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- Dec 8, 2014
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Less depresso...more espresso!
Same—this is good marketing!Y'know, all I can really feel about this is... impressed. Get that market, girl.
Y'know, all I can really feel about this is... impressed. Get that market, girl.
I'd be really pissed if I showed up here as a client and there was no espresso maker in the office. I wanted more espresso!
It's a pretty cute ad. I would only be worried because Sabrina regularly courts controversy.
I’ll stan for Sabrina Carpenter and my 3.5-year-old and I blast Man Child on the morning drive.Same—this is good marketing!
Saw a post from @doctorperrin on X the other day that stuck with me. He wrote:
“My brother’s spiciest psychology take is that the rise in poor impulse control over the last thirty years came from the success of anti-smoking campaigns, because cigarettes used to manage and cover ADHD and anxiety symptoms.”
Obviously it’s not the explanation (or even that there is a increase), but I actually think there’s something to it? When something shifts on the scale of smoking cessation, millions of people quitting a stimulant they were using daily, there are bound to be some unintended consequences (externalities?).
I also think the thesis overlooks the behavioral ritual that goes along with smoking. Built in moments of pausing your day to go outside, lighting up, deep breathing, sensory engagement, etc. that go along with smoking (and to a lesser extent chewing tobacco). Multiple daily, addiction driven, mindful moments?
Contrast that with the rise Zyn pouches today. You don’t that get ritual, or pause, or any embodied experience. You just get the pharmacological hit, discreetly.
Great answer; related question—has there started to be any good data out there on the mid/long term effects of vaping?Disclaimer: I've worked with some of the biggest players in this field, but only have one publication specifically on the intersection of ADHD and smoking.
I think its a relatively silly take in the grand scheme of things. For one, the meteoric rise in ADHD diagnosis most people reference is younger (i.e., elementary age) kids The average age of smoking initiation is around 13 and hasn't changed meaningfully since the 1980's - so long after ADHD symptoms typically emerge. Nicotine does have an impact on executive function, but the acute effects aren't actually that robust. The withdrawal effects (which would be expected to worsen symptoms) are actually often stronger than the acute effects, though pairing these head-to-head is methodologically challenging in humans so I'm not convinced that is definitively proven. I don't have data to back this up, but I'd strongly suspect this withdrawal effect gets especially complicated in adolescents - many are lighter smokers out of necessity (money, availability) so may not have substantive withdrawal symptoms. Restricted access (can't smoke around parents/teachers) is also going to mean withdrawal onset is often out of their control.
Is it possible some adults partly manage their ADHD symptoms through cigarette smoking? Sure, to a degree. Keep in mind though, that it is nicotine driving the effects of cigarette smoking on executive function. If their thesis was true, wouldn't we be expecting a dramatic DROP in ADHD since ~2012 and the rise of vaping? I haven't looked in a while, but that certainly isn't what I'm seeing.
If anything, I'd be more inclined to blame the increased prevalence of vaping (and the associated ebb and flow of nicotine withdrawal) for increases over the last 15ish years than reductions in smoking. In reality though, I think any link between these two is probably relatively subtle, context-dependent and the real culprits are infinitely more likely to be changes in parenting style, screen media use, sleep, etc.
We see messed up lungs a lot in our pulm clinic from vaping.Also, given the lack of regulation and loopholes in the "vape juice" market, wouldn't it be difficult to really study the effects given the wide variety of who knows what in these products?
I don't even know what behaviors people would be keying in on to suggest she has autism. Her encyclopedic knowledge of fashion...?The fact that there is even a subset of people who think that Elle Woods from Legally Blonde has autism imo proves that autism has now become defined by what the internet thinks it is, as opposed to what it actually is
The fact that there is even a subset of people who think that Elle Woods from Legally Blonde has autism imo proves that autism has now become defined by what the internet thinks it is, as opposed to what it actually is
The therapist sub is currently arguing about the definition of trauma
"Stop trying to gaslight me into agreeing with your opinions! You know I hate when you do that personal transference onto me, because it totally triggers my day to day trauma." /sIsn't that all that sub really is? A bunch of undertrained people making up their own definitions for words with established meanings? I don't think I ever saw anyone on that sub actually know or use the terms like gaslight or transference corrrectly.
Trauma is, like, totally subjective. I was traumatized this morning by the cost of my Starbucks.The therapist sub is currently arguing about the definition of trauma
They legitimately use “transference” and “countertransference” to mean “how the client feels about me” and “how i feel about the client.” I don’t think they are even aware that the original psychoanalytic definitions are “the client’s displacement of their maladaptive object relations onto me, such that I become a surrogate form of that object against which the client can struggle” and “the same thing in reverse.”I don't think I ever saw anyone on that sub actually know or use the terms like gaslight or transference correctly.
They legitimately use “transference” and “countertransference” to mean “how the client feels about me” and “how i feel about the client.” I don’t think they are even aware that the original psychoanalytic definitions are “the client’s displacement of their maladaptive object relations onto me, such that I become a surrogate form of that object against which the client can struggle” and “the same thing in reverse.”
It drives me bananas when people use those terms the wrong way, not because I want to defend psychoanalytic concepts (indeed, I think psychoanalysis is abject pseudoscientific nonsense), but simply because I care about people actually utilizing proper psychological language to describe the therapeutic relationship.
I think self-diagnosed (akin to fibromyalgia) long covid should be looked at with some skepticism, but it can be a real diagnosis. The cardiac and pulmonary damage that can occur are probably the two of the most worrisome conditions. The impact of chronic stress and/or disrupted sleep can definitely contribute to some of the reported long COVID symptoms, like cognitive fog and physical fatigue.
This explains why only disability compensation can cure many symptoms of anxiety, depression, and PTSD.FYI, capitalism is the root cause of literally all mental illness, guys /s
In my experience, it makes them far, far, worse. (And permanent).This explains why only disability compensation can cure many symptoms of anxiety, depression, amd PTSD.
Ahhh yes, I always read very closely on the monozygotic twin studies about the main effects of capitalism on symptom presentation. After all, that is what those research projects specifically aim to study. /sFYI, capitalism is the root cause of literally all mental illness, guys /s