Neurobiology of Holiday Relapses

Why does your car stop at a red light? Sure, you press the brake, but do you really think about it? For experienced drivers, the answer is no — it just seems to happen on its own.

A vaguely appreciated or unsensed cue (e.g., stoplight) causes a driver to bring their vehicle to a stop. Photo: Ludovic Simon, et al.

This is the miracle of the brain: it can automate processes so you don’t need to consciously think about them. But this is also the challenge of addiction. Unhelpful mental scripts keep executing themselves, even when you sincerely want them to stop.*

What causes the scripts to execute? The Big Book contains various clues that have since been verified by modern science. The biggest drivers are

  • Negative affect
  • Stress
  • Cues

The Big Book famously describes those with addiction as “restless, irritable and discontented.” This is the best description of negative affect that I have ever seen.

Stress occurs when “environmental demands tax or exceed the adaptive capacity of an organism.”

Cues are environmental triggers — “people, places, things” — that have previously been paired with drug use. Sometimes you are consciously aware that cues are present, for example, you notice bottles of wine in a restaurant. But in many cases, they are unsensed. The brain registers the cues but there is no conscious appreciation that they are there.

The vignette in Chapter 3 of the Big Book brings this all together. Jim, the salesman, reported, “I felt irritated” after a dust-up with his boss. (Negative affect) He might have been stressed over a sales goal. He stopped at a roadhouse to grab a sandwich. The place “was familiar for I had been going to it for years.” (Cues) Despite “no intention of drinking” and “no thought of drinking,” Jim inexplicably “ordered a whiskey and poured it into [my] milk.”

What was responsible for this “plain insanity”?

Negative affect, stress and cues.

Why are alcohol and other drugs “cunning, baffling, powerful”?

Because “addictive behaviour appears to involve processes outside of the sufferer’s personal consciousness by which cues are registered and acted upon by evolutionary primitive regions of the brain before consciousness occurs.” Spooky functional imaging studies have shown this to be true.

The holidays often involve negative affect and stress. And there are often a lot of cues, both sensed and unsensed, in holiday environments. This “perfect storm” can initiate a behavior chain that often leads to unintended problem behaviors (alcohol or drug use).

I will be talking with my patients about countermeasures for the next month. ✸


* St. Paul lamented, “I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate” (Romans 7:15; NRSV). This gets into the realm of reversal learning, which is part of the neurobiology of addiction.

The Books Before the Big Book

About 20 years ago, I ran across this in an essay by C.S. Lewis:

Every age has its own outlook. It is specially good at seeing certain truths and specially liable to make certain mistakes. We all, therefore, need the books that will correct the characteristic mistakes of our own period. And that means the old books.*

Photo Credit: PBA Galleries

Lewis argued, “I do not wish the ordinary reader to read no modern books. But if he must read only the new or only the old, I would advise him to read the old.” He also offered this suggestion: “It is a good rule, after reading a new book, never to allow yourself another new one till you have read an old one in between.”

My reading habits immediately changed. I started reading old books—in many cases, very old books.

And so it is that we will be considering Richard R. Peabody’s The Common Sense of Drinking, which was published in 1931, at an upcoming residential recovery retreat at Hazelden Betty Ford’s Dan Anderson Renewal Center. The book contains ideas and phrases that were later popularized by Alcoholics Anonymous such as “once a drunkard always a drunkard” and “halfway measures are of no avail.”†

Many thanks to Kim Albers and Peg Schroeder for inviting me back!


* C.S. Lewis. Undeceptions. London: Geoffrey Bles, 1971, p. 161–166.
† The first edition of the Big Book appeared in 1939.