Episode Notes: Bonding and Addiction: A Neurochemical Intertwining
This episode explores the deep neurobiological connections between bonding and addiction, drawing on frameworks like active inference and insights from experts such as Dr. Gabor Maté.
Part 1: The Blueprint of Connection – Our Neurochemical Drive to Bond
- Humans are hardwired for social connection, which is crucial for survival and well-being.
- Key neurochemicals in healthy bonding:
- Healthy bonding is a finely tuned neurochemical process reinforcing positive social interactions.
Part 2: The Shadow of Craving – How Addiction Hijacks Our Reward System
- Addiction is understood as a complex brain disease, a maladaptive learning process that hijacks reward pathways.
- Neurochemical shifts in addiction:
- Addiction is a destructive learning process where the brain fixates on a single, potent dopamine source.
Part 3: The Root of the Craving – Trauma, Attachment, and Gabor Maté's Insight
- Dr. Gabor Maté argues that addiction is primarily an unconscious attempt to self-soothe deep-seated pain, often from early childhood trauma, attachment wounds, or unmet emotional needs.
- His perspective: "The question is not 'Why the addiction?' but 'Why the pain?'".
- Disrupted healthy bonding can lead to emotional distress, predisposing the brain to seek solace in external comforts. Addictive behaviours become a "tragic surrogate" for missing self-regulation and connection.
- The craving for a drug can mirror the fundamental human craving for connection, safety, and belonging.
Part 4: The Predictive Brain – Active Inference and the Search for Stability
- Active Inference suggests the brain is a "prediction machine" that constantly minimises "prediction error" (discrepancy between predictions and reality) to maintain stability.
- Active Inference and Healthy Bonding: The brain predicts positive social interactions and safety; actions confirm these predictions, reinforced by neurochemicals. A secure attachment means a robust, low-error model of a safe social world.
- Active Inference and Addiction: The brain develops a maladaptive model predicting relief only from the addictive substance. Cravings are the brain's urgent attempts to fulfil this high-precision prediction and minimise internal prediction error. Other healthy coping mechanisms are discounted as the brain's model becomes distorted.
- Recovery involves re-learning and building new, healthier predictive models for minimising error through genuine connection and self-regulation.
Part 5: A Holistic View – Broader Perspectives and the Path Forward
- Other prominent voices contribute to this understanding:
- Understanding addiction as a response to pain and a dysregulation of human drives fosters empathy and more effective, compassionate approaches to recovery.
- Key to recovery: Rebuilding healthy bonds, addressing underlying trauma, and helping the brain re-learn adaptive ways to predict and engage with the world.