Showing posts with label teen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teen. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2011

Girlfriend demanding






Had his girlfriend been less demanding, Mohammad Shahzad (21) would still have his job and his reputation intact. Before he dumped his conscience, the young medical sales executive had tried to wean the woman off her Goa fancy with a flattering tattoo, a mark of his devotion for her birthday.



But when that didn't please her, he pocketed his firm's funds, told the police he had been robbed, and took her off on a long seaside holiday to Goa. Shahzad had faked the robbery in August, just four months into his job. "He claimed he was robbed by three men near the Panchkuian Road railway overbridge.



We investigated and found his call record did not tally with his story. We caught him when he tried to sell his expensive mobile, which he originally claimed was taken away by the robbers," said DCP (south) Chhaya Sharma. While sources said Shahzad had made off with a large amount - the company's collection from his area -the police have so far recovered Rs 20,600 from him.



"On August 22, Shahzad, called the police control room and reported that three men on a bike had stopped him on Panchkuian Road and snatched the sales money that he had collected from a client in Connaught Place and was taking to his office in Karol Bagh. He claimed he was held at knifepoint while the men snatched the money and his mobile phone," said Sharma.



The police had registered a case on his complaint at Mandir Marg police station. Chief investigator of the case, inspector Anil Sharma, said Shahzad's lie was nailed last Monday when they were tipped off about a man trying to sell an expensive mobile phone at Chandan Holla in Fatehpur Beri. It was Sahzad. The police picked him up on suspicion, and during interrogation he confessed the whole plot.



The police said Shahzad and his girlfriend had returned to the city just four days ago, and he had resigned from his position immediately after that. "He thought that the truth would not come to light if he sold his mobile phone to a stranger. He was carrying Rs 5,500 at the time he was caught with the expensive handset," said the DCP. Shahzad had faked the robbery in August, just four months into his job. He claimed he was robbed by three men near Panchkuian Road. His phone records didn't tally though.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

To overcome addictions






Nearly everyone has had a taste of what it would be like to have an

addiction—eating a second (and third) piece of cake, staying out until

4 a.m. drinking when work starts at seven, buying three pairs of shoes

when you had just enough cash to cover one.

You know the consequences: the stomachache and spare tire, aching head

and lousy day at work, the credit card debt, and above all—the guilt.

But the immediate payoff, whether it's pleasure or simply a sensation

of feeling alive, calls to you like a siren's song.

 

In the addicted mind, the urge hijacks the brain, overpowering the

analytical part involved in good decision-making. Whether sex,

shopping, or heroin, mental health professionals generally distinguish

a habit from an addiction when it takes center stage and shoves

everything else off, destroying relationships, finances, and careers.

As one mental health expert put it, a healthy person plans exercise

around their life.





An addict plans their life around exercise.

The Making of an Addict The scientific community has long tried to determine the factors that

cause addiction. Why for instance, are an estimated nine of every 100

Americans shopaholics, when presumably we all buy things and could be susceptible? What is it that causes about 15 percent of all people in the United States who drink to become dependent?

Researchers don't completely understand addiction and perhaps neverwill, but the majority does agree that the recipes for addiction vary and can include an array of factors including psychological demons,

social environment, lack of intellectual stimulation, learned behavior from family members, genetics, and depression.

Parsing out the ingredients and determining what causes addiction versus what was caused by it is like trying to decide if the meat was tough before being cooked or if it was tough because it was cooked improperly. But scientists have come a long way in understanding the brain circuitry involved in addiction. The research has raised hopes for medications that will quash insatiable cravings, not simply quench them with

another drug as methadone does for heroin.

Addiction sans Substance As experts examine non-substance abuse addictions (and the acceptance

that they exist grows), they have found that brains can react to activities the way they do to drugs.

For example, in obese, compulsive eaters, scans have shown hyperactivity in the parts of the brain that interpret food stimuli—the lips, tongue, and mouth. For them, eating is a drug, an

otherworldly pleasure.

For addictions to gambling and shopping, many experts say that the same feel-good chemicals come into play.

 

The cycle for nonchemical addictions also mirrors that of substance abusers. They experience the fleeting "high," the remorse, and then feel so badly that the only respite is to repeat it again.

All this provides the scientific backdrop for understanding why, when psychotherapist April Benson talks about her clients, they sound more like heroin junkies than fashionistas. In her book, To Buy or Not to

Buy, Benson examines the roots and impacts of an addiction that devastates millions of Americans.



Recovery Benson and many mental health workers underscore that to overcome addictions, people must address the underlying causes. Our emotions and experiences shape and are shaped by our brain chemistry.

Recovering requires people to understand what drives them to their  addiction—whether it's to feel the thrill of life, escape from psychological pain, gain a sense of control, or some combination of

these desires. Without understanding the reasons and finding a healthy way to manage them, addicts will often kick a habit only to replace it with another one.

Perhaps, that partly explains why the most common cause of death for Alcoholics Anonymous members is health problems due to cigarette smoking.