Neverender
November 4th, 2008, 01:26 AM
Welcome to the Drug Guide of VT!
Here you can learn about the dangers of drugs before you risk taking them. After you read this, you will no longer be able to say after it turns out that you ended up in hospital: I just didn't know.
We do not advise you taking drugs, but if you do, please know the health factors involved before doing them.
Class A: Ecstasy, LSD, heroin, cocaine, crack, magic mushrooms, amphetamines (if prepared for injection).
Possession: Up to seven years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
Dealing: Up to life in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
_______________
Class B: Amphetamines, Methylphenidate (Ritalin), Pholcodine.
Possession: Up to five years in prison or an unlimited fine or both
Dealing: Up to 14 years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
_______________
Class C: Cannabis, tranquilizers, some painkillers, Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB), Ketamine.
Possession: Up to two years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
Dealing: Up to 14 years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
1. Alcohol
2. Tobacco
3. LSD
4. Steroids
5. Marijuana
6. Ketamine
7. Inhalants
8. Cocaine
9. Heroin
10. Magic Mushrooms
11. Esctasy
12. Tranquilizers/Barbituates
13. Amphetamines
14. Methamphetamines
15. Salvia
______________________________________________________________
1. Alcohol
What is it?
Alcohol is a depressant drug that reduces social inhibitions and relaxes. Alcohol is produced by the fermentation of fruits, vegetables or grains. Alcoholic drinks consist mainly of water and ethanol or ethyl alcohol in varying strengths.
Class: no class
Street Names
Beer, wine, booze, liquor, and many more including brand names.
How Is it Taken?
By drinking.
What does it do?
Alcohol is absorbed very rapidly into the blood stream from the stomach lining, in as short a time as 5 to 10 minutes and it's effects last for several hours depending on the amount and how quickly it was consumed.
Women absorb alcohol faster than men because their bodies contain less water. The water dilutes the alcohol and so the same amount of alcohol will produce a higher concentration in the blood.
Alcohol intake is measured in units. One unit is 8 grams of pure alcohol, which is equal to half a pint of normal strength beer, a standard glass of wine or a shot of measure of spirits. After 4 to 5 units most people feel less inhibited and more relaxed. After 8 or so units, most people slur their speech and become less coordinated and clumsy. Some people have increased emotional reactions. More alcohol could result in staggering, double vision, loss of balance, nausea, vomiting and an impression of the room spinning.
After a period of heavy alcohol consumption a mixture of factors, mainly withdrawal and dehydration (alcohol dehydrates the body) may cause a hang-over. This is usually characterized by nausea, a headache and sometimes vomiting. However, this may be avoided if the water is drunk (usually at least a pint, if not more if you are a heavy drinker) after a drinking session.
Mixing alcohol with other depressant drugs increases its effects and is extremely dangerous.
2. Tobacco
What is it?
Tobacco is the dried leaves of a plant that grows in may parts of the world. Tobacco contains a variety of chemicals, including nicotine which is an addictive drug with a mild stimulant effect.
Class: no class
Street Names
None really
How is it Taken?
Smoked, sniffed, chewed, and dipped.
What does it Do?
Tobacco smoke consists of droplets of tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide and other gases. Nicotine is the substance that causes dependency. The amount of nicotine and other substances that is absorbed through the lungs depends on how much and how deeply the smoke is inhaled. Because nicotine is a stimulant some smokers feel tobacco helps relieve boredom, tiredness, and reduce stress and anxiety. The effects are almost immediate but fade quickly, which encourages continual use.
Some people may experience nausea and dizziness when they inhale tobacco smoke for the first few times.
The more a person smokes, the more likely they are to suffer from heart disease, blood clots, cancer, strokes, bronchitis, bad circulation and ulcers.
Users can develop strong psychological as well as physical dependence. Withdrawal symptoms include irritability, depression and craving for tobacco. Tobacco use is a leading cause of death in North America.
3. LSD
What is it?
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) is a synthetic substance discovered in 1938. It is manufacturered from lysergic acid.
Class: A
Street Names
LSD, Acid, Tabs, Hits
How is it Taken?
Taken orally, licked off of blotter paper. The minute amounts sufficient for a 'trip' are usually absorbed onto a small paper square, but are also less commonly available in gelatine sheets, sugar cubes or formed into tablets or capsules. The strength of all these preparations is uncertain and so the effects can be unpredictable
What does It Do?
Experiences are hard to describe, because they vary, but also because they can differ from the normal way of perceiving things. Effects depend very much on the user's mood, where they are, who they are with as well as the dose taken. They often include intensified colours and distortion of vision and hearing, although true hallucinations, believing something is there when it's not, are rare, although they become more common on higher doses. Emotional reactions may include heightened self-awareness and mystical or ecstatic experiences. A feeling of being outside one's body is commonly reported. Physical effects are generally insignificant.
Unpleasant reactions ('bad trips') may include depression, dizziness, disorientation, fear, paranoia and panic. Whether these effects are due to the user being unstable, anxious, depressed or in hostile or unsuitable surroundings is unknown. A bad trip is not predictable and may happen at any time.
Deaths due to suicide, although much publicised, are very rare. Deaths due to overdose are also very rare.
4. Steroids
What is it?
Anabolic/androgenic steroids are synthetic substances related to the male hormone testosterone. These substances have two effects, the androgenic (masculinizing) and the anabolic (tissue building). Most people who use steroids want the tissue building effect and so use steroids with higher anabolic than androgenic properties.
