not drinking in the
morning or missing work because of drinking or having problems in my relationships, I'm
fine.
But actually there's so many health problems and even life problems related to alcohol
that people may make different decisions for themselves
if they had that awareness earlier on.
You know, I was thinking about a friend of mine
who is fairly well known,
passed away from issues related to his addiction.
He had a lot of pressure on him when he was fairly
young. He wasn't necessarily a young child when he had a lot of pressure put on him,
but he was young. And I was wondering, as you said, childhood experiences, what age
that is. Is there like a certain age where those experiences, if you experience a certain
level of trauma at a certain age, it's harder to recover from that and you're more likely
to be addicted?
Yeah, so it's a great question. Trauma at any time can put you at risk for addiction.
The earlier that happens, the more sort of long lasting the impact can be. So when we
think about the brain, your brain doesn't really fully form until early to mid-20s,
and so both in terms of trauma,
but also in terms of early substance exposure,
you're at much greater risk when you're younger,
but that doesn't mean that trauma in later life
doesn't put you at risk for developing substance use as well.
So I've seen people who, you know,
their first trauma was in their 20s or 30s or 40s,
and they can still develop a substance use disorder.
It's just the risk is even greater when you experience those adversities as a child.
And the interesting thing is, you know, trauma is not so much about the experience.
It's about often being left alone to grapple with that experience by yourself.
And so what's traumatizing to one person may not be traumatizing to someone else.
And, you know, take the pandemic, for example, I've talked to people who like being stuck at home and alone and bored was deeply traumatic. Other people were fine.
They like were in their living room, you know, doing whatever and found ways to connect and
to live their lives and did okay. It was the same experience, but it was experienced very differently
by different people. So it's less about the actual experience and more about the impact on that human,
how they're left feeling. And often it's about feeling disconnected. We often talk about the actual experience and more about the impact on that human, how they're left feeling and often it's about feeling disconnected. We often talk about the opposite of addiction
is not sobriety, it's actually connection. It's how do you build that connection with
other people again?
My friend that I was referencing is Liam Payne, who's from One Direction, the boy band who
passed away. And he was on my podcast and a few years before he passed away. And on the show, he said that much of what made his early life so difficult as a teenager
was he was obviously thrust onto this big show.
And then the way it worked was, you know, you got all this public spotlight.
And then they'd like put him up on a stage and he'd be in front of 100,000 people in Dubai.
And then after that experience, he was then driven back to a hotel room and
locked in the hotel room, because obviously you can't go out because you're that famous
that if you walk out on the street, crowds are going to emerge. So he was then locked
in that hotel room. And on the show, he said, I was locked in there with the minibar, which
is full of alcohol. So I would drink and that cycle would repeat itself. And he'd be like
stage, you know, car, hotel, locked, drink, stage, car, and that cycle repeated itself.
So when you're talking about isolation and loneliness as well, I never really considered
the fact that connection and social relationships could play a role in creating an addiction
in someone, but it tracks.
Totally.
I mean, it makes me think of a patient I saw this week who really wants to stop drinking
and is able to go for a few weeks, but his life is pretty empty.
Like, he's not working right now.
He doesn't have a lot of relationships.
So when he's not drinking, he's sitting at home, like watching TV by himself.
And it doesn't take very long for him to think that, like, you know, the thing that's going
to give him relief is having a drink.
And so then the question becomes less about the molecule of alcohol and more about, like,
how do we fill up people's lives?
How do we form connection and build community and build a sense of identity and purpose
and engagement outside of the relief of substance use?
You're clearly extremely smart.
And when I meet people like you, I always think to myself,
you could have committed your life to anything.
You could have worked in pretty much any field
and you would have been a success,
because you have what it takes to be successful.
So why do you care so much about this?
Yeah.
I think, like many people, I had kind of a personal thread.
I had a family member who was impacted by addiction
who actually died when I was in medical school.
And so that was sort of a pivotal moment,
I think, that coming at the same time that I was learning
all of this science, I was realizing, wow,
I wish I'd known this when I was younger
and dealing with family members and friends who were affected by this and that we've gotten it so wrong and most people don't
have the kind of tools and knowledge to do things differently. And so, you know, you
sort of there's that saying when you know better, you do better. And I think I kind
of wanted to put out into the world what I wished was there for other people.
An immediate family member. And what age were you when you lost that person?
Probably 24 or so.
From addiction?
Yep.
When you're dealing with a family member or someone close to you that has an addiction,
so many people listening will be able to relate to that feeling.
Can you describe what they feel in an attempt to make them feel seen?
Because sometimes, especially
in hindsight, if you end up losing that person, you can be filled with lots of feelings of
guilt or misunderstanding, and especially of thinking about how society's moved on.
So how do you put into words how it feels to be a family member with someone dealing
with addiction?
Yeah, I think you feel powerless. You feel like you want to do something and you either
don't know what to do or feel like everything you've tried hasn't worked. I think again, because people have been exposed
to this idea that it's an issue of willpower or choice, which really implies that if people
wanted it bad enough, they could just stop. And so if you're a family member, then that's
easy to feel like, oh, they don't love me enough, you know, that they're not choosing
me over this substance. And so I think often people feel deeply hurt
and they've been through experiences
that have created trauma for themselves.
There's a lot of trauma within families
who are experiencing this.
And then they're sometimes given really bad advice,
you know, that you have to like kick someone out
or this whole concept of kind of tough love
and that people need to hit bottom.
And so sometimes people, you know, either do that
and then wrestle with the guilt
of was that the right thing or not?
Or they feel bad even like being kind or loving to their family member.
So I think there's a whole mix of feelings.
And of course, if you lose someone, you always wonder, what if?
Like, could I have done something differently?
Could something else have changed?
And I think people can feel angry and sad and guilty and be left with that.
What did those people in your life need that you lost, that they didn't get?
I think they needed science-based treatment and compassion and empathy. And I think they needed
a world where addiction was not seen as something to be ashamed of or something that we judge,
but rather something that is a problem. You know, the shift from like, you are the problem to like,
you have a problem and we can help you with this. And I think too often we have approached it
as if like you the person are the problem.
Do you sometimes think back and think, if I'd done something differently, whether it
was you or someone else around you or the system around that individual, they would
still be here today? Because I think that was the first thing that sprung to mind. I played back all the decisions that I made.
I thought, okay, maybe that was bad advice that I was given.
Maybe I should have been, maybe I could have called more.
Maybe I could have intervened here.
Maybe there's something else I could have done.
Absolutely.
I'm going to think about that all the time.
And I think of a friend I lost an overdose.
I think of the family member I lost alcohol. and not only things that I could have done differently,
but also those people, they saw their doctor,
they were in the hospital, they had all these touch points,
all of these reachable moments
where someone could have engaged with them
and offered them kindness and actual effective care
that's backed by science, and they weren't.
And so there are all of these missed moments
and missed opportunities.
But the other thing I think about
is how much time I lost with them.
Because I think often in this model of tough love
and kicking people out or thinking,
I'm not going to see you until you stop using or stop drinking
because I think that's going to help make them make that change,
you lose out on all of these moments of time
with people that you love, and you can't get those back.
And so there is this problem, I think,
in that binary model of you're either sobering in recovery
or you're actively using, and this is good and not as bad,
is that we lose the fact that people who are struggling
with addiction are amazing, funny, loving people who
have a problem that they're dealing with. But if someone was dealing with cancer, you wouldn't like not want
to spend time with them. You know, you miss all of that time. And, you know, both cases I'm thinking
about it, like I'll never get that back, you know. There's a phrase I had many years ago, which I'm
now reconsidering, which is, change happens when the pain of staying the same becomes greater than
the pain of making a change. And that kind of dovetails into this idea that someone
needs to hit their own rock bottom for them to change. I think the part, the reason why
that idea prevails is because we hear so many stories, I hear them on this podcast of someone's
family rejecting them, throwing them out on the street, and them having that eureka moment
that fuck, I need to change my life. And people always reference that rock bottom moment where they took action
because they were at the very bottom of the well.
And how does that phrase sit with you?
Change happens when the pain of making a change becomes greater than the pain of making a change.
I think that there are those times for sure, it's not to discount that, and I hear those stories too.
But I think there are, from evidence, what we know,
there are probably more times where people just
endure the pain again and again and again
until they never change.
And I think the part that we don't see
are the folks who change happens when
they begin to get enough hope that things
could be better for them, that someone loves them,
someone cares enough that they're reaching out
a hand in the darkness, that there actually
is a path forward.
I think people stay stuck when they feel hopeless,
when they feel like nothing could ever,
that they're never going to get this,
they're never going to be able to change,
their life would never get better.
And so take the example I often hear from family members
when their loved one is in jail, that they're like, thank
heavens, they're in a safe place at least.
Like there's actually this sense of relief.
There's even a term for it called a rescued,
that people feel, I think it just goes to the desperation
that families are dealing with, but this idea that like,
that's a safe intervention.
And you hear these stories, right,
of someone who they get locked up
and like that's their eureka moment.
And yet if imprisonment were an effective intervention
for addiction, for
example, we wouldn't see that actually the time after getting released from prison, there's
130 times increased risk of dying from a drug-related cause after people leave prison, and that your
risk of dying ever from addiction is much, much higher if you've ever been imprisoned.
And so I think there are those stories, but we tend to elevate those amazing narratives,
and we miss the fact that so many other people are going to die in pain
and alone and isolated because they have no hope. And so it's not to discount those moments.
And some people are incredibly resilient and against all odds, even with the most trauma,
they can, you know, make it through. And that's incredible. But that doesn't mean that we
should like create a system that makes it as hard as possible on people.
So would you say that if we are trying to help someone change, really, it's about hope,
it's about the strength of their why and it's about love and empathy and connection?
Absolutely.
Is there anything else missing?
And it's about effective treatment.
And treatment, okay. Which is subjective, right? Which could be depending on the situation they're in.
It depends on the type of addiction and their situation,
but in most cases,
it's some combination of psychotherapy medication.
So alcohol.
Yes.
There's, I mean, alcohol's been on a journey.
Yes.
It's been on a journey in terms of society's opinion
about it.
Can you take me on that journey and tell me where we are now? And in terms, when I'm saying that, I'm talking about society's opinion about it. Can you take me on that journey and tell me where we are now? And in terms of what I'm saying that I'm talking about society's opinion on
its health benefits and what it is. And then also what we're getting wrong now about alcohol.
Yeah, yeah. So I mean, the journey of alcohol is fascinating. So first, I think they think of this
as a relatively modern thing, but archaeologists have discovered beer-making equipment in hunter-gatherers' cave dwellings from 13,000 years ago.
That's wild.
13,000 years of people figuring out how to make beer.
You look at China 9,000 years ago.
It was really about a spiritual journey or a social thing.
