Why do we become alert after drinking tea and why does tea make us addicted?

 Why do we become alert after drinking tea and why does tea make us addicted?


If you put diesel in the petrol engine, the engine of the car will sit instead of running, but if you put petrol in the petrol engine, it will not run, but will run. This is the calculation of some people who start running after drinking tea. And if they become too active, then the question arises that

"Why do we become so alert or active after drinking tea?"

Before we know it, we need to clear our concepts about some of the basic things. There are some gaps between them. From these gaps the message reaches the next cell in the form of various chemicals. These chemicals are called neurotransmitters and the gaps are called synapses. While inside the message the message travels in the form of charges.

When it comes to tea, you all know that tea contains a significant amount of caffeine.


This caffeine enters our nervous system and replaces the adenosine, a neurotransmitter. Adenosine is a transmitter that relaxes or slows us down. And then it alerts or activates our brain

At the same time as caffeine replaces adenosine, another hormone called adrenaline is released in our body. As the arm moves to the legs and stomach.

Thus, when a person drinks tea, he feels very alert.

Here comes an unseen trap. The trap is that caffeine has the ability to become addictive, meaning that the more caffeine we take in, the more it becomes a receptor site and the more adenosine we need, and then more caffeine is needed to complete it. It seems that caffeine makes a person addicted to it. That is why we Punjabis often say to a person who drinks a lot of tea, "Dude, I am addicted to tea." In fact, that person is not addicted to tea, but to caffeine. Becomes accustomed

Post a Comment

0 Comments