Boost Your resistance to Dopamine

Boost Your resistance to Dopamine

1.      The struggle these days with most of us remains is that we want to do certain things like exercise, study and other productive work but our brain wants to do things which it likes like dopaminergic activities e.g. Play video games, reels etc.

2.      The struggle is that the part of your brain which generates motivation, is the part of the brain that controls you.

3.      Nucleus Accumbens is the part of your brain that generates motivation using dopamine as a signal. When we are motivated to do something and when we do it (engage in that behavior or activity), the Nucleus Accumbens generates dopamine as a reward and gives us pleasure.

4.      The problem is that you can’t directly affect this circuit, meaning that you can’t motivate yourself to not be motivated by pleasurable things.

5.      It’s the other part of the brain that can work to reduce the power of Nucleus Accumbens.

6.      When we want to do something that generates pleasure it’s the other parts of the brain that can help reduce its power on our actions. However, when the Nucleus Accumbens gets the taste of that pleasurable activity like alcohol addicted takes a sip of alcohol, then this Nucleus Accumbens cant be stopped even if other parts of the brain are screaming that it’s bad for you.

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8.      The more dopamine we have this may be easy to engage in a sustained effort.

9.      When we wake up, we have ton of dopamine. When in the morning we engage in any task that release dopamine e,g, video game etc. we get a tons of dopamine released from Nucleus Accumbens because we have lot of it in the morning. Because this action releases lot of dopamine, our brain would like to repeat doing this action until a point dopamine gets depleted.

10.  Once we are dopamine depleted, consider it like a squeezed lemon, now when the lemon of dopamine is dry, to release dopamine we need to get a powerful squeeze to release the remaining dopamine. This powerful squeeze can only come from activities which are strongly dopaminergic like games, play etc. or anything you love. This is intuitive, when at the end of the day when your day is hectic and you are low on energy, you can only do activities that you like and love.

11.  So, when at the start of the day we do things like games, play etc. This will squeeze a lot of dopamine out and we will not have dopamine left for things which are low dopamine releasing.

12.  Therefore, if you want to engage in sustained effort with low dopaminergic activities you need to have a lot of dopamine reserves. So never engage in high dopaminergic activities at the start of the day. Don’t use your phone for reels, games or any pleasurable activity at the start of the day. It would be difficult to work for other activities that are less pleasurable later on.

13.  Therefore, when we have high dopamine reserves in the morning, and we engage in low dopaminergic activities we still have a good amount of dopamine release after the completion of the activity and that activity or behavior gets reinforced and our brain would continue to working on the task.

14.The lesson is that do most productive task in the initial hours of the day.

      

Amygdala, limbic system and how it affects dopaminergic system or Nucleus Accumbens.

These two parts of the brain (amygdala and Nucleus Accumbens) talk to each other a lot. Amygdala is the part of the brain which is the fear system. So, if we have negative emotions then we become more susceptible to dopamine signals. It’s a mechanism of our brain to reduce the negative emotions. When we have negative emotions, our brain tells us to engage in dopaminergic activities so that we feel more pleasure. As long as you have negative pent-up emotions your vulnerability for dopaminergic signals is a lot.

Therefore, it’s very important to reduce negative emotions in order to reduce the cravings for high dopaminergic activities and thus people with negative emotions are likely to engage in things like drugs or other pleasure-seeking behaviors which are powerful dopamine releasing activities where the person ends up dopamine resistant and depleted. Things like exercise, therapy, journaling can help reduce negative emotions and thus reduce the vulnerability for dopamine.

 Prefrontal cortex

Frontal lobes are the central command center, the big brother of your brain. The part of the brain that tells you when you are crying, to just stop crying and focus on the real work. This part of the brain does value generations subconsciously. For example, you want to game and study, this part of the brain does the value assessment between study and gaming, but research has found that it does it subconsciously.

People might say yes, I know that study is valuable than game, but hold on brother/sister, you are not getting it. When you have choice between gaming and studying and you end up gaming your prefrontal cortex subconsciously doing the values assessment and telling your Nucleus Accumbens to do gaming.

However, when we have an exam next day suddenly the subconscious value assessment gets changed and our prefrontal cortex says today you must study.

Therefore, the trick is to bring this motivation, couple of days or weeks prior by doing a conscious value assessment. A simple way is “Play the tape through to the end”.  Pick a pen and paper, don’t do this in your head.  Walk through the actions and write their consequences on a paper. For example, if I wake up today tomorrow and day after at 8am and start gaming for 4 hrs. What is going to happen and how I would feel at the end of the day. On the contrary write about what if you study 4 hrs. in the morning.

Even though this may not instantly change your value assessment, but this will affect your subconscious thinking to some extent and when you keep doing this exercise over and over again your subconscious value system will start to change.

 

Hippocampus

Hippocampus has a strong influence on Nucleus Accumbens. This is a memory center of our brain. There are some things hippocampus loves and something it hates. Hippocampus loves novelty. When something is new for you, it will give a string motivational boost. When you exercise, your hippocampus will say, I know how you feel after exercise, better watch TV. So how will you influence it now, you can do that by adding novelty to your exercises like lets do Cardio today or Pilates or Yoga. Adding some novelty to the mix then there are chances your hippocampus will positively impact Nucleus Accumbens to release more dopamine. Gaming industry knows this very well, so they add new stuff frequently.

 

Opioid Circuit
It contains MU receptors or Kappa receptors. Our brain is actually a circuit. Opoid receptors are powerful influencer of our pleasure circuit, in fact it’s clear that pain and pleasure are tightly linked.

For example when your exercising and there is some pain in it and you overcome it then the pleasure from it really comes for example until the 6th or 7th rep its very good and easy but 8th, 9th and 10th rep are slightly difficult and that when you overcome them then you start feeling the pleasure after the activity, on the contrary when you don’t feel any pain and difficulty you don’t feel as much pleasure in it. However, the pain should not be so much that it shuts your brain to stop doing the activity.

Trick is to add some pain to the mix to influence our dopaminergic system.

To sum it up, Nucleus Accumbens generates motivations and that’s what create a want. However, we don’t want our wants to control us therefore what we want is to utilize other parts of the brain like hippocampus, amygdala, prefrontal cortex, opioid receptors etc. to weaken the strength of our Nucleus Accumbens or weaken this ability of Nucleus Accumbens to affect our behavior.

Lastly, we need to be very careful of our dopamine reserves, you need lot of reserves of dopamine to create a sustained behavior and activities that are less pleasurable. So if we have lot of dopamine we will get a good amount of dopamine release even from productive tasks that are less pleasurable and there are chances that when the dopamine gets released after less pleasurable tasks we tend to engage in the activities on a more sustained basis.

(Inspired by a talk from a Harvard Trained Pschiatrist, Dr Kanojia).

 

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