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Matthew Moses

The Doping of America

Published on 4/6/07 in Culture
Tune in, Turn Off, Drop Out: The Fate of America's Least Responsible Generation

So there are people in the world who need to pop a few. Hmmmm. Life that difficult? For anyone who has been paying attention to American society over the past forty years, especially the 80s, drugs have become a bit too prevalent in our society. And I'm not simply talking about the illegal kind such as LSD, Marijuana, Crack, Ecstacy, Heroin, Meth, etc. I'm talking about mood stabilizers, muscle relaxers, steroids, diet pills, anti-depressants, yada yada. This nation has developed a culture of drug dependence.

Society has become far too accepting of medicating problems. Before you flame me, perhaps due to your drug induced rage, let me continue. If I were to have been born in this decade, with my accute hyperactivity and other mental proclivities, I would have been doped up on Prozac and Ritalin before I hit puberty. You know why I wasn't? Because back in my day, less than three decades in total, children were expected to be wild, troublesome, and loud. They are kids!

Parents piss and moan about their children being out of control. Perhaps that is due to both parents being out of the house most of the time either working or socializing rather than presenting some sort of structured environment for the child. Most children act out because they either want attention or know no other way to deal with their problems. They make emotional problems physical because they don't have the mental tools to deal with such complex issues in their head. And parents, by doping their kids, only help to further this process of making mental as well as other issues physical in origin. Rather than speaking with their children to find the root of their problem or finding a healthy way to burn off that excess energy in a constructive way, whether sports or the arts, parents simply paralyze it. They arrest it. In so doing, the child's growth is stunted.

It is up to the parent to ingrain a set of manners as well as protocol into their offspring; not to find the quickest and easiest solution which is to smother it. Parents simply don't try anymore, but who can blame them. Problems are always someone else's fault. Teachers aren't doing enough to help him/her learn. The police were too rough on him/her. I can't help him/her because I have things to do (such as avoiding my duties because I want a faster car, a bigger house, the newest electronic fad). We are a nation of responsibility avoiders using drugs for quick answers to our problems.

The country is just doping. Depressed? Take an upper. Unable to sleep? Take a downer. Don't even dare think that there may be a root to your somatic problems. Maybe you're depressed because your father molested you. Wouldn't it make more sense to seek out closure rather than to go through life consistently masking and avoiding the issue? Maybe you can't sleep because of the stress of your job. Why not quit? Do you really need the pressure? Is it worth your health? Bah, just take some qualudes to get to sleep or guzzle some bitter orange to get you through the day. In fact, you see that girl over there? Yeah, she's hot. I could try to talk to her. Maybe start a relationship. Respect her before the sex. But I don't know how to talk to her. I'm not comfortable sharing my thoughts with other people. But shouldn't I try? Nah, rather than sleep I'll dump my qualudes in her cup and then take her limp form home. Why work towards the nookie when I can simply take it?

I know there are certain cases where drugs are the answer. Those are medical cases where the solution cannot be attained otherwise. In cases of schizophrenia, bi-polar disorder, and other mental illnesses as well as hormonal imbalances, drugs are the only solution that prevents a negative outcome for the individual (violence towards others or themselves). But doping kids? And worse, using meds for everything from exercise to alertness.

It is the continuation of a society that simply doesn't want to take responsibility; doesn't even remember how to take charge. We have made our problems physical rather than mental. Hell, stress, a psychological strain, can show itself in somatic (physical) ways. It will do so especially if the individual does not deal with it on a conscious level. By avoiding proper child rearing, by smothering problems beneath a medicated haze, these kids are turning into drug dependent adults to cope with their problems. They're not learning how to properly cope nor how to grow. It also spills over into other arenas.

Why work hard? I could eat the right diet and exercise right, but I would never achieve the body I wanted without extreme effort. All that time needed. All that discipline. Why not simply shoot up with some steroids or HGH? The muscles will grow faster, the exercise won't be as hard. Why put in any effort?

