Know the Lingo - Common Street Terms for Illegal
Drugs
By Stephanie
Loebs
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Weed, pot, bennies, rock, snow, dime
bag...with drug use and abuse comes a large vocabulary of
slang terms known primarily to dealers and addicts. A
concerned parent or loved may be puzzled at first to hear such
code coming from children, spouses, or friends, and
consequently it may take time to realize drugs are being
abused.
It is the goal of any reputable drug and alcoholic
rehabilitation center to help families and friends of addicts break
the codes and seek help for their loved ones, that everybody may be
able to speak the same language - one of sobriety and good health.
With this in mind, it is important for loved ones to be aware of
street terms commonly used for illegal drugs. Some may already be
well known due to saturation in popular culture, while others are
more obscure.
| Hallucinogens affect your brain.
Hallucinogens change the way the brain interprets time, reality,
and the environment around you. They also affect the way you move,
react to situations, think, hear, and see. This may make you think
that you're hearing voices, seeing images, and feeling things that
don't exist. |
People who suspect loved ones of abusing drugs may wish to be
aware of certain words creeping into their vocabulary:
Amphetamines - bennies, pixies,
speed, bottles, brownies, crank, footballs, uppers
- Cocaine - snow, blow, sugar, snort, bunk, candy, coke,
charlie
- Crack - rock, baseball, hail, apple jacks, black rock, bubble
gum, pebbles
- Heroin - horse, smack, junk, score, brown sugar, Mr.
Brownstone, caps, dirt
- Inhalants - huff, kick, rush, ames, moon gas, poppers,
spray
- LSD - acid, purple haze, Lucy, specks, haze, sugar
- Marijuana - pot, weed, grass, ganja, blunt, bud, hooch
- PCP - angel dust, crystal grass, dust, juice, mist
| Heroin is super-addictive.
Heroin is highly addictive because it enters the brain so rapidly.
It particularly affects those regions of the brain responsible for
producing physical dependence. |
No matter how you say it, drug abuse can have a lasting effect
on one's physical and mental health and finances for the worse. If
you suspect a loved one of abusing drugs, now is the time to get
help and put his or her life back on track. Please contact a
physician or counselor and start on the path toward rehabilitation
and healing.
| Inhalants include a large group
of chemicals that are found in such household products as aerosol
sprays, cleaning fluids, glue, paint, paint thinner, gasoline,
propane, nail polish remover, correction fluid, and marker pens.
None of these are safe to inhale--they all can kill
you. |
Stephanie Loebs is the executive director of
Williamsburg Place, one of the top drug rehab
clinics in the nation. Williamsburg Place aids those who suffer
from drug and/or alcohol addiction, and specializes in caring for
health care professionals.
For over twenty years Williamsburg Place and its
joint rehabilitation center, the William J. Farley Center, have
helped thousands of people from all walks of life take back their
lives and overcome substance abuse.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Stephanie_Loebs
| Cocaine affects your brain. The
word "cocaine" refers to the drug in both a powder (cocaine) and
crystal (crack) form. It is made from the coca plant and causes a
short-lived high that is immediately followed by opposite, intense
feelings of depression, edginess, and a craving for more of the
drug. Cocaine may be snorted as a powder, converted to a liquid
form for injection with a needle, or processed into a crystal form
to be smoked. |
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