It was never really about health.
At some point, we started talking about this as something
that is good for your health.
Like, drink red wine.
It's going to improve your health.
And that's where I think we got wrong. And the reason why was actually from how we started talking about this as something that is good for your health. Like drink red wine, it's gonna improve your health.
And that's where I think we got wrong.
And the reason why was actually
from how we were looking at the data.
So first, if you look at only one health condition,
there are some health conditions
where a moderate amount of alcohol
actually improves your health.
But it was also how people were conducting the studies.
So in most of the studies,
what people do is they take like a massive population,
tens of thousands of people,
where we have some data where they're reporting
how much alcohol they used.
And then we look at health risks over time.
And scientists would lump people into sort of non-drinkers
versus light drinkers, moderate drinkers, or heavy drinkers.
And what they were finding is that people
who were drinking even up to the moderate level
were actually doing better than the people who
weren't drinking at all.
And so that was where that concept
that drinking is good for your health came from.
And so people talk about this like J-shaped curve,
meaning that moderate drinkers
actually have lower risks of health problems.
And then it's really only when you start drinking
very high levels that you start having more risk
of health problems than people who don't drink at all.
What they realize is wrong with that
is that in the people who don't drink at all,
many of those people are not drinking
because they're actually really unhealthy for another reason.
Like, they might have heart failure,
and they, like, don't want to drink
because they don't want it to mix with their medication.
Or they might have had a history of alcohol use disorder,
and they're actually in recovery.
So they've already had some damage from alcohol,
and they are not drinking because of that.
And so when you change the reference group,
you actually make the sort of group
that you compare people to, to people who very rarely drink.
So it's not that they're not drinkers at all,
but they drink very, very light levels.
Then you start to see that those health benefits of alcohol
go away, especially if you look across all conditions.
Are you telling me that there's no healthy level of alcohol
consumption?
Yes, I would never say drinking alcohol
is good for your health.
That doesn't mean that drinking at what we call low risk levels can't be a part of a
healthy lifestyle.
So it's a slight shift that like, don't fool yourself into thinking that drinking that
glass of wine is like going to exercise for 30 minutes.
Like it's not something that's going to promote your health.
I think of it more like having dessert, eating bacon, going out in the sun.
There are risks associated with all those activities. It doesn't mean that I would say you can never do any of that,
but you need to understand what the risks are and then make choices for yourself.
So I look at this glass of wine here and this pint of beer. If I drank one of these a day,
not a huge amount, I think what people tend to think is they think, well, it's only one,
so my body will just flush it out and there'll be no adverse health consequences.
Yep.
Is that true?
Well, so part of the challenge is what we think of as one drink.
So I think much like, you know, if you learn to read the serving size on a food, you realize
that like a serving of ice cream is like a half scoop.
It's not like a giant ice cream sundae.
The same is true with alcohol.
So in the UK, the kind of low risk drinking limits
talk about units of alcohol,
which is the equivalent of eight grams of alcohol.
So how much of a drink has eight grams of alcohol?
And to be in that low risk category,
you have to be below 14 units.
The problem is that glass of wine, just eyeballing it,
has several units of alcohol.
So it is not a, even though we think of it as a single drink, it's probably, I mean, just eyeballing it, has several units of alcohol. So it is not a,
even though we think of it as a single drink, it's probably, I mean, I have to guess, but
it's probably like three units of alcohol.
So if I have a glass of wine every day, I'll be over that limit then?
You'd be right at that limit. The problem is most people don't drink just one glass.
If you, you know, if you have two glasses one day and then one glass one day and then three glasses
one day because you're at a social function, all of a sudden you're actually quite a lot
over that limit.
So if you said that this is roughly three units roughly.
Yeah, and you get 14 a week.
And you get 14 a week.
Mm-hmm.
So three times seven, 21.
Mm-hmm.
Yep.
So yes, you're over if you're drinking that size.
Yep.
Okay, so if I have this glass of wine every day, then I'd be over the UK limit of?
Lower risk drinking.
Lower risk drinking. So I'd be medium risk drinking.
You'd be in what we call moderate risk, which is associated with pretty much every form
of cancer, which I think people don't know.
Okay. Because I was wondering why cancer has been increasing. A variety of different forms
of cancer have been increasing. Breast of different forms of cancer have been increasing.
Breast cancer is one of the ones we always hear about that's increasing. So you're saying
what is the data in terms of low or moderate risk of drinking and cancer?
Yeah. So the data is growing and really worrisome. So for breast cancer, there's a few cancers
that even at low risk limits,
you see the risk begin to increase.
So where we would say there's kind of no healthy or there's no even like low risk amount.
So breast and esophageal cancer are two examples of that.
So breast cancer, if you were to drink below those low risk limits, so in the US that would
be fewer than seven drinks, but a drink in the US is five ounces of wine, which is smaller
than that.
Or in the UK is below that 14 units, so it would be fewer than seven of that size glass of
wine. We still see a slight increase in the risk of breast cancer. It's about a 5% increase.
So that means your risk of breast cancer would increase by about 5%. And that's not huge,
so I think percent increase is kind of hard to do the math on. But if you think in the
US, for example, the average woman has a 13% likelihood of getting breast cancer in their lifespan.
13% likelihood?
Really.
Wow.
Yeah, really high. So 5% increase would increase that to like 13.6 or so.
So that means that if there's nine women in this room, one of them is going to get breast
cancer probabilistically.
In their life, yeah. Damn. Yeah. One of them is going to get breast cancer probabilistically. In their life, yeah.
Damn.
Yeah.
Why is it, and it's increasing.
Yeah, and so the reasons for that are likely environmental because your genes don't change
over that time period.
So the risk factor is, if you think about breast cancer, it's alcohol, it's obesity,
it's age when you have children or don't have children because it's a really hormonally
driven cancer. Same thing if you think about colon cancer because it's a really hormonally driven cancer.
Same thing if you think about colon cancer.
That's a really scary one where we're seeing more and more cases in younger people.
Some of the drivers of that, eating meat.
So processed meats increase your risk of colon cancer.
So you know, these very sort of normal behaviors.
There's probably other environmental things, honestly, that we're not yet measuring or
able to measure.
Just given the rate of acceleration, when I talk to my colleagues who are oncologists, you
know, things like plastics or other things that we don't yet know, it's clearly something
in the environment that is driving these increased cancer risks.
So even at this sort of level, if I'm drinking, that might be one unit, right?
Yes. So that would be one unit. So that would be fewer than 14 of that.
So you could see, if you had double that,
it would be a decent pour of wine.
You could not have more than seven of those in a week
to be in low risk.
But even drinking that amount, your risk of breast cancer
would go up a little bit.
Even this amount?
Mm-hmm.
There's really sort of no safe amount of alcohol
when it comes to breast cancer.
Is it just breast cancer?
So that low risk category, so when we, these big cancer studies categorize people as sort of
low risk or light drinkers, moderate or heavy.
And for pretty much every cancer, once you get to the moderate category, we start seeing increases.
And there's what we call a dose-response relationship. So the more you drink, the higher your risk of cancer.
There's only a few cancers that the risk seems to increase even at that very low level, and
breast cancer is one of those, and then esophageal cancer is one of those. So there are certain
cancers where even a small amount of alcohol will increase your risk.
Does it have an impact on thinking about cancers that are prominent in men?
Yeah. So colon cancer, we're seeing that in a lot of young men.
Liver cancer, yeah.
Prostate cancer, which is obviously a male cancer we don't think of as much as being
sort of an alcohol sensitive cancer, but most cancers, because the way alcohol impacts your
risk of cancer is not really on a specific organ outside of the liver.
It's really about how it changes our DNA.
So it's about inflammation and what are called reactive oxygen
species that sort of change our cells and increase the risk over time of the mutations that lead to cancer. So yeah, can you drill down on that? So if I'm a heavy drinker, so say that I'm drinking,
let's say I'm drinking two glasses of wine a day consistently, which I guess would, like if I was
drinking two of those glasses, yeah, you'd be in the heavy category. So two of those a day puts me
in a heavy drinker category.
Which would surprise most people, right?
Like that, for many people, is very normal.
It is very normal, yeah.
I think it's somewhat more difficult for younger people to understand because younger people
will drink less.
But if I think about the generation above me, having two glasses of wine a day is quite
normal.
After work, on the weekends,
with every meal that you have. So that would make me a heavy drinker. And then what are
the stats saying in terms of my cancer risk profile?
Yeah, so it varies by cancer, but roughly we're talking like a 40% increase in cancer,
depending on the cancer type. And the more you drink, the more that's going to go up.
So you know, these are scientific studies where it's not precise to you as an individual.
They're based on large populations. But definitely, the more you drink, the greater the risk.
And then if I have other sort of, do they call them comorbidities?
Yeah, exactly.
So are the illnesses, are the diseases in my body, my probability is going to go up further if I'm obese, if I'm overweight?
Exactly, through smoke. So one of the main drivers of alcohol too in cancer
is that it actually makes you more susceptible to the cancer
causing effects of tobacco.
So if you drink and smoke, your risk of cancer
is going to be even higher.
How does that work?
The thought is, if you take esophageal cancer
at the cellular level, it makes you
more susceptible to the carcinogens, which
are the cancer causing compounds in tobacco.
And so rather than just seeing like an additive risk, you actually almost get a multiplied
risk in terms of the risk of cancer.
So smoking and then obesity is the other big one.
So a lot of cancers, your risk goes up if you're, if you're, you know, have an increase
in your body mass.
What's going on in the body then?
If I drink alcohol, how is that leading to cancer?
You referenced it slightly there, but I'm trying, but I want to make sure I'm super clear in my brain as to
what the knock-on effects are and how that ends up as cancer.
Yeah. I mean, there's lots of different mechanisms. Maybe starting just with what does alcohol
do in your body. You ingest alcohol. The fancy name for that is ethanol. It's a molecule.
It basically gets absorbed pretty quickly from your stomach, and so it hits your bloodstream
usually within 10 minutes or so of having a drink.
How much it hits your bloodstream depends
on how much water you have in your body,
so alcohol doesn't penetrate into your fat,
it just kinda diffuses into the water parts of your body.
So that's actually why for many women,
they will get more sort of drunk or more of an effect
from alcohol at a lower level than men,
because women have more body fat than men.
But that's gonna depend on you as an individual.
If you have more body fat,
you're gonna have a different impact.
So alcohol gets in your bloodstream.
Alcohol can instantly cross across
what we call your blood brain barrier.
So it impacts your brain instantly.
And that's where you feel the initially pleasurable effects
for many people of feeling a little relaxed,
feeling more social, feeling a little bit, you know, less anxiety.
If you keep drinking and that level keeps going up,
then you start having impaired judgment.
You might have motor, lack of motor coordination.
