home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- DRUG CULTURE MONOPOLY
-
- v 1.0
-
- Thomas J. Rundquist, M.Ed.
- Fred J. Parent, Ph.D
-
- programming by Jaques Roy
-
-
- SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE
-
- The basic premise of this section is that substance abuse is motivated
- by an often complex combination of social conditions and individual psycho-
- emotional dynamics.
- In many instances outside of the immediate family situation, social
- conditions have a strong influence. Sociologists tell us that social groupings
- regulate the behavior of their members through cultural influences such as norms,
- customs, taboos and their associated sanctions. In various ways, social controls
- indicate which ideas and actions are favored within a particular group and which
- are not. Normal urges toward food, shelter, clothing, sexual fulfillment, and
- love may be marked with disapproval in one situation and enthusiasm in another.
- The complex interplay of cultures, subcultures, and even countercultures tends
- to generate a wide variety of interpretations of what is "good" and what is
- "bad" in human behavior. Criminals often muster persuasive rationalizations
- or justifications for their illegal activities e.g., easy money, high living
- standards, and a sense of excitement and adventure in their criminal escapades.
- Looked at from this perspective, criminal activities can sometimes attract
- someone who isn't sure which set of standards are right - that of the "straight"
- world, or that of the "deviant" world.
- We live in a society where we are surrounded daily by media messages
- suggesting that personal fulfillment and success are best measured in sensual
- and materialistic terms. If you've never noticed it before, spend some time
- noting the many occasions that the theme of advertisements is that problems
- can be solved through some pill or potion that produces the "quick fix", with
- no fuss or muss, and returns the person to a happier preproblem state, or, in
- some cases, the implication is that it transports the user to new heights of
- fulfillment, success, and happiness. With all these recurrent messages
- encouraging hedonism within what is often an unrealistic problem-free "never-
- never land", it is small wonder that the attraction of various substances to
- dull, block, or otherwise avoid/escape the challenges and complications of
- everyday life has now grown to epidemic proportions.
- Problems related to one's selfconcept are often at the root of much
- substance abuse. Regardless of possesions, achievements, or attractiveness,
- a person may feel inherently inferior and unlovable. This low selfimage is
- another favorite target of modern advertising, which finds that prodding
- people's insecurities is generally good for business i.e., helps to sell
- the advertised products or services.
- The pace of life in today's world often leaves little time, if any,
- for constructive solitude, intimate and serious conversations between people
- in close relationships with one another, or other types of warm and supportive
- interactions. Whether as children or as adults, people long denied such basic
- human needs begin to experience a wide array of psycho- emotional tensions and
- problems, which frequently lead to or aggravate other problems they encounter
- in their everyday lives.
- When a person feels rejected, he or she may react in any number of
- ways. Such feelings may be bottled up inside, or displaced outward onto others
- in disruptive/destructive behaviors, or generate serious emotional disturbances
- within the person, or attract the person to a subculture based upon similar
- problems. One variety of subculture that attracts many in such circumstances
- is substance abuse oriented. (We recognize that there is much substance abuse
- that takes place outside of group settings, also.) Gaining entry to and
- succeeding in a drug culture depends primarily on peer- created and peer-
- reinforced criteria linked to the level, quality, amounts, strengths, and
- category of drugs one is willing and able to use. Typically, acceptance into
- a drug culture produces a new sense of selfworth, an imroved self- image, and
- a reordering of values and priorities which often has disastrous results for
- the person's other relationships outside of the drug culture. Sometimes, but
- not always, this transformation of the self also includes rejection of the
- "straight" world, "the establishment" (which is viewed as having failed its
- rejector and is, therefore, unworthy of respect).
- Many of the deceits and even illegal activities that some substance
- abusers end up becoming involoved in place a tremendous strain on their
- relationships outside the drug culture. As has so often been said, drugs are
- an expensive habit. The combination of psychological, social, and even physical
- dependence upon drugs draws abusers into more and more shady dealings with the
- world around them. Once this downward spiral begins, any shortterm successes
- are vastly overshadowed by longterm losses in the person's life. In one of
- life's many ironies, it is at this point, when the abusers are most alienated
- from and even repulsive to the "straight" world, that they are in most need of
- the "straight" world to help them out of their predicament.
-
-
- IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION
-
- First, the chronic substance abuser needs to make the decision to end
- his or her involvements with drugs. Ideally, this would be the person's own
- decision. In reality, it is often pressures from others that lead the abuser
- to seek help e.g., a close relative, a friend, a loved one, or someone
- representing the law. Less frequently does the abuser become tired of the
- drugs or the life except, perhaps, wanting to avoid a jail term or the ill
- effects of the drugs.
