Status Updates From The Biology of Desire: Why ...
The Biology of Desire: Why Addiction Is Not a Disease by
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Troy Terwilliger
is on page 185 of 256
True healing requires an act of radical self-compassion: forgiving the brain for doing exactly what it evolved to do (seeking survival and pair-bonding through a storm), grieving the toxic relationship with the target of that bond, and intentionally choosing to build a life narrative where the substance is no longer needed.
— May 31, 2026 06:34PM
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Troy Terwilliger
is on page 95 of 256
…the neural plasticity of the brain seeking salience in the ordinary life is bound to happen due to how the brain is wired. I. e. The rats in chapter one who adapted to the watering hole instead of the morphine.
In recovery, the brain will eventually mellow out to a baseline without the substance and will start seeking pleasure all over again: in food, attachment, sleep, beauty, etc.
— May 25, 2026 10:29PM
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In recovery, the brain will eventually mellow out to a baseline without the substance and will start seeking pleasure all over again: in food, attachment, sleep, beauty, etc.
Troy Terwilliger
is on page 10 of 256
…the only characteristic that predicted relapse 6 months after concluded outpatient treatment for alcohol dependence was “the extent to which clients endorses disease model beliefs before entering treatment.”
— May 03, 2026 02:00PM
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Robert Day
is on page 156 of 238
The stories are interesting and illuminating to some extent but the brain anatomy leaves me cold.
— May 02, 2026 06:56PM
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Robert Day
is on page 64 of 238
We're on to the case studies now. More practice and less theory (I hope).
— Apr 28, 2026 03:17PM
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Robert Day
is on page 19 of 238
Too soon to tell. Spelling mistake on page 2 doesn't bode well.
— Apr 27, 2026 02:43PM
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