So we've all seen this
and many people have probably experienced it.
You know, you may be stumbling, not able to drive safely.
You're not gonna make the same decisions you would make
if you weren't drinking.
And then if you keep drinking, then you get,
you can actually lose consciousness, so pass
out and people have experienced that.
Your body is going to try to break down alcohol as quickly as it's able to, like anything.
We want to kind of excrete any abnormality and get back to our normal functioning.
And so that process happens mostly in your liver, which is why the liver is so sensitive
to alcohol.
Because your body sees ethanol as poison.
Yes.
I mean, you know, I know you talked about this, Dr. Lemke,
but your body always wants to restore what's called homeostasis.
Your body's always going to fight to get back to what it feels its normal is.
And so ethanol is not something that belongs in your bloodstream.
Your body's going to try to excrete it as fast as it can.
And then it converts it into something called acetate,
and then you can pee that out and breathe that out and get rid of it.
So to eliminate the alcohol in your body,
you have to go through this process.
And part of that process includes this toxic molecule
that's gonna be floating around
and causing damage to your cells.
So that's one way that alcohol can cause cancer.
The other is just general sort of inflammation.
People have probably heard that inflammation
is just not good for the body
and increases the risk of cancer.
And alcohol generates a lot of that and increases the risk of cancer. And alcohol
generates a lot of that inflammation in the process of getting eliminated. And so it can
actually change your cells that over time that can lead to cancer.
So I also found this graph, which shows for anyone that can't see what we're describing
at the moment, it shows the acceleration in liver disease, death rates and general liver
disease compared to other parts of the
body, other organs in the body, I believe it shows. What impact does alcohol have on
the liver? And we have our little mannequin here of the human body. Where is the liver?
Yeah, great question. So here's our little mannequin. So just to orient people to the
bodies who are looking at the inside of the body. So like the ribs are gone, the outside
of the skin is gone. These two pink things are the lungs.
They kind of encase the heart.
You can see the heart's behind the lungs pumping your blood.
The liver is this brownish organ.
It's on the right side of your body, right under your ribs.
It's quite large.
It's big.
And it's an amazing organ.
It is quite big.
It processes much of what any kind of toxins
that we take in, things that we eat, your glucose, alcohol,
90% of it's metabolized by the liver.
So the liver is sort of the clearinghouse getting rid of byproducts in your body.
The other are the kidneys, but the liver plays a huge role especially in alcohol. So it sits right here.
It almost looks like it's as big as the lung, as one lung.
Yeah, yeah, it is.
Really?
Yeah, it's a giant organ. And it's an amazing organ.
So you can actually cut out 80% of the liver and it would regrow itself.
So kind of like those lizards that you cut off their tail and they regenerate a tail.
The liver is fascinating.
It's why we can do living liver transplant.
So I could take half of your liver and give it to someone who needed a liver.
You would still be able to live and they would get a second chance at life from that part of your liver.
So it's this really cool organ that can regenerate.
But it can only regenerate up to a point.
So once you get to a level where you have a lot of scar tissue in your liver, we call
that cirrhosis, you sort of reach a point of no return where at that point the liver
can't heal itself.
So I sort of think of it like, to use a baking analogy, if you're making muffins or a cake,
you're going along, you're mixing all your ingredients,
and you realize before you put things in the oven,
like, oh, I forgot the eggs.
You can still add the eggs in and whisk it all together,
and it's going to be OK.
If the muffins are baking in the oven
and you forgot the eggs, you can't pour the eggs on top
and make the batter the same.
And the liver's sort of like that,
that up to a certain degree, you can actually completely
repair the effects of things like alcohol or obesity, other things.
But once you pass that point into scar tissue, the liver can't regenerate anymore.
And so when you think about that graph or just the rising rates of liver disease, the
main drivers of liver disease are obesity and, too, is alcohol.
And so those are the leading causes of liver transplant.
And the thing that is so sad is,
I mean, I see this all the time working in the hospital,
is first of all, we're seeing younger and younger people
coming in and liver failure.
So people in their 20s coming in
and fulminant liver failure from alcohol
and then dying in the hospital.
And the terrible thing is that they often didn't even know that this was causing a problem in their health.
And by the time they get to the hospital,
they're so sick it's too late.
And yet all of that could have been prevented or even repaired
if it was caught sooner.
And so that's where I think this education of understanding
like what really are the health harms of alcohol
and that we have normalized binge drinking in many occasions,
especially in young people, as being totally normal.
And yet there are very serious health consequences.
So I've got a bunch of questions around the liver. Does that mean that my liver can take
a bit of a beating before there's any real problems? Should I, you know, someone like
me, I don't drink alcohol, I'm not engaging in anything too bad, but sometimes I do wonder
if I could have like a blowout weekend and then my liver would just recover to normal again and I'd be fine. Yeah, I mean, so first every person is
different. One blowout weekend, you probably would be fine. Anyone would probably be fine.
The challenge is one blowout weekend then leads to like multiple blowout weekends and then over
time that can actually accelerate the damage to your liver. You said that my liver regenerates
though, so I'm thinking this thing will just pop back to
normal again.
As long as you haven't gotten to that scarring phase.
So once you get too far down that path, even if you were to stop drinking, your liver won't
recover.
The hard thing is that we don't totally understand who and why that happened so young to.
So this is an active area investigation because there are people who've been drinking for
60 years and their livers don't show signs of scarring.
And then we're seeing these young people at 25
who come in and die in the hospital.
And so there are individual factors
that you don't have any way of knowing
that are going to impact your risk of developing
liver inflammation and scar tissue.
And so the safest way to prevent that is to not drink
in these really high ways that we know are going to lead to harm.
The other way is to get medical care,
because often we do detect these things through blood tests
and we can do ultrasounds.
And when we see those early phases,
so what happens first is you actually get
fat deposition in your liver, that's the first step.
And then we see inflammation in fatty liver.
And if you don't stop the thing
that's driving those changes, over time,
we see the development of what's called fibrosis,
which is like scar tissue. And then that scar tissue gets more and more
advanced to the point that your liver stops functioning and you either die or you need
a liver transplant.
What activities outside of alcohol cause great stress on our liver that we might not see
as obvious?
Yeah. So obesity.
Food does.
Yeah, food. So your liver is very involved in glucose metabolism.
So our diet and our body weight impact our liver health.
And the other medication, so acetaminophen or Tylenol, which is a very common over-the-counter
pain reliever, above a certain threshold can cause serious liver damage.
So sometimes we'll see cases where someone didn't realize that like their cold medicine plus the Tylenol they were
taking both had that ingredient and then they go out
and drink heavily and that kind of combination effect
can cause liver damage.
How much do you think, this might be a bit of a strange,
bit of an unclear question, but how much alcohol
is gonna cause liver damage?
So again, it varies person to person.
For liver damage, it does tend to be the moderate to higher
amounts that cause damage.
One thing is that having these big surges,
like these massive binge episodes,
is probably more harmful than drinking at a moderate level
for a long period of time.
Those big surges cause a big buildup of that toxic byproduct
that your body has to clear.
And so if you have several years
of binge drinking heavily,
that actually probably is gonna cause more damage
than a longer period of time
of just drinking above the risk limits.
So really trying to minimize
and avoid those very heavy drinking episodes
is incredibly important.
And then keeping it to those low risk guidelines,
which we just learned are kind of eyeopening
and how low risk they are
is gonna reduce the risk of liver damage.
And does alcohol just impact the liver?
No, I mean, alcohol has effects across our body.
So many parts of the body can be affected by alcohol.
So kind of starting from the top, your brain,
and we can look at this with pictures like an MRI.
Oh, I've got one actually.
Yeah, I think.
This is, by the way, shocking. Yes.
So when we do an MRI of someone's brain,
we basically, this is like a cross slice.
So it's almost like you're facing me
and I'm cutting your face off
and looking at your brain onwards.
Healthy brain tissue is the gray and white matter,
and you want it to be as plump
and like taking up as much space as possible,
because that's where all of your brain activity is.
When people get really old or have dementia,
one thing we see is more and more
the black space is essentially water.
So we see the brains start shrinking and shrinking
and there's more water and less active, healthy brain tissue.
That process is accelerated with heavy alcohol use.
And so you can see here, this is a 43-year-old person
with severe alcohol use disorder
where their brain looks the way, you know,
a 90-year-old person with severe alcohol use disorder, where their brain looks the way a 90-year-old with dementia
would look because of that brain damage over time
from alcohol use.
And so we can actually, a form of dementia
is related to alcohol use.
And so your brain can be hugely impacted with alcohol.
What is going on there?
What's causing the brain to deteriorate in such a way
because of alcohol?
Yeah, well, remember I said ethanol,
which is the molecule,
crosses the blood-brain barrier.
And so, especially when you're having these high levels
of blood alcohol, that ethanol is sort of bathing your brain.
And if you think about what we talked about,
inflammation and changes to cells and to DNA and proteins
that is happening at the brain level,
the other thing that can cause,
accelerate the brain damage we see with alcohol
is actually nutritional deficiencies.
So people may be drinking a lot, and they're actually
not getting really crucial nutrients in their diet.
And that can accelerate the process of brain damage.
We can even see a very sudden onset amnesia
from heavy alcohol use in the setting of not getting
enough nutrients in your diet.
OK, so that's the brain.
That's the brain.
So the brain, for sure.
The next is the mouth and your esophagus.
So obviously you're drinking alcohol,
it's bathing your mouth,
it's bathing your esophagus and your stomach.
So we do see an increase in cancer like we talked about
and that's accelerated by smoking.
But we also see like benign but annoying
and problematic health conditions,
most notably acid reflux, so heartburn.
So if you notice like, oh, I'm like always having heartburn, I'm having to pop all these like
antacids and take this medicine, you might want to think like, how much am I drinking?
Is that contributing to my heartburn? So that's a very common thing. The heart is affected
by alcohol. So, you know, the heart is an organ where at low risk levels, there doesn't
seem to be harm from alcohol. But once you get into the moderate and high, we see harms. And the harms can be a couple fold. One is something called
atrial fibrillation, which is basically where your heart starts beating really irregularly.
So in your heart, there's four chambers, the two chambers at the top. So this is really
showing the ventricles and the atrium. So there's two chambers that blood flows through.
And in a normal heart, your electrical activity
comes from the top of your heart,
goes down to the bottom of your heart,
and tells the heart to pump.
And so you get a single impulse
that goes to the bottom of the heart,
says pump, and that pumps blood out to your brain
and your body and your organs and your liver.
In atrial fibrillation, the top of the heart
is just kind of quivering with this abnormal
electrical activity, and so the heart can't pump
in a normal way.
We actually, there's a term in medicine called holiday heart, because we see sometimes people
drink a ton over the holidays and will end up in this abnormal rhythm just from that
binge drinking pattern.
