The Free Press Journal

THE HUNGRY HAPPY HIPPY Drugs, and other drugs

With so much buzz about narcotics in the news, it’s time to think about addiction…

- (The columnist is Associate Editor, TravelDine, and a bespoke Mumbai tour specialist. Find her on Instagram and Twitter @priyapathi­yan and @thehungryh­appyhippy on Facebook. She blogs on thehungryh­appyhippy.com)

But when you think about it, the word drug is such a blanket term for so many different things. Hallucinog­ens to happy pills, everything is a drug. Where do you draw the line that this one is a medicine and that one is a harmful, addictive substance?

Say no to drugs’, my mom mouthed the oftrepeate­d government slogan when I was off to junior college. And I patiently waited through all five years at my hip South Bombay college for someone to offer me illegal substances so I could shake my head and say no.

But no one ever did.

A few years later, when I moved from my first job at the

Free Press Journal to another news organisati­on, a colleague warned me of the ‘debauchery’ that awaited me there. Apparently, attending all those parties every night to report on the high-fliers for Page 3 meant being high as a kite. But no. I found myself and all the other Boomtown Rap reporters quite down to earth. Our only indulgence, the machine-waali coffee in our fluorescen­t-lit office.

Later, I regularly interviewe­d the Who’s Who of entertainm­ent, business and sports for the Sunday glossies. Meeting them in their workplaces as well as their homes was a normal and regular occurrence. But apart from being offered carrot sticks by John Abraham, assorted chocolates from Bipasha Basu, sweet corn chicken soup by Javed Akhtar, and a delish dinner and drinks at Aamir Khan’s, the only addictive substances I saw doing the rounds everywhere were tea and coffee!

Now, with so much talk about substance abuse, I wonder how it all passed me by! Even my hair stylist proudly gave me a list of all the diverse drugs he has ‘done’. And me, who hasn't even tried smoking weed unlike everyone and their grandma, felt major FOMO. Hopefully, someone will offer me something illegal someday just so I can say no to it and make my mom proud!

But when you think about it, the word drug is such a blanket term for so many different things. Hallucinog­ens to happy pills, everything is a drug. Where do you draw the line that this one is a medicine and that one is a harmful, addictive substance? In fact, in August this year, the world of science was abuzz with the results of a small study that had proven that the psychedeli­c drug psilocybin — found in ‘magic mushrooms’ — performed just as well as a widely used antidepres­sant in easing the symptoms of major depression. An award-winning Netflix documentar­y called Fantastic Fungi goes into great detail on similar lines, talking about the curative properties of psilocybin and experts positing that human evolution was triggered by the consumptio­n of magic mushrooms.

“In about two million years, the human cortex tripled in size and the brain exploded over a ridiculous­ly short span of evolutiona­ry time,” says ethnopharm­acologist Dennis McKenna, in the film, propagatin­g the ‘Stoned Ape’ model of human evolution. McKenna

believes that the mind-expanding effects of the mushrooms gave us language and the ability to innovate with tools. That’s why perhaps it’s time to re-evaluate what we mean when we’re talking about drugs.

Of course, an Udta Punjab situation is terrible, and I’m not taking away from the amazing efforts by all the organisati­ons working so hard to help people get away from the habit.

But addictions really do come in many forms and what substance we abuse is rather subjective. An American psychiatri­st, who once did a city tour with me, asked me whether Indians go to mental health profession­als for actual therapy or are they just after prescripti­ons? That question itself gave me a lot of insight into a world where those who need support for mental issues are also getting hooked onto drugs that give them a high and cause major side-effects when cut off. Sounds familiar?

Another drug that comes disguised all around us is — wait for it — sugar! Yes, this one is said to be the most dangerous of all, even more than other addictions like smokes or alcohol, and it sits innocently on the kitchen shelf. But it also infiltrate­s so many packaged foods and drinks, and is present in so many things, even in toothpaste, my dentist once told me!

And anyone who has had that insatiable dessert craving knows the powerful pull of this insidious substance that we overdose on as kids and try to reduce our intake of only later in life, when the effects of all those sugar rushes start to take their toll. A few manage to go cold turkey, while most others delude themselves that sugar substitute­s are better than those shiny, white crystals.

And then there’s love. One that releases happy hormones such as oxytocin into one’s system, gives you a high like no other, keeps you coming back for more, and causes major withdrawal symptoms if taken away. Luckily, in most cases it’s socially sanctioned, and when you get married, they say you’re ‘hooked and booked’. And in this case, unlike in others, the words have a completely positive connotatio­n.

 ?? ?? Sugar addiction often goes unnoticed
Sugar addiction often goes unnoticed
 ?? ?? A still from Udta Punjab
A still from Udta Punjab
 ?? ?? PRIYA PATHIYAN
PRIYA PATHIYAN

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