The human brain can get hooked on exercise
in a way that resembles a drug addiction –
but with much more positive outcomes.
When researchers first started studying the
phenomenon of “exercise dependence” in the
late 1960s, they ran into a big problem. No
matter how much money they offered, they
couldn’t find any regular exercisers willing to see
what would happen if they stopped exercising for
a while. And if they did sign up, participants
tended to cheat and lie, pretending they hadn’t
worked out when they had.
This anecdote illustrates that the “persistence
high” people get from endurance sports isn’t the
only way exercise can be likened to drugs.
Because it activates our brain’s reward system
in similar ways to substances like cocaine and
heroin – stimulating the release of feel-good
chemicals like endocannabinoids, dopamine,
endorphins, and noradrenaline – regular
physical activity can be just as addictive as
those substances.
For self-described exercise junkies, for example,
missing a single workout can increase anxiety
and irritability. And after several missed
workouts, many of them report signs of
depression and insomnia. They also show the
same attentional bias as other addicts: when
shown images of people working out, the brain
of an exercise junky fires up in the same way as
when you show cigarettes to a smoker.
However, there are some important ways in
which exercise dependence differs from other
habit-forming addictions. First of all, it takes our
brain longer to get hooked on exercise than on
drugs, because the chemical changes that
physical activity effect in our brain are less
intense and happen more slowly.
For example, mice who are made to exercise
each day for two weeks do not show symptoms
of exercise addiction afterwards. But after six
weeks, something in their brain seems to flip,
and even with no one forcing or rewarding them,
they can hardly stop running. Similar studies on
humans show that we tend to get hooked on
exercise after exercising four times a week for
six weeks.
As with other drugs, regularly getting “high” on
physical activity slowly changes the chemical
structure of your brain. But the great thing is that
instead of making you less sensitive to its
positive effects, as happens with chemical
drugs, regular exercise makes you more
sensitive to them. This happens because
exercise
increases
the
receptors
for
endocannabinoids in your brain and makes
dopamine cells more responsive. This is why, in
stark contrast to drugs, the more exercise you
do, the better you feel about it.
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