And then over time, if you're drinking at high levels, your heart actually dilates and
you can end up with congestive heart failure from a cardiomyopathy, which means the heart
muscle gets kind of weak and thin and floppy and can't pump the way that it needs to.
Oh damn. Sometimes we think that if we're good at handling our beer or our alcohol,
then it's having less harm on us. So for whatever reason, I've always been good at drinking
quite a lot when I used to drink, I don't drink anymore, but when I used to drink, and
being less affected than my friend who was a little bit bigger than me, had a little
bit more body fat, which is really interesting
because you pointed out an association there that I was never aware of.
Just to pause on that for a second, you're saying that if someone has more body fat,
they're more likely to get drunk?
Yeah, because they have less body water,
and alcohol doesn't go into your body fat.
So, essentially, it's like if you took a glass of water
and you dropped red dye in it, you're going to diffuse into that water.
So, the more water you have, the more diffuse it'll you're going to diffuse into that water. So the more water
you have, the more diffuse it'll be and the lower your blood alcohol content. So if you
have very low body fat, you probably have more body water. And so, you know, two drinks
for you is going to diffuse into a larger amount of water.
That explains a lot. Because I always wondered, he was so much bigger than me. At the time,
he was, he had much more body fat. And he would get drunk very, very quickly. And you
always think of a big guy, they can handle their beer or whatever,
but he'd get drunk very quickly.
So I used to wonder, I used to think, well, alcohol isn't harming me as much
because I'm not as drunk as he is.
But that's not true.
No, I mean, so first of all, I think the interesting story there,
one is not just the body fat, but also that people metabolize alcohol at different rates.
You probably, I don't know if you've found this to be true,
you probably had fewer hangovers than your friend
because a hangover does seem to be related
to the amount, how high that your blood alcohol level gets.
So people who don't metabolize alcohol as quickly
tend to have worse hangovers.
So that may have been something you experienced,
but it doesn't protect you
from the other health harms of alcohol,
like liver damage, like cancer, like over time,
heart problems or esophageal
problems.
What is a hangover?
Yeah, hangover is a fascinating thing that people are, you know, there's a lot of emerging
evidence about it and trying to understand what happens.
It seems to be most related to how high the ethanol concentration in your brain gets because
they've actually done a ton of studies with mice and with people, it was initially thought
to be due to the byproducts of alcohol like that acetyl aldehyde molecule we talked about, but it doesn't seem to be
related to that. It seems to be related to ethanol. But essentially, it's this syndrome
where after you drink, once your blood alcohol content comes down to zero, you feel sort
of apathetic, you're tired, you have a headache, you often feel nauseous. And so it's sort
of that sequelae of your brain essentially being bathed in this ethanol and then as it leaves you just feel totally crappy.
Because people think of it sometimes as just being dehydrated.
Yeah, it is not just being dehydrated. There's actual sort of effects of ethanol on your
brain that lead to the hangover. I think if you are drinking at an amount that you're
getting a hangover it is a good sign that you're drinking above a limit that would be
considered okay for your body.
Because sometimes, I remember back in the day, if I had a big glass of water before I went to bed,
if I'd been drinking, I felt better in the morning.
There is some element of dehydration, don't get me wrong, and that's partly because, right, if you think again, alcohol is diffused in water.
So if your total body water is contracted because you're dehydrated,
your ethanol level is going to be higher. So drinking is going to help you sort of flush
it out and feel better. I'm drinking water, but it's not only because of dehydration.
There'll be people listening to this now. I doubt they would have got this far, but
because if they did, they probably wouldn't think this, but there'll be some people who
would have gotten this far in the conversation and be thinking, yes, but alcohol helps me socialize. And socializing is really
important. And I can't socialize very easily because of the design of the modern world
without having a drink, or I have great times when I drink. So I don't want to quit my alcohol
use. And in some cases that they will be high and medium consumption alcohol drinkers.
What do you say to those people?
Well first, there's no judgment here.
So a molecule of ethanol is not more moral or immoral than a molecule of glucose.
You could say the same thing about diet.
We have lots of awareness now about processed foods and white flour and white sugar.
That doesn't mean that everyone's going to live, ascetic lifestyle where they never eat dessert.
So I think it really is like an...
You need to go in with eyes wide open
and understand what are the risks,
what matters to you, and how do you make that calculus.
So if you decide it's a choice you wanna make,
you wanna set yourself up for success.
So if you decide, like,
I wanna cut back on how much I'm drinking,
but I'm gonna go to happy hour every night with my friends
and just try to, like, not drink while I'm there,
you're probably not gonna be very successful because you're going to be in a situation
that's constantly like reminding you of alcohol use and everyone around you is using alcohol.
So try to make some different sort of structural changes in how you set up your life in your
week and your day.
And you may find that actually you don't miss it that much that you could cut out three
or four days of drinking and still get that social pleasure two days out of the week and
your overall health risk is going to go down significantly.
In terms of treating someone with alcohol abuse disorder,
rehab is often the most widely known form of treatment. One of my friends who struggled
with addiction really, really badly with alcohol addiction, but also drug addiction said to me
multiple times, he said, I've been to rehab three or four times now and it's just not working. And I think when the most popular or the most well-known
treatment doesn't work for you you kind of develop an even greater sense of hopelessness.
Are you a fan of rehab? Generally no. So you know rehab is this idea that you go away somewhere for
a week, a couple weeks and then you're kind of cured right? It's almost like people have thought
of addiction as an infection where you need like two weeks of antibiotics and then you're kind of cured, right? It's almost like people have thought of addiction as an infection where you need like two weeks
of antibiotics and then you're done.
What we really understand is that for many people,
addiction is more like a chronic illness
or even like cancer where you need a lot of treatment
up front for the first few years and then over time,
you get into stability and remission
and you're almost like a cancer survivor,
you're in long-term recovery.
And so this idea that you go somewhere for a couple weeks
and then you come out and you're all better
really doesn't match what we know of addiction.
The other problem is that much of what happens in rehab
is not all that therapeutic most of the time.
So the things that we know are most effective for addiction,
one are medications,
which there's a lot of stigma misunderstanding about.
And then two are like evidence-based psychotherapies.
So things like cognitive behavioral therapy,
motivational enhancement therapy,
you know, working on your underlying trauma.
Often in rehabs, the model is really built around this idea
of like you remove yourself from this environment.
You do some groups while you're there.
Sometimes, often they're based on more
of like a peer support model.
Sometimes the therapies that are offered
are frankly not very evidence-based.
Like we actually did this study.
It was a secret shopper study where we called rehab programs
across the country to ask about what they offered.
And many of them offer things like horse therapy
or dolphin-assisted therapy, which
I'm sure it's very nice to swim with dolphins
and to work with horses.
But it's not something that's been studied and effective.
And many places don't offer the things
that we know are actually effective,
which are trained clinicians doing
evidence-based treatments or medication treatments.
So it's a combination of this short-term fix
for a long-term problem and not actually getting
the treatment that you need.
So what does work, like for alcohol use disorder,
most people don't know we have very effective medications that
can help you, even if you just want to not drink as much.
So there's this medication I mentioned have very effective medications that can help you, even if you just want to not drink as much.
So there's this medication I mentioned at the beginning that actually blocks your opioid
receptors, which seems kind of funny that it works on alcohol.
But the reason it does is that for people who part of the thing that drives them to
drink is that they drink, they feel this like pain relief pleasure sensation from the release
of opioids in their brain.
And that makes them want to drink more.
That if you block that, people don't get sick if they drink,
but they just don't find it as rewarding.
And so someone named Sinclair, actually,
in Europe did some fascinating experiments
of even just using it as needed.
So rather than taking it as an everyday medication,
if you know that when you go to like a holiday event,
you're gonna drink way more than you want to drink,
you take it like 30 minutes before you go,
and then what people find is they have like one drink,
and they're like, ah, I'm good.
I don't have that same urge to want to drink more and more because I
didn't get the same sort of tickle of feeling better and feeling relief. What do you think
about psychedelics as a way to counteract addictive behaviors like the ones we've described?
Yeah, one of the most like groundbreaking trials in the last couple years for alcohol use disorder
was psilocybin. So there's a big study of psilocybin assisted psychotherapy for alcohol use disorder was psilocybin. So there's a big study of psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for alcohol use disorder, which showed really remarkable effects. So people
took psilocybin, actually compared it, folks came in and they either got a big dose of
Benadryl or psilocybin, and then they sat with a therapist for like eight hours for
this guided psilocybin journey. And they found that people drank much less after it. So it
does seem to have some effect. And the thought is that part of the way psychedelics work
is they increase neuroplasticity,
meaning the ability for the brain to form new pathways
and kind of retrain itself.
And so it does seem to be a potential therapeutic
for alcohol use disorder.
Psilocybin is the active compound in magic mushrooms.
Yes, exactly.
Have you had of Ibogaine?
I have, yeah.
Which is often associated,
which is another psychedelic often
associated with addiction.
Yes, people have looked at Ibogaine
for opioid use disorder.
Those studies have been less promising than psilocybin,
although it hasn't been tested in the same kind of rigorous
ways recently.
Partly for opioid use disorder, we
have really effective medications
that have been shown to improve recovery and reduce death.
And so it's sort of hard to be better than that.
One really interesting new whole class of medications
for alcohol is medications that are being used for weight loss
that people have probably heard of.
So like Wigovia, Ozempic, that whole class of GLP-1 medications
seems to also reduce alcohol use,
which is kind of interesting.
Really?
Yeah.
Has FA studied that?
Yeah.
Well, first of all, there's whole Reddit threads and online communities about this, over juice alcohol use, which is kind of interesting. Really? Yeah. Has FA studied that? Yeah.
Well, first of all, there's whole Reddit threads
and online communities about this,
where people were prescribed it for diabetes or for weight loss.
And they all of a sudden were like,
I don't really want to smoke or drink.
That kind of urge has gone away entirely.
And for some people, they really describe it
as being miraculous.
They've been trying to stop drinking for years and years.
And for the first time, they don't
feel that sense of craving and urge.
And there recently have been some actual clinical trials where they've done placebo-controlled
blinded studies and have shown that it does reduce drinking.
And so it's a really interesting area where it seems like those medications kind of reset
craving and appetite more globally and not just for food.
What the hell is this? I'm going to tell you.
All of you will probably know that I spend a huge amount
of the year, about 50 weeks a year,
traveling around the world.
And one of the great tips that I've always offered
for traveling is to pack as light as you possibly can.
Because if you do, I found that I can save hours
by not having to check in my bags
and then having to wait for them on the other side.
So I always travel with a small, tiny bag
that can be stowed above me in the plane.
Everywhere I go, even for trips that take weeks and weeks,
it is a massive travel hack.
