
The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens How We've 'Drugified' Our Entire Existence: Dopamine & Addiction In the Digital Age with Anna Lembke
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Jan 7, 2026 Anna Lembke, a Stanford University professor and bestselling author, dives into the complexities of addiction in a digital world. She discusses how modern environments hijack our brain's dopamine, fostering compulsive behaviors linked to technology and processed foods. Lembke highlights that addiction is a predictable response to societal pressures rather than a personal failing. She also shares practical strategies for reducing addictive tendencies, such as radical honesty and digital etiquette, aiming for a balanced life amidst a culture of instant gratification.
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Dog's Cardboard Compulsion
- Nate Hagens shares a story about his dog Frank compulsively shredding cardboard during evening screen time.
- Anna Lembke relates similar animal examples showing compulsive behaviors arise when natural outlets vanish.
Devices As Immediate Self-Soothers
- Anna Lembke bluntly calls digital devices 'masturbation machines' to illustrate their function of immediate self-soothing.
- She links this to reduced real-world attachment and warns that AI intensifies the problem by meeting needs frictionlessly.
The Two-Week Withdrawal Window
- Acute withdrawal from a removed stimulus peaks around 10–14 days with intense craving and dysphoria as the brain recalibrates.
- If abstinence persists, reward thresholds normalize and modest pleasures regain salience within weeks to months.