Class: unsure
Street Names
None
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally or injected.
What does It Do?
How steroids work in the body is complex and not fully understood. It is thought that the drug finds particular body cells such as skeletal muscle cells, hairs follicles, sebaceous glands and certain areas of the brain. Steroids appear to increase protein production and so increases the size and strength of the muscle. This process can reverse if the muscle is not stimulated, hence training is an important factor Bodybuilders use steroids in cycles from 4 to 12 weeks in length, with rest periods in between.
There are a number of health problems associated with steroid use including increased irritability, aggressiveness, acne, accelerated hair loss, bloated appearance, changes in sex drive, impotence, and decline in sperm production in men. Steroids cause masculinizing in women and can lead to growth of facial and body hair, baldness, voice deepening, enlargement of the clitoris and disruption of the menstrual cycle.
Except for hair loss, the above effects are generally reversible upon stopping steroid use. Adolescent steroid use may lead to a premature fusion of the epiphyses, the end of growing bones, leading to stunted growth.
5. Marijuana
What is it?
Marijuana is the most popular illegal drug in America. Marijuana comes from the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). Marijuanas is made from the leaves, flowers (buds), and seeds. After harvesting they are dried, shredded, and mixed together.
Class: C
Street Names
Marijuana, weed, pot, reefer, grass, dope, ganja, Mary Jane, sinsemilla, hash, herb, Aunt Mary, skunk, boom, kif, gangster, chronic, blunt.
How is it Taken?
Usually smoked and sometimes eaten in cookies, brownies or brewed in like tea.
What does It Do?
Marijuana is a mind-altering (psychoactive) drug that gives users a sense of feeling good or high. While under its influence, users may feel more hungry, temporarily lose their normal inhibitions, and become more easily sexually excited.
Marijuana is not addictive but it can be habit forming.
6. Ketamine
What is it?
Ketamine is 2-(2-Chlorophenyl)-2-(methylamino)- cyclohexanone, ketamine (commercially sold as Ketalar) is a powerful anaesthetic used for animals, although it is used in some human medical applications. It was first developed by the University of Michigan in 1965.
Class: C
Street Names
Ketamine 'K', Special K, Vitamin K
How Is it Taken?
It is either snorted or swallowed as a powder and either swallowed or injected as a liquid. If injected it is usually injected into the muscles rather than a vein.
What does It Do?
Ketamine causes hallucinations and as an anaesthetic stops the user feeling pain. Users may feel as if they have entered another reality or left their body.
Like most anesthetics, eating or drinking before taking ketamine may induce vomiting. Temporary paralysis has been reported in some users but is rare.
If regularly used, the user will develop a tolerance to ketamine. It is not known whether ketamine use can lead to psychological or physical dependence, although both may be likely in some individuals.
An overdose can also cause the heart to stop.
7. Inhalants
What is it?
Inhalants are carbon-based substances which produce effects similar to alcohol or anesthetics when inhaled. Some users strengthen the effect by sniffing from inside a bag placed over the head, which is extremely dangerous. Inhalants seems to be prevalent mainly among age 12 to 16 year olds.
Class: No Class
Street Names
None
How Is it Taken?
Usually by sniffing in a bag or right out of the can
What does It Do?
Inhalant vapors are absorbed through the lungs and rapidly reach the brain. Breathing and heart rate are reduced. Repeated use by deep inhalation can result in an overdose which can cause disorientation, loss of control and finally unconsciousness, although inhalant users usually recover quickly from these effects. At small doses inhalants produce a drunken like stupor. At larger doses inhalants may cause hallucinations. The effects of the inhalant vapors occur quickly and disappear within a few minutes to any hour after sniffing is stopped.
Some inhalants products (particularly aerosol gases and cleaning fluids) can cause heart failure, especially during physically exertion while intoxicated. However, deaths are rare and most can be avoided even if inhalant misuse itself cannot be prevented.
With continuous use, tolerance to the effects of inhalants develops, but physical or psychological dependence is rare.
8. Cocaine
What is it?
Cocaine is a white powder obtained from the leaves of the coca plant and has powerful stimulant properties similar to those of amphetamines.
Class: A
Street Names
Cocaine and Crack Coke, Charlie, Snow, Rock
How is it Taken?
Soluble cocaine is sometimes injected, possibly mixed with heroin (this mixture is sometimes called 'Speedball') but the usual method is for a small amount (usually called a 'line') to be sniffed or 'snorted' up the nose through a small tube and is absorbed into the blood via the nasal membrane. However, more recently a smokeable form of freebase cocaine called crack is become increasingly more common. Crack is purer and more concentrated than soluble cocaine and is absorbed into the body faster than if it is snorted.
What Does it do?
As with amphetamines, cocaine produces feelings of well-being, mental exhilaration, reduced appetite and great physical strength and mental capacity. However, the intended feelings can often be replaced by feelings of anxiety or panic.
When snorted the effects of cocaine peak in about 15-30 minutes and then fade, which often encourages users to repeat the dose in order to maintain the effect. Large doses or lots of quickly repeated doses over a period of hours or days can lead to extreme states of agitation, anxiety, paranoia and possibly hallucinations which generally fade when the drug leaves the body. After effects can include tiredness and depression.