And that's why I have to tell you
about today's show sponsor, X-Star.
This bag uses some clever technology
to suck all the air out of your luggage
so that you can fit up to three times more things
in a tiny, tiny little
space. You can learn more at xster.com and if you want to buy one of these you can use code DOAC
for 10% off plus free shipping and a 100 day trial. That's xster.com with code DOAC.
One of the ways that many of us understand addiction if we haven't experienced it directly
in our own lives is we look up at role models on TV
and in sort of celebrity pop culture,
and we see these role models who we see on stages
start to deteriorate and deteriorate in the public eye.
And ultimately, it seems often like it's inevitable
that someday the TMZ headline is gonna ring out
and say that this person has passed away.
And that happens all too often.
We think about Whitney Houston,
or I guess Michael
Jackson's even been associated with dying from an addiction to, I think it was painkillers
or something. Prince Elvis Presley, Mac Miller, who a lot of people will know as well, Anna
Nicole Smith. And even now in the public eye, there are certain individuals where we're
starting to see this sort of erratic behavior. They're posting on their Instagrams. They're
showing up in society in a slightly different way.
When you see that in the line of work that you operate in,
what is your natural reaction?
How does it make you feel when,
because there's a couple of people I'm thinking about
at the moment who the world are talking about that,
we think they have an addiction, we think they need help.
What is your natural reaction to that?
And what is it that those people need?
Yeah. When I read the headlines of someone dying, I mean, to me, it's gutting and heartbreaking.
One, because obviously it's a human life that was someone's mother and sister or brother,
and people cared about a public figure that people looked up to and cared about. But mostly
that it was a totally preventable death, like really, no one should die from a substance-related death. We have tools to treat addiction. We know how to
prevent the harms of drug overdose, for example. And so the fact that someone can die, especially
someone that everyone has watched for so long, is I think just like a tragic example of how
what the mismatch is between what we do around addiction and what science does is actually helpful.
I think when I see someone who actively is showing signs,
it's just sad to see that happen so publicly without people
being able to support that person.
And it's not a magic fix.
It's not going to be like you have an intervention,
the person goes to treatment, gets better forever,
that I think is often in people's minds.
It is a process, a journey, like any change. And so really, it is around where we began, that
idea of how do you begin to understand with this person, how is their substance use getting
in the way of what they want for themselves? And how might their life be better for them
based on whatever they believe better is if they were to make changes to their substance
use?
I am I remember I had this one particular friend who had an addiction and I remember
always the life of the party and I remember this one day he came up to me and an event
and he'd sat down in front of me and said to me um he said he like whispered to me I'm
in so much pain and he told me about rehab and how it felt and etc. But it just
almost sounded unbelievable that someone with such a big smile on their face would whisper
to me, especially a man, because men don't really talk much about their emotions, I'm
in so much pain. And then finally, I then see how the world treats that individual,
him having whispered that to me one day, and the world, how the world responds to his behavior and attacks him and criticizes him. But I
was privy to the whisper. And that one whisper helped me to kind of reframe how to treat
that person, but also really what was at the heart of what was going on.
And probably give you so much empathy, you know?
A huge amount of empathy, because I would have been like the rest of the world. I would
have just thought, what an idiot. What a dickhead.
Like, what's he doing that?
That's strange behavior.
Yep.
And you said something really important that was a slight
shift in words.
You didn't say he failed treatment.
You said the treatment failed him.
And that matters so much because I think too often we've
made it seem as if people are failing.
Like, if they go to rehab and they don't get well,
eh, it's their problem, you know?
And actually, the treatment wasn't right for them.
If someone had cancer and their cancer came back
or didn't get treated by chemotherapy,
we wouldn't say, oh, they failed.
We would say, well, what's the next treatment?
How do we get them to the right doctor?
And so there is this personal blaming.
And that gets at stigma, which is one of the main reasons
that people don't share that they're struggling
with substances, that they don't seek treatment.
And so we have tremendous stigma towards drug and alcohol
addiction.
It's one of the most stigmatized kind of social conditions globally.
And so of course then if you're a person who starts to think like,
oh, maybe I do have a problem, like maybe my alcohol use is getting in the way of things,
it's really hard to then say anything because you worry that you're going to be judged,
you're going to be labeled, you're going to be misunderstood.
In some cases, terrible things could happen to you.
You might get your children taken away by, you know, child welfare. You could lose your housing or lose your job. And so that
stigma has played into this terrible cycle where people have to whisper it to someone.
It shows how much he trusted you to even be able to say honestly what he was going through
because there's so much stigma about the condition itself.
You must have had many cases that broke your heart.
Yeah.
Can you tell me about one that changed you?
Oh, goodness. So many. You know, so one gentleman in particular, he was struggled with heroin
addiction for a long time and had been, like we talked about, had been kind of a chronic
illness for him. He'd had periods where he'd done really well. He'd had periods where he
had struggled and had always stayed safe through all of well. He'd had periods where he had struggled
and had always stayed safe through all of that.
And he actually, his one really meaningful relationship
in his life that kind of kept him together
was a relationship with his mom, and he lived with her.
And they lived in public housing.
They were dealing with economic insecurity like many people.
And someone found out that he was staying with her,
and it would have put her at risk for her housing.
And so he didn't want her to lose her housing.
So he left, but he was newly homeless.
And all of a sudden, because of just social barriers,
was dealing with the stress of homelessness and being alone.
And even with kind of all of the connection
he'd had with his mom and with treatment,
he was found dead between two parked cars that overdosed alone in the street. And I always think like if...
And you knew him.
Oh, yeah. The cascading effects that, you know, that it didn't have to be that way. And I think
there are so many deaths like that where I just think it doesn't have to be like this, you know,
really no one should die like this. And there are so many things that, you know, in the moment feel so out of our
control. And I think that's part of what generates my passion for this work is I can't always
save the person in front of me or change issues around homelessness or housing policy. But
I can try to work on a broader scale to make things different for the next person. And
I think that kind of that for me counteracts some of the distress of losing people that
I care about.
If you were president of the United States, for example, let's just use this country
as an example, and you had to make upstream changes to the way society was designed in
order to mitigate the downstream symptom of addiction and addictive behaviors, etc. What
are those things that you would change about the way
that our society is designed?
You could change anything.
Yeah.
I mean, starting upstream, the biggest thing
would be building resilience and building connection early on.
So I think these things that feel so not related
to addiction, per se, are actually deeply related
when we think about adverse childhood experiences.
So when we think about prevention for children,
often people have looked at education,
like telling kids that drugs are bad.
That doesn't work.
What does work is actually building resilience
among young people.
So building resilience, building connection.
So what does that look like?
That looks like affordable housing.
That looks like parks where people can get outside and play
sports and exercise and build relationships.
That looks like supporting you know, supporting families
so that families can stay together. And so those early relationships and attachment can
be well formed. That's like the true prevention work is trying to break the cycles of intergenerational
trauma, poverty, substance use, and actually supporting families communities at the very
start.
It reminds me of Rat Park.
Yes. Yeah. Rat Park is a great example of that.
What is Rat Park for those that don't know? Yeah. So Rat Park was a series of experiments
that were done, where essentially they took, they're trying to understand kind of drivers
of addiction using rat models. And so they took rats and they had one model where rats
were isolated in their own cage with nothing to do and no human connection. And they had
access to a substance like morphine or cocaine
where they could push a lever and get more of it.
And those animals, when they were deprived of connection and isolation,
anything to do, used more of the drug.
It gave them relief, it gave them pleasure.
They took those same animals and they put them in this amazing cage
with, you know, areas to play and, like, wheels to climb on
and lots
of friends and other rats. And all of a sudden they saw the same animals were no longer kind
of pushing the lever and trying to get more of the drug. And so, you know, it's, it's
a somewhat simplified model that there's lots of, it's probably oversimplified, but it demonstrates
that so much of addiction really is around this idea of connection, restoring sort of
the world around us, the
community, the interrelatedness that we all have, the opportunities and purpose and meaning
and hope.
So I think that's the real prevention.
And then there's how do we actually address folks who are having a problem.
And I think, you know, what I would do there is first make addiction treatment widely available
immediately when people need it.
So the minute you walk into your general practitioner's office
or an emergency room, you get treated with compassion,
with science, with people asking you what can they do to help
and offering you effective care the same way they would
if you had a new cancer diagnosis or a new diagnosis
of a heart problem.
And then we really reframe treatment entirely
to look like the way it looks for any other health condition.
And that we stop punishing people who use substances,
where a lot of times people are still sent to jail
for substance use, which is a confusing mixed message
of we're saying this is a health problem on the one hand,
but we're gonna put you in prison or jail at the same time.
Those two things don't necessarily align.
Many of us are living in the first model of Rat Park.
We're living alone, we're living in these big cities, we're more sedentary than ever before.
Maybe, you know, we've moved to a big city because we don't have, which means we don't have our family around.
We might be doing a job that's incredibly challenging.
So it's no wonder when we think about addiction and alcohol and some of these other behaviours, but more broadly, beyond alcohol as a substance,
other addictive behaviours, whether it's social media or it's what we eat or pornography
or in the sort of inverse, the good habits, the healthy food, the working out, the exercise,
the productive behaviours, why we're struggling so much. And I've often wondered if we should all just like go to
like communes and live, do you know what I mean?
In like, in groups.
I mean, I don't think human beings were meant
to live this way.
And it's a relatively new thing, right?
We often lived in a village or a community.
We lived in these multi-generational households.
I mean, I have little kids and I think having kids
was such an eye opener ofener of that, of like,
well, that makes sense why people live with their parents
and their grandparents and have these big families
to create community and a sort of extended family around you.
And we have lost that in a lot of ways.
And I think the ways that we used to get that, like religion,
maybe that still resonates for some people,
for others it may not.
And so finding other ways of engagement, of meaning, of purpose, that can be through lots
of different things.
I think people are finding creative ways of doing that.
It can be through finding a volunteer activity, finding some other type of social group.
Some people do it through sports.
They find connection and engagement with people they don't really know over the shared love
around an activity or a team.
But really sort of seeing that as a priority the same way you'd prioritize other things
in your life and your health.
And are you a fan of therapy as an approach to aim at the early childhood trauma?
Absolutely, yeah.
I mean, I think one of the problems is that too often therapy has been like forced on
people.
I think that I'm much more of the approach of like, we need to make treatment available
and welcoming and high quality
so that people get value out of it.
And therapy is a huge part of that.
You know, it's about a lot of things.
It's about connection.
It's about figuring out those reasons
why people are using in the first place,
addressing and healing those traumas.
It also matters that we have good,
well-trained empathetic therapists.
So there's been a lot of interesting studies
looking at actually how empathetic your therapist is,
is probably the strongest predictor
of whether you stop, make changes to your alcohol
or drug use.
