Caffeine Addiction

Recovering alcoholics and addicts have a long history of drinking large amounts of coffee, tea and cola soft drinks.

Coffee, tea, cola drinks, chocolate and many foods contain caffeine. A new range of drinks on the market is a variety of high content caffeine drinks such as Red Bull.

Caffeine, a stimulant, is the most widely consumed drug. Caffeine has occasionally been considered a drug of abuse and has the potential for people to become addicted.

Signs of are;

Coffee simply stimulates the central nervous system, increases stress hormones in the blood streams, thus making a person feel unnaturally alert. Consequently increased alert state tends to subdue your body’s natural instincts and prevent it from relaxing. This causes undue stress and leads to various kinds of disorders.

Daily caffeine intake induces a 24 hour cyclic disturbance in your body. While the morning cup of coffee or tea perks up your mood most people can’t stop at that. Almost every office goer develops a craving for the next cup and subsequently, a heavy fatigue sets in by late afternoon. Even if endless cups revives you at this time of the day, a total collapse is inevitable by evening.

Irritability, fatigue and gloom along with an uncomfortable sensation are the  usual symptom. what is worse is that finally when you try to sleep away  your blues at night, you just can’t. That’s no the end. The next morning you get up tired, thirsting for a steaming  cuppa  to settle your mood.

Thus begins a coffeeholic’s journey. At the end of which, apart from developing dark circles under the eyes, you also acquire acidity problems, irregular palpitations and more.

The Withdrawal Symptoms of Caffeine

Once you have lowered your caffeine dependence status and realized that caffeine is the trouble factor in your diet, don’t take the hasty decisions of cutting down on all such intake. For in case of sudden elimination of all caffeine products from your diet, the withdrawal symptoms maybe too tough to handle. consequently, you may suffer from some of the following withdrawal symptoms:

Headaches,IrritabilityIntensification of premenstrual symptomsFatigueGeneralized muscular tensionNauseaLack of appetiteConstipationLack of concentrationDisorientationForgetfulness

Quitting Coffee Gradually

So make sure you reduce your caffeine intake gradually. Initially reduce your intake by half. Avoid the other half by replacing  it with a cup of mild organic green tea or herbal tea. For example if you are used to four cups of coffee in a day, start drinking two cups of coffee and two cups of mild green tea. Gradually replace the mild tea with with soup or plain hot water mixed with honey and lime. Then replace the remaining two cups of coffee with mild tea and follow the same pattern.

4 cups of coffee2 cups of coffee

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