Teenager's brain on drugs. Drugs make holes in the brain and lowers brain activity |
Thursday, March 31, 2011
What Do Drugs Do To The Body?
What do drugs do to the body on the inside? Drugs are chemicals that make changes to the makeup of the human body. Drugs affect the brain; the brain is what controls the way you feel. So the drugs make the brain send certain messages to make you feel a certain way. Chemical messengers made by drugs can send wrong messages from the brain and make you see, hear, and feel things that aren’t real and doing things that you normally would not do. Eventually, people will start to develop a tolerance toward the drug they use. Some believe that this is their body accepting the drug, but in reality it is the drug killing the parts of their body that is used to resist the drug. To get the feeling again, some people will try using more of the drug which could result in an overdose. Drugs can cause liver damage, make your body unable to fight off infection, your heart beat too fast, cause your body temperature to get so high that it causes damage to your brain, cause a stroke, and even death.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
When Someone You Know Uses Drugs-The Effect
When a child, parent, aunt, uncle, or any other relative or friend uses drugs, the effect it has on the family can be devastating. When a child uses drugs, the parents may feel like it is their fault that their son or daughter became an addict. When a parent uses, a child may feel like they have lost their childhood. I have seen firsthand the toll drugs take on a child when one of their parents use drugs. To some extent, my cousins have lost their childhood as well. One of them-the second oldest-is pretty much like an adult and she is only eight years old. I guess that she thought that she had to step up and act like a parent. She is very protective about her siblings and often treats them as a mother would her children. It is kind of sad to see her have to take this position. My aunt has definitely gotten better recently, I’m not sure if she is still using or not, but my cousin still acts like an adult to some extent; so she has lost out on many childhood experiences to this point. Many children will also feel responsible for their parent’s drug usage as well. They may feel like it is their fault that their children started using, which could affect them for the rest of their lives.
Thursday, March 17, 2011
How Do Drugs Affect People Physically?
People change both on the inside and out when they use drugs. I was able to find a video that showed the pictures side by side of the changes over the years. These videos show how much people have changed over a few years, or even over a few months. This video are meth users, but other substances can cause physical changes as well.
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Helping Someone-Family Interventions
There are some people who accept help and change on their own. And there are some who need some help to decide whether or not they need help. Sometimes, family interventions can be that help. The order of events will usually follow as: Preparation, Family Intervention Day, and Post-Intervention Day. The preparation starts when a family decides to have an intervention for a loved one. They must then get together people who will be part of that intervention and hold some meetings that will explain what will be done and how it will be done. Treatment options should be explored, as well as educating each other about the dysfunction that is at hand. The preparation stage may take one or two weeks. The next event-the actual intervention day-occurs when the family and friends get together and meet with the person who is abusing a substance. Here, people tell the user how much they (the user) means to them and how using the substance has affected them and the relationship they once had and they are asked if they will accept treatment. If they do, proper arrangements have already been made. If they do not, however, the user must understand that their relationships with their family will continue to suffer. Everyone should always be respectful and kind in the intervention; they should not be judgmental or argue. The last stage begins after the day of the intervention. Here, people follow up on their word to get help. Everyone would benefit from help to find out how to be supportive and how to get their relationship back to what it used to be with everyone because one person's substance abuse affects everyone's lives and their relationships with each other.
More information can be found at: Family Intervention
More information can be found at: Family Intervention
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