Even if it hasn't been fully proven what about the drug induced chemical imbalances that normal people feel on an every day basis and how that effects the day to day lives of the individual?
Examples:
coffee (caffeine can change behavioral processes of the human ingesting)
nicotine (is in direct effect to the glutamate receptor in the brain changing mood)
MSG monosodium glutamate (can cause mood swings from an excessive amount of the amino acid glutamate.
I am someone who is super sensitive to MSG and it pushes me to an ADHD state where my ability to finish tasks is changed if consumed. effects occur about 8 hours after ingestion.
Yes! I've just been doing a bunch of research on this and the chemical imbalance of the brain theory has never been fully proven. Check out the book "Anatomy of an Epidemic" by Robert Whitaker. :)
Even if it hasn't been fully proven what about the drug induced chemical imbalances that normal people feel on an every day basis and how that effects the day to day lives of the individual?
Examples:
coffee (caffeine can change behavioral processes of the human ingesting)
nicotine (is in direct effect to the glutamate receptor in the brain changing mood)
MSG monosodium glutamate (can cause mood swings from an excessive amount of the amino acid glutamate.
I am someone who is super sensitive to MSG and it pushes me to an ADHD state where my ability to finish tasks is changed if consumed. effects occur about 8 hours after ingestion.
Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://steemit.com/psychology/@kyriacos/there-is-no-such-thing-as-chemical-imbalance-in-the-brain
Yes! I've just been doing a bunch of research on this and the chemical imbalance of the brain theory has never been fully proven. Check out the book "Anatomy of an Epidemic" by Robert Whitaker. :)