- Individuals often try to "kick the habit" on their own, and some succeed,
- though many fail. One source of failure in trying to "go it alone" is the
- person's inability to sort through the complexities of the emotional problems
- that both led them into substance abuse and became aggravated by that experience.
- Some who fail in such an attempt eventually turn to a physician for help.
- Some physicians are reluctant to become involved with substance abusers because
- of previous experiences of being conned by such people. The chronic abuser
- who is serious about kicking the habit may consent to undergo withdrawl in a
- hospital or other similar detoxification setting under professional supervision.
- Unfortunately, the waiting lists for drug rehabilitation programs are quite
- long; a wait of several months is not unusual in this country.
- Relocating to another setting, away from the people and places that
- were involved in their substance abuse experiences, may or may not be helpful
- to the person. In most cases, the major battles and the true victories have
- to be won within the person through the development of a more secure and
- positive self-image. Support from family and friends is crucial to the person
- at this point; some would say it is essential. Some degree of involvement of
- other family members in family therapy sessions is commonly requested or
- required by rehabilitation programs.
- The goals of rehabilitation and the techniques for its achievement
- tend to vary from program to program. In some cases, progress is dramatically
- quick; but, more often, progress in agonizingly slow. The rehabilitation
- experience is only the beginning of a struggle that in some way, shape, or form
- will be with the person throughout the rest of their lives. Initially, the
- normal problems of everyday life may seem overwhelming to the recovering
- abuser. Eventually, by developing coping abilities and achieving a realistic
- self- image, the person can begin to reorder their goals and priorities as
- they travel the road to recovery.
-
-
- SOME COMMON ELEMENTS OF CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES "ON THE STREET"
-
- AFTER HOURS PARTY SPOTS - "Blind Pigs" are similar to the night spots
- of the Roaring Twenties (the kind you got into by saying "Joe sent me").
- Remaining open past legal closing time, these locations are the relaxation and
- entertainment spots for the fast crowd. Liquor, gambling, dope, and prostitution
- are commonly available there.
-
- "AIRPLANE" - In this congame, the hustler convinces a greedy person
- that he can give him a special deal on some merchandise, takes his money, and
- disappears.
-
- ARMED ROBBERY - By using fake or real weapons, the threat of force is
- used to rob stores, gas stations, or individuals. Johns seeking prostitutes
- are favorite targets, as are illegal establishments (in both cases, there is
- lessened likelyhood that they will report the robbery to the police).
-
- BURGLARY - Breaking and entering is performed on cars, homes, or
- businesses with amazing speed and skill. A locked car can be stolen in a
- matter of seconds.
-
- COUNTERFEITING - "Funny money" is printed and then exchanged for real
- dollars through both large and small distributors.
-
- DOPE - This large business has many branches. Some procure, others
- transport, others produce or package drugs. All of these people support the
- pusher in your local neighborhood.
-
- FLIM FLAM - This is "the old switcheroo". For example, a hustler
- enters a store and buys a money order for "x" dollars. The clerk gives him
- the money order, but the hustler doesn't have enough cash on him to pay for
- it; so, he says he'll go get more cash in his car. Fearing the customer may
- not return, the clerk asks for the money order back. After the customer has
- left, the clerk discovers he's been handed a one dollar money order.
-
- FORGERY - Either stolen checks, checking accounts established with
- false identification, or checks available from an underworld printer are
- passed.
-
- FRAUDS OF A GENERAL NATURE - Among the many are worthless stocks,
- nonexistent raffles, poppies, "I am deaf" cards, and supposed donations.
-
- GAMBLING - Various cheating devices are used; marked cards, extra
- cards, signals between players, loaded dice, rigged games, etc. Bookies are
- very common. The bets of pennies to dollars on "the numbers" from 001 to 999
- are made with hopes of hitting it big; but, the big "winners" in the numbers
- racket are the operators, not the customers.
-
- JAMAICAN BOY - A con in which the hustler convinces the mark that
- he's new in the community and needs some money to get settled.
-
- LAWSUIT COMING THROUGH - The con convinces the mark he's due to receive
- a large sum of money in the near future, so he borrows against it.
-
- LOAN SHARK - Often working in factories, etc., the loan shark lends
- people money against their next paychecks at very high rates of interest
- (e.g., 25% is quite common). When a person cannot repay on time, either his
- credit may be extended or he may be threatened with physical violence. At
- these high rates of interest, it doesn't take long before all of a person's
- paycheck has to go just to pay the interest on his loans.