Excessive doses can in rare cases cause death from heart failure. Effects of long-term use Users do not necessarily develop tolerance, but are often tempted to increase doses for a more intense effect. Discontinuation of the drug produces tiredness, sleepiness and depression, which can encourage users to take more to alleviate these side effects
Cocaine is thought to produce a physical dependency in some people, although this is still being debated and researched. Crack does produce a strong physical dependency.
With regular heavy use increasingly unpleasant symptoms occur. Euphoria is replaced by an uncomfortable state of restlessness, over excitability and feelings of nausea. With continued use this can lead to paranoid psychosis. Regular users may appear chronically nervous, excitable and paranoid. Confusion with exhaustion, due to lack of sleep is common. These effects may all disappear once use is stopped, however a paranoid mental state may be irreversible and permanent.
Repeated snorting of cocaine may also damage the nasal membranes and the structure separating the nostrils. Smoking crack can produce severe respiratory problems.
9. Heroin
What is it?
Heroin and other opiate derivatives are made from the dried 'milk' of the opium poppy plant which contains morphine and codeine.
Class: A
Heroin in its pure form is a white powder which is easily soluble in water, however, street quality is often brown. There are a number of synthetic opiates which are used as painkillers including pethidine, dipipanone and also methadone which is often prescribed for heroin and opiate addiction. Opiates and synthetic opiates are called opioids.
Street Names
Smack, Junk, Skag, 'H', Brown, Horse, Harry, Boy
How is it Taken?
Usually heroin is dissolved in water and injected. Heroin and other opioid powders can be swallowed, sniffed, or the fumes from the heated powder is inhaled (this method is sometimes called 'chasing the dragon').
What does It Do?
Heroin and other opioids cause people to feel drowsy, warm, content, and feeling of euphoria. They also relieve stress and discomfort by creating a relaxed detachment from pain, desires and activity. They depress the activity of the nervous system, including such reflexes as coughing, breathing and heart rate. They also cause widening of the blood vessels, which gives a feeling of warmth and reduces bowel activity, which causes constipation. Even with doses sufficiently high to produce euphoria, there is little interference with muscle coordination, sensation or intellect.
The chance of an overdose is greatly increased if other depressant drugs such as alcohol and barbiturates are being used at the same time.
Even short term use of heroin can cause physical damage to the body, although not necessarily from the drug itself. Injections with dirty needles can result in diseases such as Hepatitis, AIDS and Tetanus, especially when sharing needles. There is also a risk of using impure drugs which have been mixed with unknown substances. Repeated sniffing of heroin damages the nose.
10. Magic Mushrooms
What is it?
Several species of mushrooms can produce hallucinations, about a dozen of which grow wild. The most common is the Liberty Cap (or Psilocibe Semilanceata) which contain the hallucinogenic chemicals psilocybin and psilocin. They can be eaten fresh or cooked and can be preserved by drying. Distinguishing hallucinogenic mushrooms from poisonous and sometimes deadly ones can be very difficult and sometimes almost impossible.
Class: A
Street Names
Magic Mushrooms 'Shrooms, Magic Shrooms, Wumpa Fruit
How Is it Taken?
A small piece of the dried mushroom is eaten.
What does It Do?
Mushroom users have experiences similar to a mild LSD trip but may also have feelings of euphoria and bodily excitement. At low doses euphoria and detachment occur. At high doses visual distortions and vivid hallucinations occur.
Possible reactions to hallucinogenic mushrooms include vomiting, nausea and stomach pains. As with other hallucinogenic drugs 'bad trips' can also occur and may develop into a brief psychotic episode, similar to that of LSD.
The greatest danger is mistaking poisonous mushrooms for "magic mushrooms".
There are no significant withdrawal effects and no physical dependence although there may be a desire to repeat the experience.
11. Ecstasy
What is it?
Pharmaceutically ecstasy is known as 3,4 methylene- dioxymethamphetamine, usually referred to as MDMA. It is one of a huge family of related drugs from the MDA family which fall between hallucinogens (like LSD) and the amphetamine family. It was first synthesized in 1912 by a German pharmaceutical company. Ecstasy is very popular at raves.
Class: A
Street Names
Ecstasy 'E', MDMA, MDA, MDEA, Pills, Love Doves, Adam, X-TC
It usually comes in small tablets that may have a picture printed on them such as a dove, a hammer and sickle, or a diamond and the drug is often referred to by its appearance (such as 'Doves').
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally.
What Does it do?
Most users feel an initial rush with feelings of nervousness, tingling and an uncertain feeling in the stomach (butterflies) followed by a warm euphoric glow lasting 4 - 6 hours, when the user feels calm and happy. It is a common belief that ecstasy will always provide a positive experience although there is a chance (although less than with a drug such as LSD) that a bad-trip will occur. Dry mouth, dilated pupils and various tingling sensations are common.
Taking ecstasy will exaggerate moods and feelings, therefore taking an 'E' when your mind is distracted by worry, or relationship hassles can be risky.
Initial effects are often 'butterflies in the stomach', a
Most of these deaths attributed to Ecstasy have been at clubs or raves where dehydration and over heating has been a major factor.
12. Tranquilizers and Barbituates
What is it?
Tranquilizers and barbiturates have two major effects they are sedative and hypnotic (sleepy). Many drugs have both effects, often having a sedative effect at low doses and a hypnotic effect at high doses.
