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Gray Area Drinking | Jolene Park | TEDxCrestmoorParkWomen

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    So I still remember the exact spot
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    on the highway where I was driving.
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    I think I remember it so vividly because
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    I was having one of the most important
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    conversations that I’ve ever had with
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    myself.
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    In that moment in my car,
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    I knew in my bones,
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    I wouldn’t drink alcohol again.
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    So you might be thinking
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    what was the rock
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    bottom that brought me to that point?
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    And the answer is … there wasn’t one!
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    You see, I was a gray area drinker and
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    I drank between two extremes.
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    I wasn’t an end stage,
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    lose everything kind of drinker,
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    not by a long shot.
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    If you would have asked my friends
    and family
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    if they thought I had a drinking problem
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    they would have said, “of course not”.
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    But I also wasn’t an every now
    and again drinker
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    who would have a glass of champagne
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    for example at the wedding and then not
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    drink again for weeks.
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    I didn’t fall into either one of those
    drinking categories
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    or drinking extremes. And ...
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    maybe you can identify?
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    As a nutritionist who has worked in
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    corporate wellness since 2004,
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    I functioned really well. I knew how
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    to eat well, I worked out on a regular
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    basis and I loved to read and study
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    everything health and wellness.
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    But what people didn’t know
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    was how much I loved the “off” switch
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    that wine provided to my “on”
    and often anxious brain.
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    I loved the immediate effect that red
    wine delivered.
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    And people also didn’t see how
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    easy and frequent it was for one glass
    of wine
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    to turn into one bottle of wine.
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    There is a commune characteristic
    and pattern
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    in gray area drinking that I
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    experience and I’ve watched many others
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    experience as well and that’s a stopping
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    and restarting drinking.
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    One time I stopped for 7 months,
    another time
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    I stopped for 30 days,
    and other short periods
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    in between, and then I would think
    to myself:
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    “Why am I being so restrictive?
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    I can be a social drinker”.
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    So I’d return to drinking
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    only to return to a level of drinking
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    where I regret it.
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    This back and forth drinking
    marry-go-around
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    was the exact thing that I knew I wanted
    to exit off for good
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    that day in my car on the highway.
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    And maybe you actually don’t identify with
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    gray area drinking because not
    everyone will.
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    But here is what I know with
    absolute certainty:
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    there are people in your life
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    right now, it could be family
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    members, close friends, colleagues, and
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    they are worrying and wondering
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    as they’re rethinking their drinking
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    because they are in the gray area,
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    but more than likely they are not
    talking to you about it
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    and they are not talking to others
    about it
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    because they think they are the only ones
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    and they think they are alone.
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    So how do I know this? I’ve lived this
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    for many years.
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    the more I've been speaking out
    professionally about my
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    gray area drinking experience the more
    my email inbox
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    gets flooded with emails from
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    attorneys and therapists,
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    senior level managers and nurses,
    stay in home moms,
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    yoga instructors, and many many others.
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    And the words are different, but
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    the jest of what they write me is all
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    the same and they say, “I identify with
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    your drinking story.
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    I don’t have a rock bottom either,
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    I want to be able to drink socially,
    but I end up regretting
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    how much I drink on a frequent basis."
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    This gray area drinking spectrum is real
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    and it’s large.
    And a lot of high achieving,
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    high functioning people who
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    silently live here every day.
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    But beyond gray area drinking is
    even something
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    bigger and that’s a collective story
    of anxiety.
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    And this I believe is where we are
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    collectively missing the mark.
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    We don’t need anymore cognitive hoops to
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    jump through and we don’t need anymore
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    ways to focus our will power and contort
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    our will power in an attempt
    to “fix” ourselves,
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    what we need is practical training
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    in how to nourish our nervous system
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    in a revolutionary and new way.
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    So there is many components and
    pieces to this,
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    but one component and one
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    interesting place to start can be
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    understanding your neurotransmitters.
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    So let’s start with GABA.
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    So GABA is the natural anti-anxiety
    neurotransmitter.
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    When GABA is low we can feel anxious
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    and our mind can get stuck in
    a loop of worry,
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    rumination or obsession about anything.