-
- MICHIGAN BANK ROLL - Some play money or paper is rolled with a large
- denomination bill around it, to flash around in order to impress people that
- you're "loaded". This may be done to impress women, or to "sucker in" a mark
- in some congame.
-
- PROSTITUTION - Whether streetwalkers, call girls/guys, or bar
- girls/guys, the game is the same. Using a prostitute to lure a customer into
- an armed robbery situation is not uncommon. Another common scam is "the
- Murphy", which basically amounts to tricking the customer out of their money
- e.g., someone takes his money and gives him a false address to go to for the
- desired services; or, the guide offers to hold the customers money "for
- safekeeping" until the meeting is over. Then, he disappears as soon as the
- customer is out of sight.
-
- SLUMMING - Street vendors flash supposedly stolen items on the street
- to gullible customers who think they'll get these "hot" items at very low
- prices. Usually, the items have been purchased at a wholesaler's rather than
- stolen; although some street vendors are very creative e.g., selling discarded
- portable television boxes filled with stones to unsuspecting customers.
-
- SHOPLIFTING - If caught, the shoplifter often pretends to have misplaced
- the sales receipt for the stolen items. Protests of one's innocence can be
- very convincing at times.
-
- SHORT CON - Quick, uncomplicated congames involving a single, brief
- meeting with the mark e.g., selling colored water as whiskey.
-
- TILL TAPPING - This quickfingered person distracts the cash- register
- operator just long enough to grab some money out of the cash drawer.
-
- CUTTING DRUGS - Illegal sales of drugs often involve mixing them with
- other substances ("cutting" them), in order to increase the volume of product
- the dealer can sell, which increases the profits from the sales. Unsuspecting
- customers are not only cheated in this manner, but also sometimes become victims
- of overdoses (sometimes fatal overdoses) when they accidently happen to purchase
- uncut substances and have no idea of their real potency.
-
- ANY COMBINATION OF THE ABOVE CAN BE USED TO MAKE IT THROUGH THE DAY AND SUPPORT
- ONE'S HABITS ON THE STREET. IN THE QUEST FOR SURVIVAL UNDER SUCH
- CIRCUMSTANCES, SUCH THINGS AS HONESTY, INTEGRITY, TRUST, AND RESPECT FOR THE
- PERSONAL WELL- BEING AND PROPERTY OF OTHERS QUICKLY FADE INTO INSIGNIFICANCE.
- NOT ALL OF THIS ACTION INVLOVES SUBSTANCE ABUSERS AND ILLEGAL DRUGS, BUT MUCH
- OF IT DOES IN OUR CURRENT SITUATION.
-
-
- DRUG SLANG GLOSSARY
-
- This list is by no means complete, but it may serve as an aid to interpreting
- some current "street" names for drugs in common usage.
-
- AMPHETAMINES - A's, beans, bennies, bombido, browns, cartwheels, coasttocoast,
- copilots, dex, dexies, eye- openers, footballs, greenies, hearts, jellie
- babies, jet, jolly beans, LA turnabouts, lid poppers, oranges, peaches, pep pills,
- RPM's, roses, speed, sweets, truckdrivers, uppers, ups, vitamins, wakeups,
- whites, zoom.
-
- BARBITURATES - Barbs, blockbusters, bluebirds, blue devils, blues, christmas
- trees, downers, green dragons, marshmallow reds, Mexican reds, nebbies, nimbies,
- peanuts, pink ladies, pinks, rainbows, red and blues, redbirds, red devils,
- reds, sleeping pills, stumblers, yellow jackets, yellows.
-
- COCAINE - Bernies, bernice, blow, burese, C, carrie, cecil, charlie, cholly,
- coke, corine, crack, dynamite, flake, gin, girl, gold dust, happy dust, heaven
- dust, jet, joy powder, leaf, paradise, snort, snow, speedball (mixed with
- heroin), stardust, sugar, toot, white dust, white girl, zoom.
-
- HASHISH - Black, gold, hash, lebanese, scheesh.
-
- HEROIN - Big Harry, black sundae (brown heroin cut with cocoa), boy, caballo,
- doojee, dope, duige, H, hairy, hardstuff, harry, horse, joy powder, junk, salt,
- schmeek, shit, skag, smack, snow, speedball (mixed with cocaine), stuff, sugar,
- thing, white stuff.
