Heroin Addiction: Why Does My Fat Sister Do Everything to Try to Look Attractive Except Eating Less.?
Question by Kimberly: Why does my fat sister do everything to try to look attractive except eating less.?
Well my sister today spent 250 dollars on clothes on my mom’s credit card. I’m 5’3 88 pounds. I’m small but my sister is 5’4 160 pounds. And she always wastes our money on tanning and clothes and food. My parents are pushovers but they choose her over me every time so I was getting a little upset. So finally today she ate my oreos that were saved for ME and I asked her why do you do everything to look attractive except eat less? She freaked out and told me it was an “ADDICTION”. No.. heroin is an addiction Nicotine is an addiction waking up every morning spending 15 hours a day sitting on photoshop and eating a chocolate swingset is a choice. Why does she try so much to look attractive except the obvious of not being a pig. I know it sounds mean but it has the advantage of being true.
Best answer:
Answer by Alpine
Hahaha, I think that’s a basic girl thing, or for some girls of course. But you’re right, it’s a choice, if she wants to, she should do so, but hopefully she doesn’t complain about it later down the road! Eating isn’t an addiction, it’s a choice, the more you eat when not necessary, the more your stomach will grow space and the more you’ll eat, you’ll just gain weight. TO LOSE WEIGHT IS HARD, BUT TO GAIN IT IS FAST. When she gets older or lives on her own and start paying for her own things, she’ll probably learn!
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Heroin Addiction: Heroin addiction – A&E’s Intervention Corrine, Michelle, Audrey
Opioid dependency is a medical diagnosis characterized by an individual’s inability to stop using opioids (morphine/heroin, codeine, oxycodone, hydrocodone, etc.) even when objectively it is in his or her best interest to do so. In 1964 the WHO Expert Committee on Drug Dependence introduced “dependence” as “A cluster of physiological, behavioural and cognitive phenomena of variable intensity, in which the use of a psychoactive drug (or drugs) takes on a high priority. The necessary descriptive characteristics are preoccupation with a desire to obtain and take the drug and persistent drug-seeking behaviour. Determinants and problematic consequences of drug dependence may be biological, psychological or social, and usually interact”. The core concept of the WHO definition of “drug dependence” requires the presence of a strong desire or a sense of compulsion to take the drug; and the WHO and DSM-IV-TR clinical guidelines for a definite diagnosis of “dependence” require that three or more of the following six characteristic features be experienced or exhibited: 1. A strong desire or sense of compulsion to take the drug; 2. Difficulties in controlling drug-taking behaviour in terms of its onset, termination, or levels of use; 3. A physiological withdrawal state when drug use is stopped or reduced, as evidenced by: the characteristic withdrawal syndrome for the substance; or use of the same (or a closely related) substance with the intention of relieving or avoiding withdrawal …
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