Current:Home > MarketsHow would you like it if a viral TikTok labeled your loved ones 'zombie-like addicts'? -CapitalCourse
How would you like it if a viral TikTok labeled your loved ones 'zombie-like addicts'?
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:46:49
Mainstream and social media carry an extraordinary amount of influence on the public. And that influence as it relates to the dehumanizing information shared about people who have been directly affected by the opioid and xylazine crises seems to be everywhere.
The most recent article I saw was published Sept. 12 by the New York Post titled, "Shocking video shows zombie-like addicts at ‘ground zero’ of Philadelphia’s ‘tranq’ epidemic." The article links to a TikTok video getting hundreds of thousands of views for filming individuals on the streets, many of whom seem unaware that they are even being filmed. This content is severely harmful to humanity, especially those who are documented in these videos.
Xylazine is a veterinary sedative that has been used to adulterate or “lace” synthetic opioids, such as illicitly manufactured fentanyl, and is being sold by itself and marketed on the street as “tranq.” One of the severe side effects of xylazine is that it causes a heavily sedative effect, leaving folks in an incoherent stupor.
The media commonly refers to these individuals as “zombies.” Seriously, zombies?
Dictionary.com defines a zombie as “an undead creature with a reanimated human body, typically depicted in science fiction or horror stories as contagious to the living by bite and vulnerable only to serious head trauma.”
If that’s not a dehumanizing way to describe a human being suffering an active addiction, then please put me in my place.
Addiction is a brain disease that does not discriminate
As a licensed clinical psychologist who has roots in the Kensington section of Philadelphia, accompanied by a long history of family members who struggle with addiction, this kind of news coverage is helping no one. It’s not helping the person who is in active addiction; it’s not helping their family members, partners or spouses; and it sure isn’t helping to accurately educate the public on the disease of addiction.
Addiction is a chronic-relapsing midbrain disease. We have the scientific evidence supporting addiction as a disease.
Alcoholics rationalize their drinking.For them, every day must be National Sober Day.
The limbic system is an area of our brains that influences our motivations, behaviors and arousal. Drugs like opioids, xylazine, stimulants (i.e., cocaine, crystal meth), nicotine and alcohol overstimulate the limbic system, inciting a level of arousal or a high that causes the individual to have overbearing cravings or urges that lead to compulsive and often uncontrollable use.
The overstimulation of the limbic system shuts down the prefrontal cortex, the area of your brain that lives behind the forehead and is responsible for making sound judgements and good decisions. When an individual becomes addicted, the prefrontal cortex becomes downregulated. Essentially, it malfunctions and leaves the individual with a drastically decreased capacity to make sound decisions.
This has been researched with extensive brain imaging studies.
This midbrain disease often has a behavioral presentation that manifests as someone with no moral compass. Lying, cheating, manipulating, engaging in dangerous behaviors such as prostitution and retail theft, and neglecting themselves and those who depend on them, such as their children.
This is the reality and costs of addiction, and it does not discriminate. People in active addiction do and say things that are so far removed from the people we loved before they became addicted, and it hurts.
It hurts the person in active addiction because they have lost control and have literally lost everything. The party is over – they are no longer using “to party” or have fun, but to simply exist without feeling overbearingly sick with withdrawal.
It also hurts the family and friends who love them. They lose sleep worrying about their loved one in active addiction. They ask themselves what they could have done better to prevent their partner, daughter, son, mom, dad, sister or brother from becoming addicted.
Addiction is also a family disease
Addiction is as much a family disease as it is a brain disease because it affects everyone in its orbit.
I ask the social media “exploiters” and mainstream media reporters to imagine how they would feel if their or their loved ones’ photos and videos were plastered next to a headline that reads, “Shocking video shows zombie-like addicts at ‘ground zero’ of Philadelphia’s ‘tranq’ epidemic"? It hurts, doesn’t it?
Drug decriminalization isn't working:Oregon voters chose a different approach toward drug decriminalization. It was never going to work.
Kensington might be "ground zero" for the xylazine epidemic, but most individuals who are addicted were born and raised in more desirable ZIP codes before addiction led them to Kensington.
Residents born and raised in the neighborhood have also been impacted by the devastation of addiction that surrounds them. But I guess the headline for such a story wouldn’t be exploitative enough to support the narrative that people who are addicted to synthetic opioids or xylazine are “zombie-like addicts.”
Please do better. Drop the clickbait headlines and these horrific descriptions.
Focus on the systemic issues of addiction and the human being who is suffering underneath.
Geri-Lynn Utter, Psy.D., is a Philadelphia-based clinical psychologist, author of the soon-to-be-released "Aftershock: How Past Events Shake Up Your Life Today" and director of the new documentary “Utter Nonsense.”
veryGood! (77)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Virginia lawmakers strike deal to repeal restrictions on military tuition program
- At BET Awards 2024 Usher honored, Will Smith debuts song, election on minds
- Copa America 2024: Knockout stage bracket is set
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- FDA bans ingredient found in some citrus-flavored sodas
- Some data is ‘breached’ during a hacking attack on the Alabama Education Department
- US agency to fight invasive bass threatening humpback chub, other protected fish in Grand Canyon
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- There's a reason 'The Bear' makes you anxious: We asked therapists to analyze Carmy
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Mega Millions winning numbers for July 2 drawing: Jackpot grows to $162 million
- Is the stock market open or closed on July 4th 2024? See full holiday schedule
- Federal judge sentences 4 anti-abortion activists for a 2021 Tennessee clinic blockade
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Cybersecurity breach could delay court proceedings across New Mexico, public defenders office says
- Celebrate July 4th with a hot dog: Best cities for hot dogs, America's favorite hot dog
- GM fined nearly $146 million for excess emissions from 5.9 million vehicles
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Christina Applegate shares bucket list items with 'the days I have left': 'Shots with Cher!'
'American Idol' judge Luke Bryan doesn't know if he or Lionel Richie will return
July 4th food deals: Get discounts at Baskin-Robbins, Buffalo Wild Wings, Target, Jimmy John's, more
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
U.S. military heightens security alert level at European bases in response to threats
Robert Towne, legendary Hollywood screenwriter of Chinatown, dies at 89
Jason Derulo Recalls Near-Death Experience After Breaking His Neck in the Gym