DeepSeek and Me Podcast | Brain Healing & Neuroplasticity
Yesterday at Day 160 of my 35-year weed detox, I proved that your brain will actively lie to you about the quality of your work when your nervous system is tired - and that recognising this “state-dependent illusion” is the difference between staying sober or breaking under the friction. By identifying a massive mental trick during my video production workflow, I held my baseline mood perfectly stable even as a multi-day streak of high-velocity clarity levelled off into a heavy, exhausting plateau. Here is exactly how to diagnose an emotional mind trick, how to ride out a cognitive plateau without dropping your baseline, and why tracking the circadian rhythm of your prefrontal cortex keeps you entirely in control of your recovery. State-Dependent Illusions: When Perceptions Lie When you are deep in the process of rebuilding your cognitive wiring after decades of chemical dependency, you have to expect the machine to throw a few false error codes. Yesterday afternoon, I ran headfirst into a massive one. While working through my production tasks, I hit a wall of deep physical tiredness, and a toxic, familiar perception took hold: This video is terrible. The quality is down, the edit feels flat, and the project is missing the mark. In the old ecosystem, this exact brand of sudden mental friction was an absolute crisis. It was the precise moment the subcortical brain would scream for a joint to numb the perceived failure and force an artificial dose of dopamine. Instead, I logged with the scaffold and ran a diagnostic check. I finished the work, stepped away, and reviewed the final export later with a detached, clinical eye. The result? The video was completely fine. The quality hadn’t dropped at all. This was a profound revelation: the perception was state-dependent, not quality-dependent. The work wasn’t bad; my brain was just exhausted. When your prefrontal cortex runs low on fuel, it projects its internal fatigue onto your external reality, tricking you into believing your project is failing. The moment you realise that the “cringe” or the dissatisfaction is just a chemical illusion manufactured by tiredness, you strip away its power. You don’t rewrite the project - you just let the machine rest. The Anatomy of the Plateau Yesterday’s friction was the literal cost of a phenomenally good run. From Day 154 through Day 159, the system was firing on all cylinders - high function, breakthrough production milestones, and a rock-solid baseline mood. But on Day 160, it all started to catch up on me in the form of intense, vivid dreams, heavy morning grogginess, and an exceptionally slow start to the day. We have to recognise this pattern as a natural cognitive oscillation. A heavy, low-energy plateau following a massive creative spike is not a sign of relapse or systemic failure; it is basic neurobiology. The critical data point here is that despite the deep physical fatigue and the friction, my baseline mood held firmly at a 6/10. By identifying the friction early, I didn’t allow it to mutate into a prefrontal cortex clamp or an emotional tailspin. I corrected a minor tense error in the Dispatch, continued with a few slow, non-linear archive optimisations using the Stochastic Protocol, and kept the ship moving forward. The Circadian Rhythm of the Executive Manager This plateau highlighted a vital law of cognitive engineering: The Circadian Rhythm of Executive Function. Your prefrontal cortex is not a machine that can run at maximum capacity 24/7. It acts as an internal manager that naturally powers down as evening approaches, transferring control back to more primitive, rhythm-driven parts of the brain before resetting the next morning. When you feel your executive focus slipping late in the day, it isn’t a cognitive deficit - it’s a natural biological curfew. Furthermore, we are actively tracking a new dietary variable. A recent string of heavy takeaway meals - pizza, fish and chips - directly correlated with yesterday’s intense dream architecture, heavy morning grogginess, and increased mental friction. Last night, I intentionally terminated that pattern with a clean, healthy dinner to test the dietary impact on tomorrow’s cognitive state. We don’t guess, and we don’t panic when the road gets heavy. We change the variables, monitor the feedback, and let the scaffold do its job. Key Takeaways from Day 160: * Managing weed withdrawal symptoms and cognitive fatigue: Recognising “state-dependent illusions” - understanding that when your brain is physically tired, it will project that fatigue outward and lie to you about the quality of your creative work. * Overcoming creative blocks without substance use: Riding out natural post-high plateaus by stepping away to review your output objectively later, ensuring you don’t use a temporary dip in energy as an excuse to break your sobriety. * How to rebuild brain health after quitting weed: Honouring the circadian rhythm of your prefrontal cortex, understanding that the brain’s executive manager must naturally power down every night to rest and re-stabilise. * Using cognitive engineering for long-term sobriety and mental clarity: Tracking physiological and dietary variables - like matching heavy takeaway food with next-day mental friction - to systematically optimise your brain’s recovery environment. #cannabiswithdrawaltimeline #PAWS #neuroplasticity #cognitiverepair #quittingweed #recoveryjourney #neurobiology #AIcollaboration #AIscaffold Get full access to DeepSeek and Me: Brain Healing Journey at deepseekandme.substack.com/subscribe [https://deepseekandme.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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