Ecstasy Moves to the Midwest |
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Ecstasy Moves to the MidwestSubstance abuse is without question a national epidemic and the club drug ecstasy is beginning to move into the midwest.
MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine) is a very potent drug that combines amphetamine and a mild hallucinogen. Like many illicit drugs, ecstasy was developed and patented by a pharmaceutical company, but like so many other controlled substances was found to be extremely toxic and hazardous. Drug rehabilitation expert L. Ron Hubbard discovered that toxic substances, such as ecstasy, get lodged in the fatty tissue of a person's body and remain there for years after use ceases. The old drug residues can trigger cravings or a person's desire for more drugs at any time the person's heart rate increases and burns fatty tissue for energy, releasing the drug particles back into the blood stream. Some of the physical effects of ecstasy include increased heart rate, dangerously high body temperature, dehydration and involuntary jaw clenching. The number of emergency room incidents involving ecstasy has skyrocketed over the last couple of years. The most devastating effect of ecstasy is what it does to a person's mind. A person's memory consists of pictures, or recordings, of everything that has happened in the past and included in the memory are sight, sound, smell, taste, touch and also the emotion. Ecstasy, through its psychoactive component, scrambles and alters these pictures and emotions. This makes it very difficult for the user to have any sense of reality. Ecstasy also damages a person's natural ability to feel good, so extreme depression follows the "high" and leaves the person to feel the long-term effects of the drug, which creates a feeling of wanting that high again to replace the depression. The cycle continues, taking more of the same drug to escape the condition brought on by that drug, all the while causing more damage mentally and physically. One former ecstasy user summed up the drug's effects oh him saying, "I felt so much emotional pain and was so depressed that I wanted to end my life and take all of the world's pain with me." Perhaps the most appealing aspect of the drug for youth is the initial feeling of euphoria, but the way it's packaged and ingested makes it seem easier to take. The idea of just taking a pill with a design stamped on it makes it more attractive and appear less harmful. Additionally, popping a pill is more socially acceptable than snorting, smoking or injecting a drug. There are pro-rave groups that promote the "purity" of the drug, trying to push off the casualties and depression as misuse or impure pills, feeding more lies to the millions of users by saying its okay to take ecstasy. When it comes to ecstasy or any other type of drug, the truth behind the advocates is they are the ones that benefit most financially by people becoming addicted. |
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