Really?
Which is so interesting, because we often think like,
you've probably heard someone say like,
I don't really like my therapist.
And I think someone's reaction to that is like,
oh, like you're not that into therapy.
But they've actually done a lot of studies showing that
a therapist who is less empathetic,
their client is more likely to use more substances at the end of that course of treatment.
So actually having a really well-trained, compassionate, evidence-based workforce is
hugely important too.
And I guess the same applies for family and friends?
Yeah, yeah, I think empathy is really powerful.
Those kind of things that we think of as soft skills actually matter tremendously.
Is it possible to prop somebody up? I was talking to Dr. Anna Lemke about this, about
the idea that you can play a role in someone's addiction. I want to help my friend who's
addicted and so I'm there for them, I'm comforting them, but I'm actually in some way reinforcing that addictive behavior because I'm positively reinforcing it
because I'm supporting them so much
and I'm loving them so much
and I'm showing them so much empathetic attention
that actually I'm playing a role in continuing that addiction.
Is that possible?
Yeah, I mean, this is this concept of like enabling,
which I think is nuanced.
I would say at its core, it's really deeply problematic
that for the most part,
love and support are never gonna be harmful.
And when I talk to patients,
often the thing that caused them
to ultimately engage in treatment
was not some terrible consequence.
It was the idea that someone cared enough about them
in a moment where they didn't love themselves very much
and felt hopeless,
that someone was willing to sort of lift them up
and believe in them.
And it's these small moments of kindness.
I'll tell you a story of a patient that we took care of in the hospital who was there
for a really life-threatening infection related to their drug use.
And a year to the date after he was hospitalized, he wrote a letter to our team and he said,
you know, I'll never forget the moments you guys came in and just sat with me and talked
to me.
And he now sends an email every single year on the anniversary of when he got out of the hospital.
And it's those moments of humanity of connection.
Again, that connection idea that often
are the catalyst for change, the kind of hope and belief
that your life could be better somehow,
as opposed to this idea of like increasing
someone's pain and suffering.
And that plays out in different ways.
So in families, one of the most effective tools
we teach people is something called CRAFT,
which stands for Community Reinforcement and Family Training.
And it's very different than the like,
people may have seen like shows
where you're supposed to like stage an intervention
and you know, tell someone all or nothing.
But CRAFT is very different.
It teaches people first,
how do you understand the science of addiction,
family members?
Second, how do you get support for yourself?
Because it's really tough to deal with addiction in a family?
And then how do you start to learn about consequences in a different way?
That if your parent and your kid is missing school because they're using, you don't want
to cover for them and sort of reinforce their pattern.
But you also don't need to kick them out of your house.
That there are sort of gradations of consequence that can actually help people change.
And one of the biggest sort of motivators for change
is actually positive reinforcement of the behaviors
you want to see.
So that's been called contingency management
in the kind of treatment world.
And health insurance companies, lots of companies
have figured this out, right?
So if you get money back because you join a gym,
or you get those reimbursements for doing something
that people want to see, people do more of it.
It's true in human behavior.
It's very true with addiction.
But we happen to the opposite.
We try to punish people into getting well instead
of reinforcing kind of the healthy behavior, what
we want to see more of, if that makes sense.
Yeah.
I guess I'm trying to represent the audience member that's
listening to this right now that knows someone in their life
that was addictive.
And they tried to be empathetic.
They tried to offeretic. They tried to
offer support, they tried to give the person help and still nothing changed. In that situation,
maybe the person that was struggling with the addiction didn't accept the support, didn't
go to the meetings, didn't speak to the therapist. In such a situation where you're offering
help to someone and they're not taking it.
They're not willing to investigate
different medical treatments.
They're living at your house,
they're in your business, whatever.
Is there a point where you say enough is enough?
Yeah, well, first, it is just so hard to be there
as a family member or a friend.
So for anyone listening, I've been there.
It's incredibly impossible.
So have grace with yourself.
I think that's a different decision you're talking about
is at some point, do you have to make a decision
to protect yourself?
So let's say you have someone in your home
who's dealing with addiction, who gets aggressive
or is stealing money or is causing trauma
to the people living in the house.
At some point, you may need to decide that for my wellbeing,
for the rest of the family's wellbeing,
I can't have this in my life right now.
That's very different than saying kicking them out
is gonna make them better.
So the distinction there is that it's okay
to protect ourselves, sometimes we have to do that.
And sometimes there's only so much you can do,
but to not sort of fool yourself into thinking
that the action is to help the other person, and that's okay.
I think the other pieces, and that's okay.
I think the other pieces, you know, at the end of the day, first of all, it's easier
to be a treater.
So I've been a family member, I've been a clinician.
As a clinician, I can truly be unconditional.
So I can, I'm going to be someone's doctor whether they continue to use heroin or continue
to drink or don't.
And there's something really beautiful in that.
Like my engagement with someone is not premised on whether they make changes or not. As a family member, that's harder,
especially if you're a kid dependent on someone
or you're in a marriage or a relationship.
So you may have to make different choices.
But I think at the end of the day,
people don't change because of why we think they should change.
They change because they think their life
is gonna get better in some way.
So the key then becomes figuring out
why might this person's life get better
if they were to make changes to their alcohol or drug use?
So it's a shift where you become sort of on their team
instead of trying to drag them towards water,
drag the horse towards water.
And there's this fascinating kind of human instinct
that none of us like being told what to do.
So there's something called the writing reflex,
which is, it's really hard for caregivers,
it's hard for parents, because we love to tell people
our great advice and why what they're doing is wrong
and they should take our brilliant doctor advice.
And this can be telling someone,
don't you see what you're doing is causing harm,
you should make changes.
It can also be subtler, it can be lecturing someone
or trying to educate them.
But when someone shoves something down your throat,
your instinct is to resist.
It's just natural human behavior.
Even if it's a great idea,
if someone's shoving an ice cream
come in your face and like, eat it.
Even if you like ice cream, you might be like,
wait, wait, I don't know if I want this ice cream.
And so the key then is not to sort of tell someone what to do,
it's to understand why might they want to make changes.
And so once you do that, then you all of a sudden realize,
like, it just feels better.
You're not trying to drag someone towards something.
It doesn't, you don't have like personal skin in the game about what choice they
make, but you're really a partner with them and figuring out how is this thing
causing problems to you and why might your life get better if you were to make
changes to your alcohol use or your drinking or your substance use.
What's the difference in delivery there in terms of delivering that message?
Because they're both ultimately getting to the same outcome, but it sounds like
the language
might be slightly different.
Yeah, very different. So in kind of like medical speak and therapy speak, we talked about something
called motivational interviewing, which is, it becomes almost like a mind trick, but it's,
it is basically a way of trying to identify from the person their reasons for change and
reflecting it back to them. And so it's not you telling them you think they should change,
but you are trying to elicit their motivation and amplify it.
And then at the end of the day, you're
turning over the power back to them.
So that might look like something someone says, you know.
I'll be your patient.
So yeah, I do drink a lot.
I drink a couple of times a day, especially in the mornings.
But it's fine.
I'm still managing to get to work every day.
Obviously I have a couple of misconduct issues at work.
But other than that, you know, and my partners left me,
but other than that, everything else is fine
and I can manage this.
It sounds like your alcohol use is causing some problems
at work and in your relationships.
It is, yeah.
Yeah, my partners left me and I keep getting these misconduct
and notifications at work and disciplineries because I sometimes get there late me and I keep getting these misconduct notifications at work and
disciplineries because I sometimes get there late and when I'm there sometimes I fall
asleep etc. and I've worked with big machinery so that's a little bit of a risk there but
otherwise it's okay.
It sounds like you're worried about your safety at work and also how your drinking is starting
to affect your job and your relationships.
That's true yeah I am you know I've been on the crane in particular. Being intoxicated on the crane in
particular has caused a few incidences. And sometimes I do worry that one day it'll go a
little bit too far. Yeah.
Yeah. It sounds like that's really scary that you're really worried your alcohol use could
cause even like a serious or life-threatening accident at work.
Yeah. And then what am I going to do for work?
Because if you get something like that on your file,
then I'm never going to be able to be a machine operator
ever again.
And your job sounds really important to you.
It's important.
Alcohol is starting to get in the way of that.
100%.
Yeah.
And so what are your goals looking forward around your job
or your relationship?
Well, I really should fix this alcohol issue that I have.
And I would love to find a partner.
That's really important to me because I want to have a family.
So obviously, prerequisite of having a family is finding a partner, really.
So, yeah.
Yeah, it sounds like you're really committed to thinking about making a change to your drinking
and that you're looking forward to finding a partner and family
and you're worried that alcohol might get in the way of that.
So what you're doing there is you're not leading me, you're kind of pushing me.
Yeah.
If that makes sense.
There's like a little bit of like a Jedi mind trick thing where you're essentially, it's
actually really, it's a little tricky when you're first learning how to do it because
what I'm trying to do is I'm listening for what's called change talk.
So any little nugget you're giving me about making a change.
So you're saying like, oh, I'm starting to get this misconduct.
I'm worried about this thing with safety at work.
I want a partner.
Those are like, it's a goldmine of little kernels of change.
And I'm ignoring all of your sustained talk.
So anything where you're arguing for the status quo, it's not a big deal.
Drinking is not that big a deal.
I can't make a change.
I don't even acknowledge it or address it. And that's actually hard because I think most
of us pay attention to the negative stuff. So if you think about like a performance review
at work or someone telling you any kind of feedback, we tend to amplify and remember
like the one bad thing that someone said to us and forget the millions of good things.
So you have to change, you have to like train yourself to do the opposite, to hear those
little kernels of change talk. And then I'm basically being a mirror, but I'm amplifying it.
So I'm taking these little kernels of change talk.
I'm reflecting back to your own words.
So I'm not telling you that you should stop drinking because
it's unsafe at work.
I'm reflecting to you like you're
starting to get worried that you might have an accident at work
and that's really serious.
And that's kind of guiding the conversation forward.
The other key is that if you meet a point of resistance,
you want to pivot.
Because once you start arguing, whether it's about politics or anything, people dig in.
So if you start arguing with someone, you got to find another way. You just got to pivot
and roll to a different tactic. Because the more you argue, the more people dig in on their point
of view. And it's more about like winning the argument than it is about moving forward.
What if you want to change yourself? Is there a process, a system, a methodology
to help you discover what your ideal behaviors are,
what your why is, and to implement change?
That's why I say all the time, what's your why?
I think that's so exciting.
We all want to live our best lives, whatever that means to us.
And so having a purpose, having a goal
is probably the most important thing.
Motivation is important.
We talk a lot about motivation.
But motivation is fleeting.
It can slip and slide over the course of one day.
So you may take kind of a mundane example.
You want to get in shape.
