Childhood Trauma’s Role in Men’s Substance Use Disorders
Childhood trauma leaves a deeper imprint on men’s lives than most realize—and for many, it becomes the hidden engine driving substance use disorders. Research shows that emotional abuse, physical violence, and neglect are not just painful memories but neurological disruptions that reshape stress responses, emotional regulation, and the brain’s reward systems. Men who grow up in environments marked by fear, shame, or emotional silence often turn to substances not for pleasure, but to feel “normal” in a body wired for survival mode. Studies reveal that men with trauma histories are significantly more likely to develop drug-related addictions, struggle to express emotions, and face greater barriers to seeking help. Experts like Matthew Snyder, LMFT, and Kosta Condous, LMFT, emphasize that effective recovery must address these early wounds—not just the symptoms of addiction. Trauma-informed therapies, emotional reconnection, and safe relational support structures create the conditions f...
External link. We are not responsible for the content.
Read more ↗More From Microdose (industry)
AbbVie Withdraws Patent Challenge, Clearing Path for Enveric’s Psychedelic IP Strategy
In a development that could ripple across the fast evolving neuroplastogen sector, Enveric Biosciences announced that...
Breaking: Enveric Reports New Mechanistic Data Supporting Non-Hallucinogenic Neuroplastogen Strategy
A new data release from Enveric Biosciences is sharpening the scientific debate at the heart of psychedelic drug deve...
Two New Studies Are Rewriting the Rules of Psychedelic Drug Development
For much of the last decade, psychedelic medicine has been driven by clinical outcomes first and mechanistic explanat...
Latest News
Psychedelics in the Age of Eco-Anxiety
Eco-anxiety is a rising response to environmental crises that can be transformed into resilience and action through s...
Where Does the World Go to Dance? Probs These EDM Festivals
A global guide to the festivals worth planning for. [...] Read More... The post Where Does the World Go to Dance? Pro...
Inclius Alvarious’s Place Within Indigenous Society
A look at Sonoran Desert toad medicine through the lens of indigenous sovereignty, ecological strain, and the debate ...
Can you kill a bad trip?: 5 Questions for emergency physician Gregory Yates
Yates discusses experimental attempts to end a psychedelic trip early.
Psychedelic Faeries Take on Prohibition and Authoritarianism
Plus psychedelics and telepathy, ego death for the rich, and our brain on Chat GPT [...] Read More... The post Psyche...
Introduction to Trip Sitting
The Art and Science of Holding Psychedelic Space