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    Serotonin is the natural anti-depressant
    neurotransmitter.
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    When serotonin is low we can feel
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    more depressed, unhappy, and crave
    things like
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    carbs and alcohol and have trouble
    sleeping.
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    Dopamine is the neurotransmitter that’s
    in charge
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    of our focus and motivation.
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    When dopamine’s low it can be hard
    to stay at a coarse
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    and stay on track with your goals
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    and your routines.
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    So people with low GABA people will often
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    say that they drink as a way to relax.
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    That was me. People with low serotonin
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    will say they drink as a way to have fun,
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    and people with low dopamine will say they
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    drink as a way to connect
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    and engage with others.
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    But here’s the problem and here is what I
    want to you know and take from this talk —
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    It can be relatively easy for most people
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    on the gray area drinking spectrum
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    to stop drinking,
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    but it can be hard to stay stopped,
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    especially if we are not
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    replenishing our neurotransmitters and
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    nourishing our nervous system
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    in a comprehensive and consistent way.
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    So here’s the good news, it turns out that
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    there is actually specific foods,
    movements and lifestyle practices that
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    while they are great wellness tips for
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    everyone, they have very direct and
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    immediate roles in boosting all of our
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    neurotransmitters.
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    So as a way to give you some practical
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    ways that you can begin to boost your
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    neurotransmitters now I’d like to start by
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    doing that by using the acronym “NOURISH”.
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    So N - notice nature.
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    Research shows that when our pleasure,
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    which is dopamine,
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    and our happiness, which is serotonin,
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    both begin to rise when we go into areas
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    with a large density of trees or a large
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    body of water like an ocean.
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    All it takes is 20 minutes
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    of being around nature with
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    a lot of trees, a lot of water for your
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    GABA, serotonin, and dopamine
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    to begin to rise.
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    O - observe your breath.
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    There are many medications that can stunt,
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    blunt, and block
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    the fight-flight-freeze response
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    in your body, there are no medications
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    that can boost the calm response.
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    But there is one mechanism in your body
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    that can do that naturally.
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    And that mechanism is your breath.
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    When our breath is regulated our
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    neurotransmitters become regulated.
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    Take a breath!
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    How does that feel?
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    You all just gave a little boost
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    to your GABA, serotonin, and dopamine.
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    U - uniting with others.

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    The research is solid: close social bonds,
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    community, and social connections have
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    a direct impact on our nervous system.
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    In our technology driven world
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    we have become very deficient
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    of human touch.
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    Hug the people who support you,
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    hug your pets, get body work,
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    massage or Reiki, it doesn't matter,
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    whatever resonates with you.
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    Physical touch has an immediate impact
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    on boosting GABA, serotonin and dopamine.
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    R - replenish with food.
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    When you eat protein,
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    whether it’s animal protein or
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    vegetable protein, it doesn’t matter,
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    it breaks down into amino acids and amino
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    acids are what replenish GABA, serotonin,
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    and dopamine.
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    When you eat healthy fats,
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    particularly in the form of Omega 3 fats
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    like fish oil, flax seeds, or walnuts,
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    those Omega 3 fats are the raw materials
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    that make your neurotransmitters.
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    When you eat carbohydrates, specifically
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    in the ideal form of vegetables,
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    and even more specific,
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    leafy green vegetables,
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    they break down into B vitamins and
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    B vitamins are the pre-cursors that make
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    serotonin. When you replenish with food
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    you replenish your neurotransmitters.
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    I - initiate movement. Any exercise will
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    boost the neurotransmitters.
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    The Boston University did a study with
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    yoga participants and they had them do
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    a 60-minute yoga class.
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    And then when they measured
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    they're GABA after that class
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    they found everyone’s GABA went up
    at least 27%.
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    Some participants had
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    arising GABA up to 80%.
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    Compared to a control group
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    that read a book for 60 minutes,
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    there was no change in their GABA.
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    One 60-minute yoga class
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    can initiate a boost in all
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    your neurotransmitters.
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    But after we active, we need to be still.
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    S - sitting in stillness allows
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    the nervous system the opportunity
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    to respond and adopt in a complex world
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    that we live and work in
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    in a very nurusing way.