-
- LSD - Acid, big D, blotter, blue acid, chief, cubes, dot, hawk, heavenly blue,
- instant zen, lysergic acid, pearly gates, royal blue, sugar, sugar lump,
- wedding bells, windowpane, zen, 25.
-
- MARIJUANA - Acapulco gold, ace, bhang, birds, boo, bush, butterflower, cannabis,
- flannigans, ganja, gigglessmoke, goob, goober, grass, griffo, has, hay, hemp,
- hemo, herb, Indian hay, J, jive, joint, locoweed, love weed, marijuana, Mary
- Jane, pot.
-
- METHAMPHETAMINE - Bombita, crash, crystal, doe, jet, meth, Methedrine, speed,
- splash.
-
- METHADONE - Jamidone, dollies, dolls, Dolophine.
-
- MORPHINE - Cube, dreamer, emsel, hard stuff, hocus, M, melter, Miss Emma,
- monkey, morf, morphie, morpho, tab, unkie, white stuff.
-
- PHENCYCLIDINE - Angel dust, animal tranquilizer, cadillac, CJ, crystal joints,
- cyclones, dust, elephant tranquilizer, embalming fluid, goon, hog, horse
- tranquilizer, killer weed, KJ, KW, mint weed, mist, monkey dust, PCP, peace,
- peacepill, peaceweed, pig killer, rocket fuel, scuffle, sheets, snorts, soap,
- soma, supergrass, surfer, synthetic marijuana, T, tac, tanks, tic.
-
- PSILOCYBIN - Mushrooms, rooms sacred mushrooms.
-
- STP - DOM, serenity, syndicate acid, tranquility.
-
-
- DEBRIEFING
-
- In addition to whatever discussions take place while playing the game,
- it's wise to spend some time in open discussion or "debriefing" after the game
- has ended. This allows everyone involved to gather and share thoughts related
- to both the game experience and to the topic of substace abuse. This is
- often the point when the most productive and valuable exchanges take place
- among players and/or between players and supervisors/therapists. Although a
- lot of any such discussion will be spontaneous, the following items are
- offered here as suggested prompts to get discussions started or to break a
- lull in a discussion.
-
- What are the lessons to be learned from the simulation?
-
- How realistic are the experiences described in the simulation?
-
- What are the risks of the criminal lifestyle?
-
- What are the risks involved in substance abuse?
-
- Why do addicts become criminals?
-
- People often make a distinction between physical dependence on or addiction
- to a substance and psychological dependence on or addiction to a substance.
- Are the consequences for the abuser and those around the abuser any different,
- no matter what the nature of the dependence or addiction?
-
- Are the end results of the simulation any different from the end results
- commonly encountered by substance abusers who drift into a criminal lifestyle?
-
- How do we know when a substance abuse problem exists?
-
- What is the impact of these problems on a different segments of our society?
-
- What conflicts need to be resolved by someone caught up in these types of
- problems? What about for those around them?
-
- Who is affected by these problems?
-
- What are the causes of these problems?
-
- What are some solutions to these problems?
-
- What improvements would you make in the simulation?
-
- What alternatives to substance abuse does a person have when they're hurting,
- confused, and desperate for acceptance from their peers?
-
- Why is it so hard to say "NO"?
-
- Who can you turn to for help? Your parents? Your friends? Your teachers?
- Your minister? Exabusers? A hotline or crisis center? Local mental health
- services? Your family doctor?
-
- Most of us feel pretty stupid letting someone else know we've lost control
- over our own lives and done a lot of dumb things while we drifted aimlessly
- through our daily experiences, but, should this stop us from asking for help
- when we know we so desperately need it?
-
- Nobody wants to be a "squealer" or "snitch", but what should you do if you
- know someone's really getting dangerously involved in the types of problems
- we're discussing here? Should you feel responsible in any way for the others
- you see in these types of situations?
-
- What's the attraction to drugs? Is it considered "cool", or are people just
- out for "kicks"?
-
- Are you aware that both organized crime and international terrorists are
- deeply involved in drug trafficking? So, the money paid for the stuff someone
- buys locally is, in a sense, a "contribution" in support of such activities?
-
- Aside from death, are you aware of any potentially shortterm or longterm
- physical or psychoemotional problems or disabilities that substance abusers
- risk contracting?
-
- What are some useful techniques for dealing with peer pressures when you feel
- you shouldn't go along with them?
-
- How do you react to people you know who either are trying to "kick the habit"
- or have recently "kicked the habit"?
-
-