Adolescents especially have a strong influence on their fellow peers and they are susceptible to making decisions and engaging in bad behaviors at the hands of others (Loke & Mak, 2013).
styofa doing anything

No title available

No title available
Sade Olutola
h
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
tumblr dot com
todays bird
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Janaina Medeiros
we're not kids anymore.
No title available
sheepfilms
dirt enthusiast
AnasAbdin

Andulka
d e v o n

Product Placement
YOU ARE THE REASON

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from South Korea

seen from Mexico
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Ukraine
seen from Türkiye
@lookingbackatlife
Adolescents especially have a strong influence on their fellow peers and they are susceptible to making decisions and engaging in bad behaviors at the hands of others (Loke & Mak, 2013).
Thinking about your friends and family.
Drug abuse has not only an affect on the individual, but the family as well. Families are essential for attachment, nurturing and socialization factors. When one person in an established family begins to exhibit behavior changes, the rest of the family will notice and be affected (Lander et al., 2013)
More than 100,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in the yearlong period ending in April, government researchers said.
New data out from the CDC this week, reporting that between April 2020 and April 2021, more than 100,000 people died over a 12-month period from fatal drug overdoses for the first time in U.S. history.
“…more than the toll of car crashes and gun fatalities combined. Overdose deaths have more than doubled since 2015… Though recent figures through September suggest the overdose death rate may have slowed, the grim tally signals a public health crisis whose magnitude was both obscured by the Covid pandemic and accelerated by it, experts said.”
Initial data includes 97,990 confirmed deaths with a projection of 100,306 total deaths, once all the data is compiled. May their lives be measured not just in time but in love.
From the White House: “To all those families who have mourned a loved one and to all those people who are facing addiction or are in recovery: you are in our hearts, and you are not alone. Together, we will turn the tide on this epidemic.”
This article from NPR also has more information about the Biden administration’s mixed signals on harm reduction over the last few months. Last summer the Drug Policy Reform Act (DPRA) was introduced to Congress, and the Drug Policy Alliance has more info on how you can support that decriminalization bill and other ways to take federal/state/local action.
The National Harm Reduction Coalition has a collection of great resources on safer drug use and how to take care of yourself and others. Stay safe, I love you.
This is my current read for a class I’m taking on substance abuse counseling. I don’t know how one could read this and not be absolutely infuriated by the way drug companies run in the US. As if we didn’t already have enough reasons to hate capitalism…
Drug addictions do not affect just the body, but the mind as well.
The use of illicit drugs can cause cardiovascular complications, changes in your central nervous system, neurotoxicity, Parkinson's disease, axonal damage, and many more effects to your body (Büttner, 2011).
Men vs. Women
Both men and women are affected by drug abuse, and while there are differences between how the two sexes are affected, the general pattern is seen across for drugs that are most commonly abused (Becker & Hu, 2007).
Who is affected?
The group that seems to be most affected by drug misuses are young adults aged 18-25 in America, they are the ones most likely to use addictive drugs (Addiction Statistics, 2021).
How do drug addictions begin?
Drug addictions begin when people experiment with drugs, they proceed to regularly use them, and this is what leads to their dependency. After these individuals can admit that they are developing or have developed an addiction, their desire to get treatment only decreases (Wise and Koob, 2014).
FDA chief Dr. Scott Gottlieb tells CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta that opioids are the biggest crisis" facing the FDA; tobacco is another key health crisis.
What causes opioid addiction, and why is it so tough to combat?
Carrying Naloxone Can Save Lives but Newly Abstinent Opioid Users Resist
Opioids are the main driver of fatal drug overdoses in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, resulting in 46,802 deaths in 2018, usually because the person stops breathing.
Naloxone — a Food and Drug Administration-approved medication used to reverse overdoses from opioids, such as heroin, morphine and oxycodone — works by restoring normal respiration to a person whose breathing has slowed or stopped.
“Opioid overdoses cause the largest number of accidental and avoidable deaths,” said Peter Davidson, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Medicine at University of California San Diego School of Medicine. “The human toll of drug addiction is devastating. Using naloxone to prevent opiate overdoses can and has saved many lives.”
In a study published in the March 23, 2021 online edition of the International Journal of Drug Policy, Davidson and an international group of researchers found that opioid users who participate in a 12-step abstinence program and recently stopped using drugs refused to take home naloxone, even if having it on hand might save lives.
For the study, trained interviewers visited areas known for high drug use in three Southern California counties: San Diego, Orange and Ventura. Forty-four participants were asked questions about drug use initiation, overdose experiences, both their own and observed and past treatments.
“In our research, individuals who were newly abstinent from opioid use believed that carrying naloxone symbolically tied them to a drug-use identity that they were trying to leave behind,” said first author Jeanette Bowles, DrPH, who is now a postdoctoral fellow with the Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation in Toronto, Canada, but was a UC San Diego School of Medicine postdoctoral fellow at the time of the study.
“Twelve-step programs promote abstinence through social behaviors that include staying away from people, places and things considered to be tied to drug use. Naloxone was seen as an item linked to their drug use and clashing with these sober behaviors and their goal of abstinence.”
To reduce the stigma associated with naloxone, researchers suggest reframing the meaning of carrying naloxone to represent a commitment to group safety and the wellbeing of those “who still suffer” and relabeling naloxone training programs in substance use disorder treatment settings as “overdose first aid.”
“Carrying Naloxone Can Save Lives but Newly Abstinent Opioid Users Resist”
Statistics show that almost 21 million Americans have developed at least one addiction to a substance, yet only 10% have received proper treatment (Addiction Center, 2021).
Simple Addiction Recovery Spell
You Need:
- A pen or marker (preferably a color that represents you or whoever you’re doing the spell for)
- A piece of paper with this sigil (you can print it out or copy it on a piece of paper)
- Scissors
- A candle, lighter, and a container to burn your sigil in (if performing method 1)
- A water source (if performing method 2)
Steps:
1. Gather your paper and copy or print the sigil onto it. It’s okay if it isn’t perfect. Focus your energy and intent into it, what you really want it to do.
2. Cut the sigil out from your paper. The smaller the better.
3. Turn your paper over and write the full name of you or the person you’re doing this spell for. Really concentrate on this person as you write out their name.
Method 1:
1. After you’ve completed the steps above, take your candle (preferably black for banishing) and light it.
2. Take your sigil and carefully ignite it in the candle flame. Drop it in your fire proof container and let it turn to ash. Imagine the fire burning away at all that ties you/this person to the addiction.
3. Take the ashes and go outside. Put them in your hand and blow them into the wind to symbolize freedom from the addiction.
Method 2:
1. After you’ve completed the steps above, take your sigil with you to your water source. This could be a sink, bowl of water, lake, etc.
2. Set your sigil in the water and start rubbing away at the ink. Let the water wash away all the pain from the addiction. It’s okay if it doesn’t fade completely, just try your best to rid the paper of any ink.
3. Once your paper is as clean as you can get it, tear it into tiny pieces. Imagine ripping apart all that ties you/this person to the addiction.
4. Dispose of the paper by letting it down the drain, flushing it down the toilet, or letting it float off into the body of water.
Note: This is no replacement for professional help!
Agreed!
I will choose recovery. I will choose to live. I am more than capable. I will show myself love,grace, and care because I deserve it. I’m blessed. I’m enough. I have a life and today I choose to recover and live.
Excerpt from my journal 8-26-17