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    And particularly sitting in stillness and silence,
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    invoking a sacred
    prayer, meditation, or scripture
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    can really feed and replenish your GABA,
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    serotonin, and dopamine.
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    H - harness your creativity.
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    Dopamine loves the creative flow.
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    And the way you get into a creative flow
    is to pick a single focused activity
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    that ends en “ing”.
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    Some examples are gardening,
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    fishing, painting.
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    But be careful because there are some
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    other activities that end en “ing”
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    that make us feel like we get
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    a dopamine hit: drinking, smoking,
    overeating.
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    Fishing, painting, the positive hobbies
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    boost your dopamine.
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    The other: drinking, smoking, overeating
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    depletes dopamine. Harnish your
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    creativity, but be very conscientious
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    how you doing that.
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    As of today, It has been 1054 days
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    since I’ve had a drink of alcohol.
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    But I didn’t have a rock bottom moment
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    that brought me to this point
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    and you don’t need to have one either.
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    From the outside looking in my drinking
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    didn’t look problematic,
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    but from the inside looking out
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    at the road I was traveling down
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    I knew the way I was drinking
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    was a problem for me.
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    And I’m not the only one
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    making this decision.
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    There are thousands of people in
    this country,
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    in the U.K., Australia, and Canada
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    who are rethinking their drinking
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    and stopping drinking because
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    they choose to, not because they have to.
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    A whole paradigm is shifting
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    and we up on a whole new wellness movement
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    starting to go alcohol free.
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    But I’ll be honest there were two things
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    I worried about when I stopped drinking.
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    And the first was: what would happen with
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    my relationships? This one surprised me.
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    The important relationships in my life,
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    family stuck by me, but they deepened.
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    And I look back at all the new wonderful
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    people who who had entered my life in
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    the last 3 years, some of them drink,
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    some of them don’t, but our relationship
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    is not built on my personal decision
    to not drink.
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    We’ve been able to connect and
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    relate and we’re aligned in a way
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    that is new for me.
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    And it’s been really really
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    nourishing to add these relationships
    to my life.
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    The second thing I worried about was what
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    if something awful happened and it would
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    be so painful that I’ll want to numb it
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    with a glass or a bottle of wine?
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    That worry came true. Eighteen months into
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    not drinking I hit my worse personal
  • 13:03 - 13:05
    financial crisis in my life.
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    If there was ever a time when I wanted
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    to numb the experience
  • 13:08 - 13:10
    and anesthetize the intense
  • 13:10 - 13:13
    anxiety and fear that I felt that was
    the time.
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    But I didn’t do it.
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    And I believe the reason I got through
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    that time without drinking wasn’t because
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    I had an intellectual understanding of
  • 13:21 - 13:24
    the nervous system, which I do, but
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    intellectualizing something is what gets
  • 13:25 - 13:27
    me through something. And it wasn’t
  • 13:27 - 13:29
    because I had a strong will power, which

  • 13:29 - 13:31
    I don’t, my will power fatigue is as much
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    as the next person. But what I had was
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    a very targeted and specific nourishment
  • 13:36 - 13:38
    that I had given my nervous system
  • 13:38 - 13:40
    leading up to that point in a very new and
  • 13:40 - 13:42
    different way. And that had given me
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    a zone of resilience and internal zone
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    of resilience that I’ve never had before.
  • 13:51 - 13:53
    So whatever road you’re on, wherever
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    you are on that road with your own
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    internal conversation, whether you’re
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    a healthcare professional like myself,
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    a business professional in any industry,
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    a stay at home parent or anyone else,
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    if you know in your bones that you’re in
  • 14:09 - 14:12
    the gray area with drinking or anything
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    else as an attempt to regulate the anxiety
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    in your body or the discomfort in your
    life, don’t forget:
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    your GABA, your serotonin,
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    and your dopamine are waiting for you
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    to activate them with
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    certain foods, movements and lifestyle
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    practices, and when you do that
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    you’re giving your nervous system the
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    nourishment it’s been craving all along.
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    Thank you!
Title:
Gray Area Drinking | Jolene Park | TEDxCrestmoorParkWomen
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
15:05

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