Understanding cocaine addiction
Cocaine addiction can develop far more easily than you think. What perhaps started off as occasional use at the odd party or during stressful periods can easily become a coping mechanism. Over time, cocaine will impact every area of your life, from your relationships to your overall health. Although this feels overwhelming, there is hope. At Connection Mental Healthcare, we can offer insight into your use and a treatment that suits you, so that sustainable recovery is possible for you too.
Why cocaine can be addictive
When you use cocaine, the immediate short-term effects can be highly deceptive. Because the drug directly hijacks your brain's reward system, you will typically experience:
- intense euphoria – you feel a powerful rush of pleasure and happiness, sometimes escalating into delusions of grandeur where you feel entirely "on top of the world"
- increased confidence – you get a significant boost in self-esteem, making you feel (over) confident
- extremely high energy levels – you seem to have endless stamina
- mental alertness – you perceive yourself as being much sharper, experiencing a state of quick thinking, extreme focus and heightened awareness
- decreased physical needs – you lose your appetite and the drug temporarily masks any feelings of fatigue or your need for sleep
- talkativeness – you find yourself talking excessively, although you tend to listen poorly
With these effects in mind it is easier to understand why cocaine can be addictive.
What is cocaine addiction or coke addiction?
Like all addictions, cocaine addiction is where you develop a strong dependence on a substance or a rewarding behaviour. Your desire to use has turned into a desperate need. Cocaine impacts the brain's reward system by releasing large amounts of dopamine, the chemical linked to pleasure and motivation. Think of the natural good feeling you get from eating a delicious meal or going for a run, but magnified many times over. However, your brain quickly gets used to this extreme rush. If you use cocaine frequently, your reward system becomes completely dysregulated. Your brain starts to believe it actually needs that powerful artificial stimulus to function. When you stop using coke your will experience withdrawal symptoms. You can face intense cravings and compulsive thoughts around using. Looking for treatment? We are here for you.
From cocaine abuse to a severe addiction
On top of this, you build a tolerance: you find yourself needing increasingly larger amounts of the drug just to achieve the same effect. This can lead to a cycle where your consumption steadily increases as you chase that initial high. Over time, this vicious cycle makes it incredibly difficult to stop using, even when you really want to and ultimately develops into a severe addiction.
Because cocaine directly impacts your reward system and the short-term effects are powerful, it can be especially challenging to stop once the addiction has taken hold.
“I have seen people arrive convinced they were beyond help, certain the cravings would always win. Recovery is not about willpower alone – with the right support around you, that grip really can loosen.”
Crack cocaine addiction
Cocaine comes in different forms, such as powdered and crack. Crack cocaine abuse is one of the most addictive forms.
What is crack cocaine?
Crack cocaine is a processed form of cocaine that is created by converting powdered cocaine into solid crystals that can be heated and inhaled. Crack cocaine is smoked as opposed to snorted. The biggest difference between powdered cocaine and crack cocaine is in how quickly the drug reaches your brain. When you smoke crack cocaine, the drug hits your brain almost instantaneously.
Why addiction to crack cocaine is so intense
Because crack cocaine reaches the brain so quickly, it produces an intense but short-lived high. As a result, this rapid effect creates a powerful dopamine spike in your brain's reward system. Although it produces this high, the effects of crack cocaine wear off quickly, often within minutes. This often leads you to use the drug repeatedly to maintain that feeling.
Crack cocaine addiction treatment
This pattern of intense, short-lived highs is why a crack cocaine addiction develops rapidly. The highs are followed by strong cravings and, as a result, an increased risk of repeated use and dependence. Do you struggle with crack cocaine addiction? Please call us on +27 21 541 0643. We not only offer treatment for crack cocaine addiction but we are also here for personal advice and any questions about crack cocaine abuse.