Class: C
Street Names
Tranquilizers and Barbiturates Tranx, Jellies, Temazepam, Valium, Temazies, Barbs, Sekkies, Tuinal, Seconal and Nembutal
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally, but it is sometimes injected for medical purposes
What does It Do?
Tranquilizers
Tranquilizers are used to help control anxiety and tension and sleep aid. Benzodiazepines are the most commonly prescribed of these drugs, which include Valium, Librium and Ativan.
A fatal overdose of pure Benzodiazepines is almost unheard of, but death has been reported when combined with other drugs, especially alcohol.
Psychological dependence is common in long-term users and without the drug they may be confused, irritable, anxious, and unable to carry on routine activities. Barbiturates are sleeping pills and include Tuinal, Seconal and Nembutal. These are the most misused because of their intoxicating effect.
Barbiturates
Like alcohol, barbiturates depress the central nervous system and have similar effects lasting from 3 to 8 hours depending on the dose. Small doses usually gives the user a feeling of being relaxed similar to the effects of alcohol.
Large does can cause extreme and unpredictable emotional reactions, mental confusion, unconsciousness, respiratory failure, and death. They are extremely dangerous when taken with alcohol
Users can develop strong psychological as well as physical dependence. Withdrawal effects can include irritability, nervousness, inability to sleep, faintness and nausea, twitching, delerium, and convulsions. Sudden withdrawal from high doses of barbiturates can be fatal.
13. Amphetamines
What is it?
Amphetamines are stimulants which speed up the way your body works. They make your heart work faster and they pump adrenaline into the system. The most common type of amphetamine on the street is a white powder called amphetamine sulphate. This is an illegally manufactured powder of varying strength, usually of between 6% and 10% purity. Another form of speed known as 'base' is far stronger and is between 25% and 35% pure.
Class: B
Street Names
Sulf, Whiz, Speed, Pep Pills, Copilots, Footballs, Uppers, Billy, Phets, Crystal, Glass, Ice Cream, Ice, Meth, Bipetamine, Dexies, Beans, Black Beauties, White Beanies, Crosses, Hearts
Crank, Meth, and Crystal are street names for Methamphetamines.
Dexies and Beans are street names for Dextroamphetamines.
How Is it Taken?
Usually taken orally, snorted, sniffed, smoked or injected.
What Does it do?
Amphetamines give users extra energy for 4-6 hours, prevents sleep, reduces appetite, speeds up breathing and heart rate and widens the pupils. The user feels more energetic, cheerful and confident, and because of these effects there is a high risk of psychological dependence.
Regular users who take high doses may develop delusions, hallucinations and feelings of paranoia. This can develop into paranoid psychosis from which it may take many months to recover or which may be permanent.
Many women who use amphetamines find that their periods become irregular or even stop.
14. Methamphetamines
What is it?
Methamphetamine is a very addictive stimulant drug that affects the central nervous system. It is a Schedule II stimulant, which means it has a high potential for abuse and is available only through a prescription that cannot be refilled. However, its medical uses are limited and the doses prescribed are much lower than those typically abused.
Class: A+!!!!! (VERY BAD!!)
Street Names
Meth has the longest list of names of any drug in the history of the world.
They are as following.
20/20 ("Clear Vision" Hawaii)
222 (Chiacgo)
Agua
Albino Poo
Alffy
All Tweakend Long
Anny
Anything Going On
the attenborough (London; 11/29/07)
Bache Knock
Bache Rock
Bag Chasers
Baggers
Barney Dope
Batak (Philippine Street Name)
Bato
Bato-(Philippine Steet Name)
Batu Kilat (Malaysia, it means shining rocks)
Batu or Batunas (Hawaii)
Batuwhore
Beegokes
Bianca
Bikerdope
Billy, Or Whizz, (Britain - after a cartoon character in a kids comic called Billy Whizz who seemed to be always on the stuff!)
Bitch
Biznack
Blanco
Blizzard
Blue Acid
Blue Funk, (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Bomb
Booger
Boorit-Cebuano (Filipino Street Name)
Boo-Yah! (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Bottles (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Brian Ed
Buff Stick
Bugger Sugar
Buggs
Bumps
Buzzard Dust
Caca
Candy
Cankinstien
CC
Chach
ChaChaCha
Chalk
Chalk Dust
Chank
Cheebah
Cheese
Chicken Flippin
Chikin or Chicken
Chingadera
Chittle
Chizel
Chiznad
Choad
Chunkylove (Missouri)
Clavo
Clean out the chimney (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Coco
Coffee
Cookies
CR (California Central Valley)
Crack Whore
Crank Is "Walk" & Coke Is "Talk."
Crankster Gansters
Cri,Cri (Mexican Border in Southwest Arizona)
Criddle
Cringe
Critty
Crizzy
Crothch Dope
Crow
Crunk
Crypto
Crystal Meth
Crystalight
Cube
Debbie, Tina, And Crissy
Devil Dust
Devils Dandruff
Devils Drug
Dingles
Dirt
Dirty
Dizzy D
Dizzle (Missouri)
Dizzo (Missouri)
D-Monic Or D
Do Da
Doody
Doo-My-Lau(H.B.)