Ugh, these pounds won't come off. Sure, I could cut out the junk food, but I love the candy bars. Why not simply sip some ephedra, take some dietary pills. That'll help me burn fat faster. Hell, I can eat more!

I am nervous about public speaking. I get nauseous, am gripped by fear, can't stand those eyes on me. I could practice. I could see a psychiatrist to work through my phobia. Wait, I could take Xanax. Then the fears just melt away.

All these problems. What ever will I do? Eh, why do anything? I'm the way I am and I can't change because it is beyond my capabilities. But wait, I can drug my problem away. I can become faster, stronger, make the ugly world fuzzier and less visible. I can burn off those pounds quicker. I can solve my aches with a pill. I can stay awake longer with a shot. Will, what is that? I shouldn't have to exert myself. Let the meds do all the work.

We are passing the buck as a society. We are losing our discipline, failing in our duties. We are not growing. But hey, maybe you simply don't care. After all, you can't help it.

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5 Comments

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Well written, sir.

I agree that drugs have become the easy way out for a lot of people not willing to deal with their issues. Although there are a few things that must be handled with drugs, they should never be a permanent solution. Written on 5/6/07
Much sense written here.

I think it'll also take the courage to let go of the 'Therapism' culture to some extent too: constantly boosting childrens' self-esteem by telling them they are unique and special when not actually encouraging to do anything that might give them cause to believe it seems to be fostering the pathological narcissism at the root of these problems.

Look at celebrity culture. Celebrity is not fame: one is famous FOR something, be it pioneering a new form of heart surgery or excelling at one's chosen sport. The desire for celebrity is the wish to be paid attention and loved simply for the act of existing: it's an infantile drive, and the artifical overboosting of self-esteem creates the self-perception that one DESERVES the public's love (it's a passive condition, much as the passive lethargy detailed in the article).

When that isn't forthcoming, the angry, resentful, bloated ego looms large - the most convincing diagnosis I've read of Cho Seung Hui was of pathological narcissism. This wasn't someone who turned up with guns to kill people he hated: this was someone who made videos and an artistically laid out pictorial manifesto to ensure his fame (the fundamental inability of youth to comprehend mortality fuelling this personal valhalla) then blew holes in people he'd never met before.

Rather than just telling people the Disneyfied message that they are unique and special, we need to give them the tools to really achieve. If they can see what they've accomplished they'll believe in themselves, no Xanax required. Otherwise simply giving them the idea "I'm special" and then sending them into the wide world will doom them, like those African militia soldiers who believed that rubbing peanut butter on their bodies made them bulletproof: they felt just GREAT about themselves until 7.62mm of copper-jacketed lead introduced them to some harsh realities. Written on 9/6/07
Enjoyed your commentary; then I saw your web address...We did this to ourselves; not god.
Don't be the mouse in the poster "Last great act of defiance". You have a good mind.

We are the last generation spoken of; with all our knowledge, what have we accomplished? Knowledge without the WISDOM to use it correctly is self destructive. Written on 19/6/07
What's with the Qualuude obsession? You just threw that in to seem hip -- you can't find a 'luude this side of a Deep Purple album in the last decade and a half. Please. Written on 29/6/07
i lived in a house with perscription drugs in like 4 or 5 shelves. i say the less chemicals the samn better and now my family is finally starting to listen i am now 20 and still going with theory. but one day i was 17 i tried throwing all the medicine, the ones with like stuck dust on them and stuff, i like cleaning and organizing the house for my mom and dad when they're not all drugged up on the scammy medication, they came home and threw a fit saying I had a problem, later checked me into a hospital i was doped up on meds for "two" years (actually i flushed them). Finally i got to the right people after i tried committing suicide on the stupid medicine i hated so much that got rid of my muscle to a point where i could no longer walk and my head even fell backwards the one time so they had to shoot me up with more stuff. Well the right people said i had a pinch of depression not enough for medicine and i am now no longer in anyone's "care" YOu gosh damn scanm aritists i can't wait till the 80's kids take over your "game" ya pigs. Written on 25/11/07

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