Thursday, December 23, 2010

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How to recognize an addiction? Eating disorders


Often the problem an addiction may go unnoticed in the early stages of it, and sometimes what the problem is visible as the tip of an iceberg where much of the problem is hidden and corresponds to associated pathologies such as relationship problems with peers , personality disorders or mood disorders such as anxiety or depression.



order to recognize a problem of addiction, it is necessary first to define it, the addiction is a dependence on a substance, activity or relationship that isolates the person therefore are deteriorating personal relationships, family and work, in addition to their physical, mental and emotional. It also draws attention to the emotional charge that the person gives his thoughts and behaviors related to consumption.

currently accepted definition of addiction as any activity that the person is not able to control and drive you to perform compulsive behaviors thus impairing their quality of life.

There are two types of addictions:
  • Abusers: learned behaviors that correspond to negative consequences and the acquisition is due to repetition of behavior that at the beginning supposed pleasure, caused by the interaction of organism a drug, drug or substance.
  • not toxic: they correspond to learned behaviors that produce negative consequences and the acquisition is due to repetition of behavior that at the beginning supposed pleasure, including sex addiction have, shopping, food and game .

There are six clear indicators of an addiction:
  1. An object of desire: There's always an object of desire. This is the substance, thing, activity or relationship that leads to addiction, whether alcohol, food, sex, gambling, pornography, internet, drugs, or anything else that causes obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors led.
  2. Concern: There is an obsession with the object of desire, a need for the thing that causes addiction.
  3. guided behaviors: There is a compulsion to reduce anxiety and to satisfy the obsession that leads to addictive behavior.
  4. Lack of control: Addiction always involves a loss of control over thoughts, feelings, ideas or behaviors when you see the thing desired. Even when an addict tries to stop or cut their addictive behaviors, it fails in the attempt. This is the key and central feature of addiction and dependency.
  5. Unit: There is a dependence on the object of desire, physical or psychological, and only that thing can satisfy the desire of the addict (at least temporarily).
  6. negative consequences: Addiction is always accompanied by negative consequences. One of the more common is depression. The greatest desire of an addict is to get the desired happiness, and seeing that it is not possible with the thing desired, gradually falls into a depression that, in turn, tries to overcome with greater use or consumption of the thing desired.

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