Dope
Drano
Dummy Dust
Dyno
Epimethrine
Epod
Eraser Dust
Ethyl-M
Evil Yellow
Fatch (Mexican Border In The Southwest Arizona Area)
Fedrin
Fil-Layed
Fizz Wizz
G (short for Glass or Go-fast)
Gab
Gackle-a Fackle-a
Gak
Gas
Gear Or Get Geared Up
Gemini
Gina or "I want to talk to Gina tonight" (Calif; 11/18/07)
Glass
Go
Go Fast
Go-ey
Go-Go
Gonzales (Like the cartoon "Speedy")
Got Anything
Grit
Haiwaiian Salt
Hank
High Speed Chicken Feed
High Riders (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Highthen
Hillbilly Crack
Hippy Crack
Holy Smoke (Hong Kong)
Homework (This is because homework is generally done on paper which had lines)
Hoo
Horse Mumpy (Tampa, Florida)
Hydro
Hypes
Ibski
Ice
Ice Cream
Icee
Ish
Izice
Jab
Jasmine
Jenny Crank Program, (jenny crank diet) (Seattle, WA 11/4/07)
Jetfuel
Jib
Jib Nugget
Jibb Tech Warrier
Jinga
Juddha
Juice
Junk (San Diego)
Kibble
Killer
KooLAID
Kryptonite
Lamer
Laundry Detergent
Lemon Drop
Life
Lily
Linda
Lost Weekend (Bay Area SF)
Love
Low
Lucille
M Man
Magic
Meth
Meth Monsters
Methaine
Methandfriend
Methandfriendsofmine
Methanfelony
Methatrim
Methmood
Method
Moon Juice (Missouri)
Motivation in a bag (cleve or Columbus, Ohio; (11/19/07)
Nazi Dope
Ned
Newday
Night Train (11/7/07)
No Doze
Nose Candy
On A Good One
(New Zealand)'place where meth is made is a "P lab"
Patsie
Peaking
Peanut Butter
Peel Dope
Phazers
Phets
Philopon (East Asia)
Pieta
Pink
Poison
Poop
Poop'd Out
Poor Man's Coccaine (Philippines)
Pootananny
Powder
Powder Monkeys
Powder Point
Project Propellant
Puddle
Pump (Bay Area SF)
Quarter Tee Bag
Q'd
Quick (Canada)
Quill
Rachet Jaw
Rails
Rails
Rank
Redneck Heroin (Atlanta)
Richie Rich
Rip
Rock
Rock
Rocket Fuel
Rocky Mountain High
Rosebud
Rudy's
Rumdumb
Running Pizo
Sack
Sam's Sniff
Sarahs
Satan Dust
Scante (Hispanic Population in Southern California)
Scap
Schlep Rock
Scooby Snax
Scud
Scwadge
Shab
Sha-Bang
Shabs (San Francisco)
Shabu
Shamers
Shards
Shit
Shia (Missouri)
Shiznack, Shiznac, Sciznac or Shiznastica
Shiznittlebang
Shiznit
Shiznitty
Shizzo
Shnizzie Snort
Shwack
Skeech
Sketch
Ski
Skitz
Sky Rocks
Sliggers
smack
Smiley Smile
Smurf Dope
Smzl
Snaps
Sniff
Snow, Motivation (Colorado Springs, CO)
Space Food
Spaceman
Spagack
Sparacked
Sparked
Sparkle
Speed Racer
Spin, Spin, Spin
Spinack
Spindarella
Spinney Boo
Spinning
Spishak
Spook
Sprack
Sprizzlefracked
Sprung (Mississippi)
Spun Ducky Woo
Squawk
Stallar
Sto-Pid
Styels
Sugar
Suger
Sweetness
Swerve
Syabu (pronounced "shabu" - SE Asia)
Ta'doww (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Talkie
Tasmanian Devil
Tenner
The New Prozac
The White House
Tical
TIK (1/27/08 - South Africa)
T. D. - for - Tink Dust (as in: ''Tinkerbell", from Disney)
Talkie
Tina Or Teena
Tish - Shit Backwards (C.V. Calif. area)
Tobats
Toots
Torqued
Trippin Trip
Truck Stop Special
Tubbytoast
Tutu (Hawaii)
Twack
Twacked Out
Tweak
Tweedle Doo
Tweek (A Methamphetamine-Like Substance)
Tweezwasabi
Twiz
Twizacked
Ugly Dust
Vanilla Pheromones
Wake
Way
We We We
Whacked
White Bitch
White Ink
White Junk
White Lady
White Pony (Ridin' the White Pony)
White
Who-Ha
Work: I think that came about from it being my dealers "work" (1/22/08 Arlington, TX)
Wigg
Xaing
Yaaba (Thailand)
YAMA (Pattaya, Phuket, Ko Samui And Bangkok)
Yammer Bammer
Yank
Yankee
Yay
Yead Out
Yellow Barn
Zingin
Zip
Zoiks
Zoom
How is it taken?
Methamphetamine can be swallowed, smoked, snorted, or injected.
What does it do?
When the crystal form of methamphetamine is smoked or injected, it produces an immediate rush, followed by hours of euphoria. When any form of methamphetamine is snorted, swallowed, or inserted, it may take up to 20 minutes to take effect. Most often the feelings of pleasure and well-being that follow last for 4 to 12 hours, but some people stay high for much longer. This is because methamphetamine binds strongly with the pleasure receptors in the brain.
A low dose of methamphetamine may produce the following effects: an increase in energy, increased feelings of self confidence, heightened libido, ‘wakefulness’ and alertness, reduced appetite, and improved physical and mental performance.
