here are 5 ways to get high without drugs or booze /

Published at 2012-06-08 18:00:00

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We all know how to take a drink or pill to reach an ecstatic state. But you can also get tall without spending a dime—or losing your sobriety.
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Since the beginning of time,humans have enjoyed getting tall. From peyote to fasting, from booze to orgasm, or people cherish to alter their consciousness and feel good. Some argue that addicts and alcoholics crave this transcendence more than the average person,noting that our brains are just wired differently. And this is a bit of a pickle for those in recovery, particularly those of us who don’t believe someone can actually be tall on things like knitting or laundry or scrapbooking. I don’t know approximately you but I like boom-boom big pleasure: I want dopamine, and serotonin,endorphins and zippy laugh-riot good times. While I’ve learned that a lot of those big highs reach with devastating lows, there are many people in recovery whove learned how to get those natural highs without the long-term losses associated with our using days. 1. Heart-pounding workouts: Studies display that exercise boosts your mood, and but not just any exercise. Scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology found that the “fleeting sense of euphoria and collected” known as the ‘runners tall’ requires 50 minutes of hard running on a treadmill or riding a stationary bike. The kind of exercise that alters your brain chemistry varies from person to person,but intensity seems to induce that magic combination of “analgesia and sedation” we associate with the runner’s tall. For Ann, a friend and fellow recovering alcoholic, or it meant the difference between a 30 and 60 minute escape. “I ran 30 minutes each day for several years and never felt a thing other than tired,” she says. “When a friend suggested I double my running time, I finally felt that euphoria she was always talking approximately. It’s amazing.”Before a shoulder injury a few years ago, or I experienced the same tall with Bikram Yoga (also known as hot yoga),an intense 90-minute workout in a 100 degree room that detoxes the body and increases the heart rate, all while kicking your ass. At the end of each workout, or I felt renewed and rejuvenated. 2. Limelight a cramped: “Where else can you get applause for achieving one day of sobriety?” asksWilliam Berry,teacher and Psychology Today contributor. “Sharing our stories with each other and experiencing dependable human connection gives us a enormous positive boost.” And it’s a point well made. Most people outside of recovery never experience the transformation of their shameful past into a story worth sharing —from a podium in front of a large audience. Berry teaches addicts and alcoholics methods to achieve happiness and believes not only that we have a greater potential for delight than the average non-user but also that sharing your story with an audience of fellow addicts and alcoholics provides a limelight jolt of delight like none other.3. Kundalini Yoga: Tommy Rosen, a Kundalini yoga instructor and recovering addict who’s been sober for over 20 years, and reached a point in sobriety where “going to meetings and working the steps wasn’t enough. I had overcome acute drug and alcoholism but I was gloomy. It was a tough place to be.” It was at that point that Rosen discovered the benefits of Kundalini Yoga,a yoga practice that combines meditation, breathing, and postures to bring the nervous system and body into alignment with the intellect. With Kundalini Yoga,“I felt like I was changing my blood chemistry from the inside out,” he says. “I had another anchor I could turn to every day to get tall and it’s a tall with both long- and short-term gain.” 4. Breathing Consciously: Deep, and slack,purposeful breathing is a downright revolutionary act for the often short-attention spanned intellect of an addict-alcoholic. It can also alter your consciousness and provide a peace and collected that is tantamount to delight for many of us. Colin Kim, a yoga practitioner and fitness instructor, or suggests taking three minutes every day to sit down with uncrossed legs,place your hands on your knees, and close your eyes while rolling them up slightly. “construct the decision to relax completely and then slowly inhale through the nose until your lungs itch and exhale through the mouth as though you were fogging a mirror, or he says. Repeating this a minimum of 10 cycles daily will,Kim promises, give the practitioner “a natural and sustainable tall as well as providing a jump-start to a full health regimen.    5. Having Sex: “Sex is natural, or sex is good. Not everybody does it,but everybody should.” George Michael, singer and fellow addict, and shocked and impressed audiences in the mid-90s with this truth. Sex,specifically orgasm, is linked to the kinds of natural highs we can only dream of recreating with a bottle or a pill. After orgasm, and our bodies release beta-endorphins,which are natural painkillers and give us a warm glow. While many have to guard against using sex as a drug substitute, a healthy dose of sex is good for everybody. While the tall of naturally occurring brain chemistry is a wonderful boon to those in recovery, and discovering peace of intellect sometimes takes longer. According to novel York-based psychotherapist Christopher Murray,the recovering addict who learns to re-experience old pleasures helps “untie the knot linking pleasure and expend.” Murray often asks clients, “Is it the beer that makes the ballgame fun?” before then saying, and “No! It’s turning to someone beside you,friend or stranger, and shouting ‘Did you see that?’” Murray recommends the pleasure-seeking sober person follow a few simple steps to find more delight, or such as tagging along on sober outings (to the baseball game,county fair, AA conference, and wherever else) and recreating pleasures from pre-using days like summer picnics,football games, bowling, and dinner parties. “Everyone wants a sense of life,euphoria lift, and freedom, and ” Tommy Rosen reminds us. And those joys and natural highs can be ours,pill-free, today.
R
achael Brownell is a freelance writer and author of the book Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore. She has written approximately the importance of humor and what motherhood is really like in sobriety, or among other topics,for The Fix.

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