Chemical Feelings
Aug. 25th, 2003 10:13 pmI don't know how many of you have ever been under the influence of narcotics, but I'm willing to bet that the vast majority of you would be willing to admit that what we eat affects our mood. Aside from the medical phenomena associated with various anti-psychotic drugs, the positively psychedelic effects of LSD, a simple experiment can be carried out utilising any random small child and 40-odd grams of sugar (I suggest using someone else's child for this, otherwise you'll be responsible for the screaming agent of satan for the rest of the day).
An old friend of mine could tell how recently his girlfriend had eaten by her mood within 20 seconds of picking up the phone. An ex-flatmate was a nightmare to live with for 3 months after they changed her contraceptive pill (and then they changed it out for a different one and she returned to her usual semi-sane behaviour).
I've seen thousands of instances of simple chemical changes causing seemingly complex changes in people's personality. The complex changes generally turn out to have a single underlying change behind them all, but the complexities of human behaviour can easily take a single underlying cause and express it in a million different ways depending on everything from the various other chemicals floating around the brain to the genetic sensitivity to those chemicals to the vast amounts of upbringing and culturalisation that tell you how you can express yourself.
It's amazing to me how much people's minds can be changed by such simple things as sugar molecules, and how a simple temperament change can express itself in so many complex ways because of our upbringings.
It's also amazing to me how much being tired affects my whole outlook on life. So, due to the lack of sleep I've had in the last 48 hours, I think I'm off to bed!
An old friend of mine could tell how recently his girlfriend had eaten by her mood within 20 seconds of picking up the phone. An ex-flatmate was a nightmare to live with for 3 months after they changed her contraceptive pill (and then they changed it out for a different one and she returned to her usual semi-sane behaviour).
I've seen thousands of instances of simple chemical changes causing seemingly complex changes in people's personality. The complex changes generally turn out to have a single underlying change behind them all, but the complexities of human behaviour can easily take a single underlying cause and express it in a million different ways depending on everything from the various other chemicals floating around the brain to the genetic sensitivity to those chemicals to the vast amounts of upbringing and culturalisation that tell you how you can express yourself.
It's amazing to me how much people's minds can be changed by such simple things as sugar molecules, and how a simple temperament change can express itself in so many complex ways because of our upbringings.
It's also amazing to me how much being tired affects my whole outlook on life. So, due to the lack of sleep I've had in the last 48 hours, I think I'm off to bed!
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Date: 2003-08-25 02:25 pm (UTC)this body chemistry thing sucks. i demand a tune up.
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Date: 2003-08-25 02:49 pm (UTC)And my kids are maniacs on sugar, although not as bad as they are on artificial sweeteners.
heh
Date: 2003-08-25 03:47 pm (UTC)I can imagine there's biological underpinnings to the tendency to get aggressive when your blood sugar drops.
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Date: 2003-08-25 04:19 pm (UTC)I think it also has to do with the way you are raised, as well as purely chemical reactions, but there are a whole range of other examples, like the different reactions various people have to various drugs.
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Date: 2003-08-25 11:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-08-25 06:16 pm (UTC)Heh heh, get the pills, Sam.
Date: 2003-08-25 10:50 pm (UTC)But,...
It also gave her a crutch *and* an excuse for ill manners and bad behaviour.
Like much of life, chemistry is a double edged sword.
Katja, who often ended chem lab with a watchglass full of beautiful crystallizing blue stuff,... when it should have been smokey orange. Sigh. Damn drawer partner!
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Date: 2003-08-26 02:11 am (UTC)I totally empathise with the 'tetchy hungry' thing, and the Xmas story is hilarious.
Relatedly, I am pretty much convinced that the reason that alcohol is especially problematic amongst drugs is that it is the only drug that is also a food (packing 7kcal per gram of pure alcohol). [OK technically hash leaves or coca leaves are food too, but think how much salad you need to eat to get any calories!]
It's not classically 'addictive' and this could explain the complexites of peoples reaction to it.