The effects often diminish and change with high dose and frequent use. Effects may include: teeth grinding/clenching, agitation, restlessness, insomnia, decrease in libido, and a decrease in mental clarity and concentration. Other negative effects include mild to severe tremors and athetosis (writhing, jerky, or flailing movements), hostility and paranoia.
People who use methamphetamine repeatedly often develop tolerance to the drug. That is, they require larger and larger amounts of the drug in order to feel its effects. Tolerance develops because the brain tries to rebalance itself by limiting the impact of the drug. Tolerance to any drug may lead to dependence, which is the need to continue using a substance in order to function normally. Users of methamphetamine often state that the initial experience of intense euphoria is rarely experienced again, resulting in repeated use to chase the original high.
Long-term use of methamphetamine can lead to a lifestyle that is very destructive to one’s body. The failure to provide the body with adequate food, water, and sleep, combined with the drug’s impact on mental processes, can lead to significant brain and organ damage.
15. Salvia
What is it?
Salvia divinorum is a plant from the mint family and a species of sage that is used for its psychoactive effects.
Class: Unclassified
Street names
Diviner’s Sage, Sally-D
How is it taken?
Orally or Smoked
What does it do?
Salvia can produce a wide range of effects, but the duration is very limited. Really, you won't be in a super-weird state for more than 15 minutes at the longest, and it's much, much more likely that you're only going to be in it for about 5 minutes. Most likely, you won't do anything bad. Uncontrollable laughter is common. You might have some immediate difficulty in walking or talking properly, but that will pass quickly.
Some of this was taken from http://www.puberty101.com/
and some of this was taken from wikipedia
and a bit of the rest was typed by me.
and i will also add more drugs as i feel like it.
Here you can learn about the dangers of drugs before you risk taking them. After you read this, you will no longer be able to say after it turns out that you ended up in hospital: I just didn't know.
We do not advise you taking drugs, but if you do, please know the health factors involved before doing them.
Class A: Ecstasy, LSD, heroin, cocaine, crack, magic mushrooms, amphetamines (if prepared for injection).
Possession: Up to seven years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
Dealing: Up to life in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
_______________
Class B: Amphetamines, Methylphenidate (Ritalin), Pholcodine.
Possession: Up to five years in prison or an unlimited fine or both
Dealing: Up to 14 years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
_______________
Class C: Cannabis, tranquilizers, some painkillers, Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB), Ketamine.
Possession: Up to two years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
Dealing: Up to 14 years in prison or an unlimited fine or both.
1. Alcohol
2. Tobacco
3. LSD
4. Steroids
5. Marijuana
6. Ketamine
7. Inhalants
8. Cocaine
9. Heroin
10. Magic Mushrooms
11. Esctasy
12. Tranquilizers/Barbituates
13. Amphetamines
14. Methamphetamines
15. Salvia
______________________________________________________________
1. Alcohol
What is it?
Alcohol is a depressant drug that reduces social inhibitions and relaxes. Alcohol is produced by the fermentation of fruits, vegetables or grains. Alcoholic drinks consist mainly of water and ethanol or ethyl alcohol in varying strengths.
Class: no class
Street Names
Beer, wine, booze, liquor, and many more including brand names.
How Is it Taken?
By drinking.
What does it do?
Alcohol is absorbed very rapidly into the blood stream from the stomach lining, in as short a time as 5 to 10 minutes and it's effects last for several hours depending on the amount and how quickly it was consumed.
Women absorb alcohol faster than men because their bodies contain less water. The water dilutes the alcohol and so the same amount of alcohol will produce a higher concentration in the blood.
Alcohol intake is measured in units. One unit is 8 grams of pure alcohol, which is equal to half a pint of normal strength beer, a standard glass of wine or a shot of measure of spirits. After 4 to 5 units most people feel less inhibited and more relaxed. After 8 or so units, most people slur their speech and become less coordinated and clumsy. Some people have increased emotional reactions. More alcohol could result in staggering, double vision, loss of balance, nausea, vomiting and an impression of the room spinning.
After a period of heavy alcohol consumption a mixture of factors, mainly withdrawal and dehydration (alcohol dehydrates the body) may cause a hang-over. This is usually characterized by nausea, a headache and sometimes vomiting. However, this may be avoided if the water is drunk (usually at least a pint, if not more if you are a heavy drinker) after a drinking session.
Mixing alcohol with other depressant drugs increases its effects and is extremely dangerous.
2. Tobacco
What is it?
Tobacco is the dried leaves of a plant that grows in may parts of the world. Tobacco contains a variety of chemicals, including nicotine which is an addictive drug with a mild stimulant effect.
Class: no class
Street Names
None really
How is it Taken?
Smoked, sniffed, chewed, and dipped.
What does it Do?
Tobacco smoke consists of droplets of tar, nicotine, carbon monoxide and other gases. Nicotine is the substance that causes dependency. The amount of nicotine and other substances that is absorbed through the lungs depends on how much and how deeply the smoke is inhaled. Because nicotine is a stimulant some smokers feel tobacco helps relieve boredom, tiredness, and reduce stress and anxiety. The effects are almost immediate but fade quickly, which encourages continual use.
Some people may experience nausea and dizziness when they inhale tobacco smoke for the first few times.
