Know What Your Kids Are Talking
About with this Guide to Today's Drug Terms
Is your teen robotripping on CCC?
How would you know if you don't even know what that means?
"It's very important that parents brush up on slang, because just like
with text messaging, kids use all these abbreviations and parents don’t
know what they mean. But the more they understand what these things
mean, the more they will be able to monitor kids’ behavior," says
Gregory Pollock, a psychotherapist specializing in addiction at the
Cleveland Clinic Foundation in
Ohio.
That's why WebMD went directly to the experts on the front lines of teen
drug abuse to get a better handle on the today's teenage drug slang.
Here's what you need to know about teens and drugs today:
Cold
Medicine Abuse
Dextromethorphan (DXM):
This is a drug contained in
over-the-counter cough suppressants. After 900 milligrams, it
becomes a hallucinogen. Synonyms for DXM include Candy, Dex, DM, Drex,
Red Devils, Robo, Rojo, Skittles, Tussin, Velvet, Poor Man's X, and
Vitamin D. "Tussin is a very popular name that has been catching on
lately," says Pollock. "Cold medicine abuse is a very serious problem,
from what I have seen, because it is so available."
Syrup
heads: Users of DXM
Dexing:
Abusing cough syrup. Synonyms include robotripping
or robodosing because users tend to chug Robitussin or another
cough syrup to get high.
Triple C:
This stands for Coricidin HBP Cough and Cold. "The triple C or CCC is
something that we are seeing a lot of, and that is specific to Coricidin,
but anything with DXM is abused today," adds Kevin M. Gray, MD, an
assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Medical
University of South Carolina in
Charleston.
More
Teen Drug Use Terms
Special K:
A medication used as an anesthetic in humans and
animals, ketamine is sometimes abused as a "club drug." It can cause
hallucinations and euphoria in higher doses. Synonyms include vitamin K,
breakfast cereal, cat valium, horse tranquilizer, K, Ket, new ecstasy,
psychedelic heroin, and super acid.
Crank:
The stimulant methamphetamine. Synonyms include meth, speed, chalk,
white cross, fire, and glass. "Crystal
methamphetamine is called ice," says Cleveland Clinic's Pollock. "Crystal
meth is smoked, but meth can be injected, snorted, or taken as a pill,"
he explains.
Antifreeze:
Heroin. Synonyms include Big H, brown sugar, dope, golden girls, H,
horse, junk, poison, skag, smack, sweet dreams, tar, and train,
according to the web site of Phoenix House, a national alcohol and drug
abuse treatment and prevention facility.
Crunk:
This is a verb that means to get high and drunk at the same time.
Snow:
Cocaine. Synonyms include Charlie, crack, coke, dust, flake, freebase,
lady, nose candy, powder, rock, rails, snowbirds, toot, white, and
yahoo, according to Phoenix House. "After all this time, alcohol and pot
are still the most used drugs by teens, but cocaine is really a strong
third, especially with females, because of the weight issue," says
Janice Styer, MSW, a clinical
coordinator-addictions counselor at Caron Treatment Center in
Wernersville, Pa. "The drug of choice among women with eating disorders
is almost invariably cocaine." A stimulant, cocaine can decrease
appetite.
X:
Ecstasy or 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). Synonyms include
Adam, E, bean, clarity, essence, lovers speed, MDMA, roll, stacy, XTC,
according to the Phoenix House.
Georgia
Home
Boy: This refers to Gamma
Hydroxybutyrate (GHB), a central nervous system depressant can produce
euphoric, sedative, and body-building effects. Other synonyms include
Gamma-OH, Grievous Bodily Harm, Liquid Ecstasy, Liquid E, Liquid X,
Organic Quaalude, and Scoop, according to Phoenix House.
Roofies:
This refers to rohypnol, a.k.a. the date rape drug. Synonyms include the
forget pill, La Rocha, Mexican valium, R-2, rib, roachies, roofenol,
rophies, roche (pronounced roe-shay), and rope.
Kibbles and bits:
The attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug called Ritalin.
It is sometimes also referred to as pineapple, says Pollock.
Teens
and Drugs on the Web
Cheese:
This is a hazardous mix of black tar heroin
and Tylenol PM or other medicines containing diphenhydramine). It looks
like grated parmesan cheese -- thus the name. There were more than 20
teen deaths in
Dallas and surrounding
neighborhoods that have been attributed to Cheese since it
was identified in 2005.
Candy flipping:
This term refers to a high that’s achieved by combining LSD (lysergic
acid diethylamide) or acid with ecstasy. "The new thing, especially with
kids on the Internet, is which drugs are best and safest to combine,"
explains Styer.
A new study by the Caron Treatment Centers found that one in
10 messages on the Internet involved teens seeking advice from their
peers on how to take illicit drugs. The messages were posted on common
online message boards, forums, and social network sites such as
MySpace.com.
When it comes to teens and drugs, "You will never know everything, but
you don’t want your kids to think you are an idiot," Styer says. "You
need to keep communication open and talk to your kids about the dangers
of the Internet."
For additional links and
information, visit
www.couragetospeak.org.
Courtesy of 