US /krev/
・UK /kreɪv/
That you don't have the things you crave.
That you don't have the things you crave.
It's so important because the number one thing that stops most people from dropping weight is that they crave sweets.
stops most people from dropping weight is that they crave
But because nicotine is a stimulant, once it’s no longer present, you crash and crave more, which ultimately leads to addiction in many people.
present you crash and crave more, which ultimately leads to addiction in many people. In the
Our brains seem wired to crave junk food and sweets.
You crave it, you chase it, you forget what steady love even looks like.
You crave it.
There's quite a few people that have got fatigued by having to have video chats, meetings, and things of that nature, and that they realized they now crave human contact.
and that they realise they now crave human contact.
Here, though, there's a downside. The dopamine hit of sexual attraction feels so good, we crave it more and more. Some people are always chasing the next relationship to get a new hit of pleasure, and soon become stuck in a loop – an idiom meaning they're unable to break the habit of repeating the same patterns of behaviour over and over again.
The dopamine hit of sexual attraction feels so good we crave it more and more.
Are you the type to crave candy bars, cupcakes or soda after a long day?
Are you the type to crave candy bars, cupcakes, or soda after a long day?
The idea of trying to avoid love sounds paradoxical in the extreme. Why would anyone take steps to deny themselves an experience which seems so plainly positive and life-enhancing? Plenty of people are denied love by external forces. Why would anyone take active measures to sabotage love if it lay before them? The answer can only be found by looking back in time. Though we all crave love in theory, our capacity to accept it in practice is critically dependent on the quality of our early emotional experiences. To abbreviate sharply, we can only willingly tolerate being loved if, as children, the process of loving and being loved felt sufficiently reliable, safe and kind. Some of us were not so blessed. Some of us were stymied in our search for love in ways we have not yet recovered from or fully understood. Perhaps the person we wanted to love fell ill or grew depressed. Or at the height of our dependence on them, they went away or had a new family or turned their attention to a younger sibling.
Though we all crave love in theory, our capacity to accept it in practice is critically dependent on the quality of our early emotional experiences.
You crave deep connection and honest conversations.
You crave deep connection and honest conversations.