And you're feeling super motivated one day.
And then the next morning, your alarm clock
goes off at like 5 in the morning.
And you're tired.
And it's cozy in your bed.
And maybe you stayed up a little too late.
Your motivation is going to be flagging, right?
So if you don't have a goal or a reason or a why or a purpose, it's going to be really
hard to actually get up the energy to get up.
And so figuring out what that purpose is and then trying to find ways to enjoy the process.
Because if you're always working towards a future goal, some people are very goal-oriented
and that works for them.
But finding joy in the process will help you.
So I'll take alcohol, for example, like not an addiction issue, just like making changes
to your drinking in your life.
So if you're just like, oh, I should stop drinking because drinking is bad for me, that's
like a relatively vague goal, right?
It's not really about anything that matters specifically to you, and it's going to be
hard to stick to that.
If instead you think, okay, I've started to realize that when I drink every single
night I don't get the work done that I want to get done because I'm too tired and I fall
asleep. I don't feel refreshed in the morning because I'm not sleeping very well. I'm not
getting up early to exercise and that's something that really matters to me. I'm not as present
with my family as I wanted to be. Then it's all these little micro goals that make it
much easier to make a change. So you may decide, I'm only I'm not going to drink, I'm only going to drink two days
out of the week.
And when I do drink, I'm going to keep it to this amount.
But the reason why is not some vague recommendation from some doctor.
It's because like you're working really hard at work and it feels good to be productive
after dinner and you're training for a race and you want to get up in the morning and
run.
And so you actually notice those little steps like, wow, it feels great.
I woke up this morning and I feel so refreshed.
Like you're reinforcing your goal right there.
You're not working towards some abstract thing
that doesn't really matter to you.
So you wanna make these like really focused,
personalized goals and really anchoring it
on what is your why.
And your why may be very different than my why
or someone else's why.
So it may be, you know, sleep really matters to you.
Or, you know, you may have a different relationship
with alcohol.
So the other kind of example I'd give is,
people are different, right?
We respond differently to things.
So some people can open a bag of like potato chips
and eat two and walk away.
Some people like they open the bag,
they're gonna eat all of the chips.
And so it's just easier not to open the bag.
And alcohol is like that too.
Some people might find if they open a bottle of wine
or they have alcohol in the house,
they're gonna drink all of it. And the idea of like, trying to keep to these small amounts
of alcohol is actually really hard. And it's simpler and easier to just avoid it completely,
or to only drink at a restaurant or something. So you do have to understand like how your goals,
your why, your purpose interacts with your response to whatever it is that you're working on. And
that's going to be different for everyone. Are there any other things, any other habits
that we should be thinking about
when we're trying to overcome an addiction?
So if we think about alcohol as being
at like the bottom of the stream,
is there anything else upstream
that I should be thinking about?
So we talked about social connections and relationships.
I need to be making sure that I'm surrounded by people,
I'm socializing,
because that's gonna be an insulator to like stress
and loneliness, which is gonna cause me discomfort, which is going to lead me to alcohol. But are there
any other things that I should be thinking about when I'm setting off to make a change
in my life?
Yeah. Yeah, there's a bunch. I think first, any behavior change, whether it's alcohol
or other, if you're feeling like depleted and tired and not your best self, it's going
to be harder to make a change. So if you think about like any big decision you made to change your job, to start an exercise
routine, to leave your partner, you probably didn't choose like the day that you're exhausted
and feeling anxious and stressed and not your best self to make that change. Like change
is hard. So you want to try to boost up other things in your life. Eat well, you know, get
enough rest, try to exercise. Things that are going to help you feel healthy in your
best best self when you're trying to make a change.
Is that linked to dopamine?
Yeah, because I mean, so our natural reward system, the thing that triggers it is exercise,
food, sex, connection. So, you know, trying to have healthy other ways of positive dopamine
release. And so I think for many people, alcohol or substances can feel like a way of doing
something nice for ourselves.
Like, I'm going to, this is going to help me reduce
my stress after a bad day at work.
So the goal then is not that you just, like,
white-knuckle it all night and feel really stressed after work.
It's that you figure out, like, what
are some other things that help me reduce stress after work?
Maybe it's going to a yoga class with a friend.
Maybe it is, you know, spending time with my family.
Maybe it's getting massage or meditating
or watching a show I like.
So you wanna, it's not just you're removing the thing
that you're trying to change.
You wanna fill up the empty space with other things.
So what if I fill it up with like,
Haagen-Dazs ice cream and burgers?
Because that will cause a dopamine here.
So presumably if I just eat loads of sweets and candy, then
that's going to stop me from engaging in addictive behavior.
But we see that all the time. So that's like replacing things. And, you know, I was reading
an article, people probably heard of dry January, this idea of like not drinking for the month
of January to rethink your relationship with alcohol. I was reading an article that dry
January has become high January because people are just smoking a ton of weed instead of
drinking.
And so it's very, I think you want to be cautious that you're not just replacing the thing that
you're trying to change with something that's also going to cause health problems.
Now having dessert once in a while for this, you know, you're not getting calories from
alcohol and having a nice ice cream cone once a week is a way of sort of treating yourself
as healthier and maybe more aligned with your goals.
That's fine.
I think thinking about these things,
actually thinking about alcohol the way we think about dessert,
sunbathing, eating processed meats, all of these things
have risk and benefit in our lives.
I think where we've gone so wrong with alcohol
is this idea that it's like a health promoting behavior,
that you shouldn't be drinking for your health.
It's not going to make you healthier.
And also, much like many things we
do that are not health promoting activities,
there are ways of reducing the health harms of that activity
so that it's OK in small amounts in your life.
I think B2B marketeers keep making this mistake.
They're chasing volume instead of quality.
And when you try to be seen by more people instead
of the right people, all you're doing is making noise.
But that noise rarely shifts the needle
and it's often quite expensive.
And I know as there was a time in my career
where I kept making this mistake
that many of you will be making it too.
Eventually I started posting ads
on our show sponsors platform LinkedIn.
And that's when things started to change.
I put that change down to a few critical things.
One of them being that LinkedIn was then
and still is today the platform where decision makers go to,
not only to think and learn, but also to buy.
And when you market your business there,
you're putting it right in front of people
who actually have the power to say yes.
And you can target them by job title, industry,
and company size.
It's simply a sharper way to spend your marketing budget.
And if you haven't tried it, how about this?
Give LinkedIn ads a try, and I'm going to give you a hundred dollar ad credit to get
you started.
If you visit linkedin.com slash diary, you can claim that right now.
That's linkedin.com slash diary.
Just thinking about something we said earlier about how early childhood trauma causes the
brain to change and then results in addictive behaviors. If I
went through an early childhood trauma and my brain has changed because of that
and then I get into I become addicted to alcohol as a young man and then I
managed to find my way off the alcohol my brain is still addicted right my
brain still has that addictive sort of predisposition so isn't it the case that
I'll just end up being addicted
to something else that gives me a dopamine hit?
So it turns out the brain is amazingly plastic,
meaning it can change.
We see that over time.
So the first thing is even adverse childhood experiences
are not a done deal.
So we talk a lot about ACEs.
We don't talk a lot about pieces
or PCE positive childhood experiences,
but actually you can reduce the risk that someone develops addiction by increasing the number of positive childhood experiences, but actually you can reduce the risk that
someone develops addiction by increasing the number of positive childhood experiences.
So take someone who's experienced some terrible adversity, their parent has died or they have
a parent who's in prison or they have addiction in their family. If that kid has one single adult
figure that they believe cares about them, that reduces their risk of addiction. So there are a
lot of positive ways that we can actually change the trajectory, even
in the midst of terrible trauma.
When you think about someone who's had a substance use
disorder, we actually have good data on this,
that after five years of recovery,
and often that is fits and starts.
So most people think of like, this is one fell swoop
that you decide to stop drinking,
and then success is that you never drink again.
For most people, what we find is that's actually
like a series of steps.
So I always like to think of progress, not perfection,
and not have this kind of all or nothing mindset
that for many people, they may early on have a month
where they go without alcohol,
and then maybe next time it's three months,
and then maybe it's a year.
And these recurrences happen,
but ultimately they get to this place
where they go into long-term recovery.
After five years of recovery,
a person's risk of subsequently developing addiction
is no higher than the general public's.
Your brain actually does change,
and we see this on functional imaging,
we see this in longitudinal studies
that follow people over time.
So you actually can overwhelm those things
and get to a place where you don't have a higher risk
than other people.
Because some people say,
I've got an addictive personality.
They sort of self-label and self-identify
as having an addictive personality.
Sometimes they even reference their brain
as being easily addictive.
Is there truth in that?
Is it possible to have an addictive personality?
It's not so much about personality,
but we do respond differently to substances.
So take alcohol or opioids, anything.
People feel differently the first time they ever use it.
So often if you talk to someone who then develops addiction,
they tell you that first time they used the substance,
it was like this amazing feeling.
It felt like I've had people describe it as falling in love
or a warm hug or like a relaxing bath,
these like incredible comforting experiences.
Other people, they get prescribed like an opioid
for a tooth extraction.
They feel nauseous and kind of like not like themselves and they don't like the feeling.
So how we respond to substances is definitely based on our neurobiology and is different
for different people.
So some people are both from a genetic reason and their own brain are just more wired to
be at risk of addiction.
And that's important to know about yourself because then you can make different choices.
You may decide, you know, never to keep alcohol in the house or not to drink because
the risk is too great. How much do you think about other things that are taking hold of society?
Some of the other things that are non-substance related. So social media addictions and
pornography addictions and what else? What else are some of the big ones? Food addictions,
food, sex, gambling. I think there are a lot of similarities.
It's not my particular area of focus,
but I think there are a lot of overlaps.
I mean, I think many of the things you just listed,
you could talk about, one, dopamine, obviously, but two,
this idea of needing to fill yourself with something else,
either thinking about trauma, thinking
about untreated mental illness, thinking about just
the deficit of connection and of meaning and reward and reaching to these external solutions.
Can you tell me about a time where you've worked with a patient who, through the process
of working with them and understanding their trauma, you discovered something unexpected
about the root cause of their addictive behavior?
Yeah, yeah.
I can think of many patients, but one in particular who, you know, I had this, I knew that he'd
experience hard things in his life.
He'd been in prison, for example, which is a traumatizing experience.
He'd lost his parents, another thing.
I never truly understood the depth of his trauma and had, he had struggled this whole
life with substance use disorder and using lots of things, mostly opioids, but also alcohol and cocaine,
and just had had a really, really hard time.
And after years of knowing him,
one day he broke down my office and shared
that he'd actually been molested as a young kid.
And so sometimes there is that thing
that people have never felt like they could share
with anyone that really is at the root
of so much of what they've been dealing with.
