Drug Abuse
By: Mikki • Essay • 1,447 Words • December 20, 2009 • 1,081 Views
Essay title: Drug Abuse
Drug abuse
“Who has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has strife? Who has complaints? Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes?
Those who linger over wine, who go to sample bowls of mixed wine.
Do not gaze at wine when it is red, when it sparkles in the cup, when it goes down smoothly!
In the end it bites like a snake and poisons like a viper.
Your eyes will see strange sights and your mind imagine confusing things.
You will be like one sleeping on the high seas, lying on top of the rigging.
‘They hit me,’ you will say, ‘but I’m not hurt! They beat me but I don’t feel it! When will I wake up so I can find another drink?’” (Proverbs 23:29-35 1328-1329)
Drug abuse dates as far back as the Biblical era, so it is not a new phenomenon. “The emotional and social damage and the devastation linked to drugs and their use is immeasurable.” The ripple of subversive and detrimental consequences from alcoholism, drug addictions, and addictive behavior is appalling. Among the long list of effects is lost productivity, anxiety, depression, increased crime rate, probable incarceration, frequent illness, and premature death. The limitless consequences include the destruction to personal development, relationships, and families (Henderson 1-2). “Understandably, Americans consider drug abuse to be one of the most serious problems” in the fabric of society. And although “addiction is the result of voluntary drug use, addiction is no longer voluntary behavior, it’s uncontrollable behavior,” says Alan Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (Torr 12-13).
Addiction is a progressive, chronic, and ultimately a fatal disease. It is progressive in the sense that if it is left untreated it will get worse. Chronic means long term. Once one becomes dependent, it is like diabetes, in that diabetes is an incurable disease that can only be controlled. Long-term addictions have the high potential to lead to death through overdose, AIDs, suicide, or an accident (Aronson 17). The cycle of addiction tends to follow a pattern.
People first take drugs for many different reasons. Early on, drug experimentation can stem from curiosity, peer pressure and influence, or because of the environment people live in (Nagle 17). For example, in the East Side of downtown it is apparent that drug dealing and drug usage is prevalent. The police recently arrested 54 individuals from the East Side. Unfortunately it was just one block out of approximately 50 more on that side of town.
Next comes the social use stage. This is the stage where most individuals tend to stop or control their usage. People will try it and occasionally use drugs to “cut loose”, party, and have a good time, generally if, and only if, everyone else around them is doing it. Otherwise they could either take it or leave it and don’t necessarily seek out illegal drugs.
However, as a tolerance to the substances begins to build and the social group changes from friends in the same peer group to primarily drug users and abusers, that is when the drug abuse starts. People become preoccupied with the thought of obtaining drugs. Instead of people living a life with the occasional lapse where drugs are used socially, drug abusers plan their life around using. The majority of their time is spent thinking about drug usage. They plan their usage carefully and choose their friends based on the availability of drugs.
Then the aspect of denial becomes integral. Addicts make excuses to use. Any excuse is valid, It could be because they are sad or mad, lonely, depressed, made a bad test grade, are in trouble with the authorities, had an argument with a girlfriend or parent or a teacher until they find a way to get high. The abused substance often doesn’t matter and getting high becomes all that is important regardless. They lose control on how to moderate their use and over their willpower to prioritize their life, thus allowing the drugs to take precedence, affecting family and friend relationships. Former friends drift further away, and the addict bonds more closely with a new set of user/addict “friends.” Everyone gets along when one is high, and the endless spiral begins to form where all hope is lost. By now, the addict may have medical, legal, or psychiatric problems, but still justify their continued abuse because of their problems or because they are stressed, or the sky is blue, the sun is out, or hey, it’s raining, etc. (Nagle 17-19). According to Leshner, drug addiction “is the result of drugs changing your brain in fundamental ways”