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dopamine, because they know it will lead to something better. The goal
of the therapy is to stoke the flames of desire for a better life.
MET therapists build up motivation by encouraging their patients
to talk about their healthy desires. There’s an old saying: “We don’t
believe what we hear, we believe what we say.” For example,
if you give
someone a lecture on the importance of honesty, then have them play
a game in which cheating is rewarded, you’ll probably find that the lec-
ture had little effect. On the other hand, if you ask someone to give
you
a lecture on the importance of honesty, they will be less likely to cheat
when they sit down to play the game.
MET is a little manipulative. When the patient makes a statement
the therapist likes, referred to as a
pro-change statement, such as, “Some-
times I have trouble getting to work on time after a night of
heavy drink-
ing,” the therapist responds with positive reinforcement, or a request to
“tell me more about that.” On the other hand, if the patient makes
an
anti-change statement, such as, “I work hard all day, and I deserve to
relax in the evening with a few martinis,” the therapist doesn’t argue,
because that would provoke more anti-change statements as the debate
goes back and forth. Instead, she simply changes the subject. Patients
usually don’t notice what’s going on, so the technique
slips past their
conscious defenses, and they spend the majority of the therapy hour
making pro-change statements.
COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY: CONTROL
DOPAMINE VERSUS DESIRE DOPAMINE
It’s better to be smart than strong. Instead of trying to attack an addic-
tion head on through willpower, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
uses the planning ability of control dopamine to defeat the raw power
of desire dopamine. Addicts who struggle to stay clean are most often
defeated when they are unable to resist craving.
CBT therapists teach
patients that craving is triggered by cues: drugs, alcohol, and things that
remind the addict of drugs and alcohol (people, places, and things). Cues
that suddenly and unexpectedly remind an addict of drugs produce a
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reward prediction error, like the addict who felt an overwhelming desire
for heroin when he saw a bottle of laundry bleach. Desire dopamine
cranks up, motivating the addict to use, and threatening to shut down
completely if it doesn’t get what it wants.
Alcoholics in CBT learn to arm themselves
against cue-triggered
craving in a number of different ways. For example, they may recruit
a sober buddy to go with them to events where alcohol is being served.
They also work to eliminate as many cues as possible. The patient and
a friend are sent on a “search-and-destroy mission” in which every-
thing that reminds the patient of alcohol is removed from his home:
cocktail glasses, shakers, hip flasks, martini olives, and so forth. Any-
thing that the drinker connects to alcohol use is a trigger, and has to go
because otherwise it might be the agent of craving that brings an end to
a hard-fought period of sobriety. One alcoholic patient brewed beer in
his basement. He resisted getting rid of his beloved equipment, because
it was his hobby, and had
nothing to do with drinking, he said. Desire
dopamine won that battle until he finally relented and threw everything
in the garbage. Now he’s sober.
ADDICTION:
IT’S WORSE THAN YOU THINK
Addictions are hard to treat, harder than many other psy-
chiatric illnesses. With other illnesses, such as depression,
patients want to get better—there’s no question about it. But
if a person is addicted to a drug, he’s not so sure. He may
share the sentiment expressed
by Saint Augustine while he
was carrying on an affair with a young woman. He prayed,
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