Meth Addiction

Metamphetamine is an extremely addictive drug. Similar to most drugs, once improperly used, it could result to detrimental effects towards the user’s body. Upon entering the brain, meth triggers the rapid release of dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine which regulate feelings of pleasure. It is very active in mesolimbic reward pathways of the brain which causes intense euphoria.

Meth has a stimulating consequence on sex, mood, and energy. It can cause weight loss and appetite suppression. It also has positive effects on the body, like providing one to be alert and having the ability to concentrate. Like any other drugs, tolerance develops overtime with continuous use of meth. Methamphetamine tires out the brain’s store of dopamine and destroys the wiring of dopamine receptors. The drug’s pleasurable effect is not everlasting. As the user takes in an increasing amount of the drug due to tolerance, negative effects to the body begin to take place. Users usually elicit poor judgment and dangerous behaviors such as committing petty and violent crimes. Maintining pleasant effect of the drug makes the user to likely increase doses which in turn results to the damage of body organs, mental disorders, and even death. Long-time users of this drug have been known to develop symptoms of psychosis, like paranoia, aggression, hallucinations, and delusions. Moreover, physical effects of Methamphetamine addiction are diarrhea, palpitations, and dizziness, jaw clenching and facial ticks. Meth can also lead to heart failure since it increases heart rate. Some costs include bronchial dilation, dilation of the blood vessels to the skeletal muscles, dilation of pupils and the emptying of the bladder and intestine.

Meth addiction is prevalent in the United States. Statistics show that there are about 1.4 million users of methamphetamine in America and the number is increasing. With the number of meth users increasing, the government is quite helpless. Meth is readily available and cheap. Meth’s main object is the youth most especially those problematic ones; ravaged by broken homes, neglect and little parental influence. The National Association of Countries report that users are both high school and college students and white and blue collar-workers as well as people in their 20s and 30s who are unemployed.

What is the driving force that makes people to get addictive to meth Meth is easy to use, cheap, and could work as an energy booster. The immediate but temporary benefits of using meth is the once that greatly attract people to use this drug.

Meth addiction destroys the life of a person. Once addicted to it, the symptoms could lead to undesirable and unhealthy behaviors. Moreover, depriving the body from taking in methamphetamine would lead to depression, aggression, anxiety, fatigue, paranoia, and intense craving for the drug.

Fighting addiction is such a hard and painful thing to do. It is like pulling your hair on your head one by one until everything is gone. Imagine the pain. It is not an overnight process. Most of all, things work if it is a forced thing. Meth addicts should be first of all, be very enthusiastic and determined to fight the addiction and get rid of it for good. The enthusiasm should not come from the people around the meth users. It should only come from the self. One should first accept the problem before doing something about it. There have been a number of meth-specific programs that have been developed. The aim of treatment is to teach the user new skills that will help cope with the user’s drug cravings and prevent relapses. There are different kinds of approaches in treating meth users, either by group or by individual. Treatment allows the patient to see beyond the immediate positive effects of drug use and lead them to see the negative effects that inevitably follow. Moreover, recovered addicts are taught to deal with their lives more successfully, increase their confidence and self-esteem, and set positive personal goals.

One easily gets addicted to something, yet it is so difficult to become “un-addicted” if there is such a word. Addiction is like letting go of a loved one, we know that letting it go is the exact thing to do, but we find it difficult to do it because we know it would hurt so bad. The first step should always start with the self.

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