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Staying Sober – Running Against Addiction

It’s been done before – replacing one high through another, far healthier kind. Running to cope with addiction isn’t just a matter of getting away from your problems – it’s about chasing new goals, achieving dreams, and, as science may tell you, it’s about staying sober and teaching your brain to associate new things with pleasure.

For many, exercise has become the key to defeating addiction. But it’s not quite as simple as turning one obsession into another, or simply taking the drive of addiction and turning it into the tenacity to run a marathon.

 

Staying Sober Through Exercise

Running and exercise have a track record of being proven ways to deal with addiction, but their success depends entirely on you and your passion to get moving. While general exercise to bolster your physical health, and maintain a strong body is recommended in any case, coping with the day-to-day stresses of addiction recovery through sports and training is different from simply exercising enough to take care of your health. The clear differences are:

Going on recovery eliminates addiction, and that leaves a gaping hole. Depending on how long you’ve been addicted, it can take a while before you cut the association between pleasure and relief, and drugs. Using training as an alternative to help you keep your mind off the stress or channel your frustrations is far more constructive and beneficial in the long-term and helps in staying sober after the recovery process as well.

 

Your Brain on Training

Perhaps the biggest benefit of physical activity as a new coping mechanism in your fight against addiction is that it speeds up the mental recovery from drug abuse. It can even be preventative towards the development of an addiction. Certain substances, especially very harmful ones like cheap methamphetamine, can cause serious damage to the brain.

Research has shown that aside from affecting the brain and making new connections between exercise and pleasure, training affects the speed at which the mind repairs itself, partially reversing the effects of methamphetamine use.

 

Staying Sober In Your Own Way

In the end, running – and exercise in general – is part of a large collection of possible paths for healing. But that means understanding the context of what you’re doing, and having a healthy attitude towards it. Look at it this way – if what you truly enjoy doing is cooking, and it’s something that lets you shut out the worries of the world and actively focus on the art of your craft, then that is a great way to deal with addiction by giving you an outlet to unleash your stress and your emotions and develop your creativity, putting your brain to the test.

However, if you end up going to the kitchen every time you get depressed to make yourself a plate of cookies or a delicious, yet high-calorie soufflé, then you’ll quickly turn one problem into another.

Practicing responsibility and understanding the difference between what makes a coping mechanism positive, and what makes it negative, is critical to establishing a lifestyle that allows you to heal and move past the consequences of your addiction, regardless of how you choose to go about that lifestyle. Is painting your thing? Meeting new people in book clubs? Limiting yourself to a small circle of friends while focusing on a large writing project? Visiting local gyms and competing in sports or martial arts?

Whatever your passion is, using it as a major outlet against the potential stress of recovery to help reshape your life while staying sober and make a major change in who you are as a person is important. It’s not just about making a distinction between your old days and the new you – it’s also about crafting your own identity through positive accomplishments and associations, rather than feelings of shame or another kind of negativity. It’s also about challenging yourself, pushing yourself to find new limits and rediscover the boundaries of what you used to think you could do while practicing sober living.