And like the person who whispered to you, I think the pain of keeping that inside, not
only the trauma of experiencing that as a child, but then holding that secret and feeling
like you somehow are damaged or, you know, that this thing inside you is there and not
being able to heal it, talk about it, share it with people, I think, is just this like
this well of pain that lives
inside people.
Did he recover?
He actually passed away.
From substance abuse?
From substance use, yeah.
You must carry a lot of this stuff with you, because your line of work sounds like you're
dealing with bad news quite often, more so than the average person.
And the news you're dealing with is a quite often, more so than the average person. And the news you're
dealing with is a different type of news. You're dealing with somebody reaching the
end of their life through something that you also have said many times you believe is preventable
in many cases. How do you manage that?
Yeah, I think a couple of things. One, there are so many stories of hope
that I think counterbalance that for me.
So I think the other stories in my mind
are I carry with me and still care for and are in touch
with people who are living these amazing, vibrant lives
in recovery.
And in the US alone, there's 24 million people
living in recovery.
So there are these stories of people
who have overcome just trauma, tragedy, hardship,
and are doing awesome. They're parenting. They're working. You probably don't even know they're around you. So there are these stories of people who have overcome just trauma, tragedy, hardship, and
are doing awesome.
They're parenting, they're working.
You probably don't even know they're around you.
They don't tell people necessarily that they're in recovery.
And getting to be sort of a part of that process with someone and watching, there's nothing
in medicine where I can actually see as dramatic of a change as with addiction, where someone
can be in a moment where they're dealing with all of these health consequences and relationship challenges, and then they
get better.
And it's just like the most beautiful thing to be a part of.
And so I think the hope from that, the sort of positivity of it is what keeps me going
every day.
Obviously, finding ways to care for myself through that and family and connection, exercise,
I run, I write, you know, you got you have to keep yourself whole through it all too.
But I think I get tremendous purpose
and mostly like a lot of hope from working with people
and seeing them recover.
What is the most important thing we didn't talk about
that we should have talked about?
I think one thing is language.
It's like this subtle thing.
I sort of mentioned an example where you did it really well
where instead of saying someone failed treatment,
you said the treatment failed them.
But a lot of the language that we use with addiction
actually subtly and not so subtly worsens stigma.
And sometimes it sounds like I'm being politically correct
or it's like an issue of semantics,
but there's actually really good data on this.
So if you think about words we use for addiction,
one is substance abuse, right?
So the term abuse, what does abuse refer to?
So it actually comes from an old English word
that means like a willful act of misconduct.
And it's a word that we use for child abuse, for sexual abuse, for
domestic abuse. Like it's only for these like terribly violent acts of commission that are
very stigmatized because they're like terrible things. And yet we use it for this thing that
we're saying as a health condition that you're like a substance abuser or you have substance
abuse. And so there have actually been these elegant studies that took like PhD level psychologists,
really highly trained clinicians, and they described a person as either a substance abuser
or as a person with a substance use disorder.
And the clinician was actually more likely to recommend a punitive intervention for the
person described as a substance abuser.
What does that mean?
So in this case, they were given like an option.
You read this paragraph about a fictional patient, and they don't really know what the
researchers are testing.
And they're given a bunch of different options
for intervention.
And one is this, send them to a drug court or send them to jail.
One is offer them outpatient effective treatment.
There's a bunch of different choices.
When they hear someone described as a substance abuser,
they're actually more likely to recommend
the jail-based intervention.
So words actually influence how we think, even how we make clinical
decisions. They've also done this to the public. So if you describe someone as a drug addict,
the public has a more negative view of them than if you describe them as a person with addiction.
So there are these subtle ways there's been a shift in addiction to really using what we call
person-first language, which has been true across medicine. So like we used to use terrible words,
like we refer to someone as like the schizophrenic,
or really labeling them as their health condition.
And thankfully, there's been a change
from that to realize that people are people first
who have an illness.
They're not defined by it.
So I would never say, I'm going to go see the lung
cancer in room 204.
I'd say, I'm going to see Mr. Smith who has lung cancer.
And so with addiction, too, people are more than that.
So to say, person with addiction, person
with an alcohol use
disorder, rather than saying they're an addict or an alcoholic.
And then even terms like clean and dirty,
which are commonly used when we talk about addiction.
So take the word clean.
It sounds really positive.
You're saying, oh, you're clean.
But what are you really saying?
So you're saying, if you're clean now,
when you were actively struggling, what were you?
You were dirty.
And so I always remember an example.
A friend of mine who's in recovery
was interviewing for jobs in the recovery space.
And so people on the interview trail
would say to him, like, how long have you been clean for?
And he would say, well, I've been
bathing since I was a newborn.
So I've been clean my whole life.
And I've been in recovery for five years or whatever.
So I think these little things actually
matter that we should use terminology that we'd
use for another health condition.
If we're labeling people with active addiction as dirty,
or people with addiction as the same as child abusers with that sort of language,
we're really sort of subtly increasing stigma.
So that's a small thing that we can all do,
is just try to use language that's a bit more humanizing.
It's so interesting, because I was aware of this,
but I still found myself accidentally using the word abuse.
Yeah.
And I'd stumble into it.
I was like, oh, I'm so stupid.
I tried to avoid the use of the word addict.
Yeah, it's hard to change.
But you know, like everything, you just want to be humble, curious, and keep trying.
I mean, there's lots of language that we've changed.
Like think about so many terms we use for, you know, for, you know, people who are born
with different abilities or for people of different races or
other identities that we're really stigmatizing and we've learned to use different language,
even if it feels a little awkward when you're first learning it.
I think understanding the science and the data behind the impact it has to use certain language,
I think is really useful because that's helped me to understand. Just because now I understand
the first principles of it, I need to make sure I describe people as a person first.
Yeah.
So a person with... Add a person with addiction is much better
than calling someone an addict.
Yeah, exactly. And one thing people ask me will say, well, what if someone refers to
themselves that way? Because people may do that. And that's fine. People can use whatever
language they want for themselves. But I think as a healthcare professional for sure, or
someone who's trying to help combat stigma,
we can choose to use different language.
And I've actually had patients sort of ask me,
well, why do you use that terminology when
they use a different language?
And it actually can be sort of empowering to be like, oh, yeah.
I'm actually a person in recovery.
I'm a person with addiction.
I'm not going to label myself that way anymore.
Something I've been really curious about just in my life
generally, because in conversation,
I said something yesterday when we were at dinner with the team here. I said, I can't
remember the exact phrase, but it was words to the effect of, I'm not good at that, or
I'm not that type of person, or I'm not organized. And I stopped myself and the team will remember
and I go, actually, I shouldn't say that. I should say, right now, I was...
You're like defining yourself as incapable of doing something instead of being like,
I'm working on organization right now.
Yeah, I think it's so important and we don't think about it.
How casually we create an identity for ourselves that is like fundamentally limiting or puts
us in a box or frames us as having a deficit or captures our whole identity in some kind of deficiency we have often in the case of the habits I'm
referring to. Does this a similar thing take effect when we're talking about calling someone
an addict?
Yeah, you're sort of labeling them as that is the only thing that they are and that they
will be that forever. And, you know, a friend of mine is a journalist who is in recovery
and writes a lot about addiction. Maya Solovitz wrote this great New York Times piece
that addiction doesn't always last a lifetime.
Because I think there's this idea in our head
that people with addiction will always have addiction
and it's this incurable thing.
And that actually people have lots of different journeys.
And for some people, that becomes something they deal with
and then they move on in their lives.
For other people, it's something that they actively manage.
But this idea that you sort of boil things down to like the only thing I am in this world as
a person with addiction, you really limit everything else about yourself.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next,
not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for. And the question that's been left for you
And the question that's been left for you is,
if you could redo or revise one thing
that you have successfully accomplished, what would that be and why?
I guess I would say,
and I could think of lots of successful accomplishments
that apply this to, but I'll take the example
of medical training, which is a successful accomplishment. I think I would be more
present that we are always like rushing to the accomplishment, to the finish line,
to sort of getting to the next goal. And I think back and wish I had realized what
an amazing journey it was in that moment. And I mean even things with medical
training that I was I was never gonna be a heart surgeon. But to stand in an operating room
and look inside someone's chest
and watch a beating heart
is an experience that I'll never get again.
And I think in this journey to always achieve
and move forward and get to the next exam
and the next thing,
we sometimes miss like the miracle
that's right in front of us.
And so I think I would have been even more present.
That applies to all of us.
I felt like I was being called out.
LAUGHS
True for parenting, true for everything.
Thank you so much.
I'm so grateful for the work that you're doing
because there's so much conflicting information,
especially as it relates to alcohol.
There's been so much information over the last five, 10 years
about the impact alcohol has on us. And I've sat here and had conversations with people
who are pretty convinced that even moderate levels of alcohol are good for us. And having
read your work, I'm now clear on what the truth there is. Thank you for doing what you
do. It's incredibly important. And I actually think it's going to become increasingly important,
unfortunately, because the way that the world is heading, the loneliness epidemic that we're
experiencing and the access we now have to digital devices and to low-cost consumption
of addictive substances is terrifying for me. I know you've got a book on the way, which
I'm extremely excited about, which is due in autumn, next autumn?
Spring of 27, so we have some time.
Okay. And what's that book about?
Can you give me a clue?
I'm gonna have to gasp.
It is gonna be about changing the narrative
around addiction and about really reframing
how people think about it, to see it as a treatable,
good prognosis illness, and using some of the stories
of people I've had the privilege of knowing
to hopefully help people see things in a different way.
Where do people find you
if they wanna to reach out
or learn more?
Yes, they can find me on LinkedIn, on Instagram.
They can email me.
Yeah, happy to connect.
And would love to come back after the book is out too.
I look forward to that.
I'd love to.
So your Instagram, your LinkedIn,
I'll put those details below.
I'm sure you'll probably get a lot of messages
because these issues in particular
are incredibly potent issues in people's lives and very emotional issues as well. So thank you
for on behalf of all my audience. Thank you for your generosity today, but also thank you
for your wisdom. Really, really appreciate it. And I would love to speak to you again soon when
the book is out. Thank you. Thank you for having me. I find it incredibly fascinating that when we look at the back end of Spotify and Apple
and our audio channels, the majority of people that watch this podcast haven't yet hit the
follow button or the subscribe button. Wherever you're listening to this, I would like to
make a deal with you. If you could do me a huge favour and hit that subscribe button,
I will work tirelessly from now until forever to make the show better and better and better
and better. I can't tell you how much it helps when you hit that subscribe button
The show gets bigger which means we can expand the production
Bring in all the guests you want to see and continue to doing this thing
We love if you could do me that small favor and hit the follow button
Whatever you're listening to this that would mean the world to me. That is the only favor I will ever ask you
Thank you so much for your time.