The more a person smokes, the more likely they are to suffer from heart disease, blood clots, cancer, strokes, bronchitis, bad circulation and ulcers.
Users can develop strong psychological as well as physical dependence. Withdrawal symptoms include irritability, depression and craving for tobacco. Tobacco use is a leading cause of death in North America.
3. LSD
What is it?
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) is a synthetic substance discovered in 1938. It is manufacturered from lysergic acid.
Class: A
Street Names
LSD, Acid, Tabs, Hits
How is it Taken?
Taken orally, licked off of blotter paper. The minute amounts sufficient for a 'trip' are usually absorbed onto a small paper square, but are also less commonly available in gelatine sheets, sugar cubes or formed into tablets or capsules. The strength of all these preparations is uncertain and so the effects can be unpredictable
What does It Do?
Experiences are hard to describe, because they vary, but also because they can differ from the normal way of perceiving things. Effects depend very much on the user's mood, where they are, who they are with as well as the dose taken. They often include intensified colours and distortion of vision and hearing, although true hallucinations, believing something is there when it's not, are rare, although they become more common on higher doses. Emotional reactions may include heightened self-awareness and mystical or ecstatic experiences. A feeling of being outside one's body is commonly reported. Physical effects are generally insignificant.
Unpleasant reactions ('bad trips') may include depression, dizziness, disorientation, fear, paranoia and panic. Whether these effects are due to the user being unstable, anxious, depressed or in hostile or unsuitable surroundings is unknown. A bad trip is not predictable and may happen at any time.
Deaths due to suicide, although much publicised, are very rare. Deaths due to overdose are also very rare.
4. Steroids
What is it?
Anabolic/androgenic steroids are synthetic substances related to the male hormone testosterone. These substances have two effects, the androgenic (masculinizing) and the anabolic (tissue building). Most people who use steroids want the tissue building effect and so use steroids with higher anabolic than androgenic properties.
Class: unsure
Street Names
None
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally or injected.
What does It Do?
How steroids work in the body is complex and not fully understood. It is thought that the drug finds particular body cells such as skeletal muscle cells, hairs follicles, sebaceous glands and certain areas of the brain. Steroids appear to increase protein production and so increases the size and strength of the muscle. This process can reverse if the muscle is not stimulated, hence training is an important factor Bodybuilders use steroids in cycles from 4 to 12 weeks in length, with rest periods in between.
There are a number of health problems associated with steroid use including increased irritability, aggressiveness, acne, accelerated hair loss, bloated appearance, changes in sex drive, impotence, and decline in sperm production in men. Steroids cause masculinizing in women and can lead to growth of facial and body hair, baldness, voice deepening, enlargement of the clitoris and disruption of the menstrual cycle.
Except for hair loss, the above effects are generally reversible upon stopping steroid use. Adolescent steroid use may lead to a premature fusion of the epiphyses, the end of growing bones, leading to stunted growth.
5. Marijuana
What is it?
Marijuana is the most popular illegal drug in America. Marijuana comes from the hemp plant (Cannabis sativa). Marijuanas is made from the leaves, flowers (buds), and seeds. After harvesting they are dried, shredded, and mixed together.
Class: C
Street Names
Marijuana, weed, pot, reefer, grass, dope, ganja, Mary Jane, sinsemilla, hash, herb, Aunt Mary, skunk, boom, kif, gangster, chronic, blunt.
How is it Taken?
Usually smoked and sometimes eaten in cookies, brownies or brewed in like tea.
What does It Do?
Marijuana is a mind-altering (psychoactive) drug that gives users a sense of feeling good or high. While under its influence, users may feel more hungry, temporarily lose their normal inhibitions, and become more easily sexually excited.
Marijuana is not addictive but it can be habit forming.
6. Ketamine
What is it?
Ketamine is 2-(2-Chlorophenyl)-2-(methylamino)- cyclohexanone, ketamine (commercially sold as Ketalar) is a powerful anaesthetic used for animals, although it is used in some human medical applications. It was first developed by the University of Michigan in 1965.
Class: C
Street Names
Ketamine 'K', Special K, Vitamin K
How Is it Taken?
It is either snorted or swallowed as a powder and either swallowed or injected as a liquid. If injected it is usually injected into the muscles rather than a vein.
What does It Do?
Ketamine causes hallucinations and as an anaesthetic stops the user feeling pain. Users may feel as if they have entered another reality or left their body.
Like most anesthetics, eating or drinking before taking ketamine may induce vomiting. Temporary paralysis has been reported in some users but is rare.
If regularly used, the user will develop a tolerance to ketamine. It is not known whether ketamine use can lead to psychological or physical dependence, although both may be likely in some individuals.
An overdose can also cause the heart to stop.
7. Inhalants
What is it?
Inhalants are carbon-based substances which produce effects similar to alcohol or anesthetics when inhaled. Some users strengthen the effect by sniffing from inside a bag placed over the head, which is extremely dangerous. Inhalants seems to be prevalent mainly among age 12 to 16 year olds.
Class: No Class
Street Names
None
How Is it Taken?
Usually by sniffing in a bag or right out of the can
What does It Do?
Inhalant vapors are absorbed through the lungs and rapidly reach the brain. Breathing and heart rate are reduced. Repeated use by deep inhalation can result in an overdose which can cause disorientation, loss of control and finally unconsciousness, although inhalant users usually recover quickly from these effects. At small doses inhalants produce a drunken like stupor. At larger doses inhalants may cause hallucinations. The effects of the inhalant vapors occur quickly and disappear within a few minutes to any hour after sniffing is stopped.
Some inhalants products (particularly aerosol gases and cleaning fluids) can cause heart failure, especially during physically exertion while intoxicated. However, deaths are rare and most can be avoided even if inhalant misuse itself cannot be prevented.
With continuous use, tolerance to the effects of inhalants develops, but physical or psychological dependence is rare.
8. Cocaine
What is it?
Cocaine is a white powder obtained from the leaves of the coca plant and has powerful stimulant properties similar to those of amphetamines.
Class: A
Street Names
Cocaine and Crack Coke, Charlie, Snow, Rock
How is it Taken?
Soluble cocaine is sometimes injected, possibly mixed with heroin (this mixture is sometimes called 'Speedball') but the usual method is for a small amount (usually called a 'line') to be sniffed or 'snorted' up the nose through a small tube and is absorbed into the blood via the nasal membrane. However, more recently a smokeable form of freebase cocaine called crack is become increasingly more common. Crack is purer and more concentrated than soluble cocaine and is absorbed into the body faster than if it is snorted.
What Does it do?
As with amphetamines, cocaine produces feelings of well-being, mental exhilaration, reduced appetite and great physical strength and mental capacity. However, the intended feelings can often be replaced by feelings of anxiety or panic.
When snorted the effects of cocaine peak in about 15-30 minutes and then fade, which often encourages users to repeat the dose in order to maintain the effect. Large doses or lots of quickly repeated doses over a period of hours or days can lead to extreme states of agitation, anxiety, paranoia and possibly hallucinations which generally fade when the drug leaves the body. After effects can include tiredness and depression.
Excessive doses can in rare cases cause death from heart failure. Effects of long-term use Users do not necessarily develop tolerance, but are often tempted to increase doses for a more intense effect. Discontinuation of the drug produces tiredness, sleepiness and depression, which can encourage users to take more to alleviate these side effects
Cocaine is thought to produce a physical dependency in some people, although this is still being debated and researched. Crack does produce a strong physical dependency.
With regular heavy use increasingly unpleasant symptoms occur. Euphoria is replaced by an uncomfortable state of restlessness, over excitability and feelings of nausea. With continued use this can lead to paranoid psychosis. Regular users may appear chronically nervous, excitable and paranoid. Confusion with exhaustion, due to lack of sleep is common. These effects may all disappear once use is stopped, however a paranoid mental state may be irreversible and permanent.
Repeated snorting of cocaine may also damage the nasal membranes and the structure separating the nostrils. Smoking crack can produce severe respiratory problems.
9. Heroin
What is it?
Heroin and other opiate derivatives are made from the dried 'milk' of the opium poppy plant which contains morphine and codeine.
Class: A
Heroin in its pure form is a white powder which is easily soluble in water, however, street quality is often brown. There are a number of synthetic opiates which are used as painkillers including pethidine, dipipanone and also methadone which is often prescribed for heroin and opiate addiction. Opiates and synthetic opiates are called opioids.
Street Names
Smack, Junk, Skag, 'H', Brown, Horse, Harry, Boy
How is it Taken?
Usually heroin is dissolved in water and injected. Heroin and other opioid powders can be swallowed, sniffed, or the fumes from the heated powder is inhaled (this method is sometimes called 'chasing the dragon').
What does It Do?
Heroin and other opioids cause people to feel drowsy, warm, content, and feeling of euphoria. They also relieve stress and discomfort by creating a relaxed detachment from pain, desires and activity. They depress the activity of the nervous system, including such reflexes as coughing, breathing and heart rate. They also cause widening of the blood vessels, which gives a feeling of warmth and reduces bowel activity, which causes constipation. Even with doses sufficiently high to produce euphoria, there is little interference with muscle coordination, sensation or intellect.
The chance of an overdose is greatly increased if other depressant drugs such as alcohol and barbiturates are being used at the same time.
Even short term use of heroin can cause physical damage to the body, although not necessarily from the drug itself. Injections with dirty needles can result in diseases such as Hepatitis, AIDS and Tetanus, especially when sharing needles. There is also a risk of using impure drugs which have been mixed with unknown substances. Repeated sniffing of heroin damages the nose.
10. Magic Mushrooms
What is it?
Several species of mushrooms can produce hallucinations, about a dozen of which grow wild. The most common is the Liberty Cap (or Psilocibe Semilanceata) which contain the hallucinogenic chemicals psilocybin and psilocin. They can be eaten fresh or cooked and can be preserved by drying. Distinguishing hallucinogenic mushrooms from poisonous and sometimes deadly ones can be very difficult and sometimes almost impossible.
Class: A
Street Names
Magic Mushrooms 'Shrooms, Magic Shrooms, Wumpa Fruit
How Is it Taken?
A small piece of the dried mushroom is eaten.
What does It Do?
Mushroom users have experiences similar to a mild LSD trip but may also have feelings of euphoria and bodily excitement. At low doses euphoria and detachment occur. At high doses visual distortions and vivid hallucinations occur.
Possible reactions to hallucinogenic mushrooms include vomiting, nausea and stomach pains. As with other hallucinogenic drugs 'bad trips' can also occur and may develop into a brief psychotic episode, similar to that of LSD.
The greatest danger is mistaking poisonous mushrooms for "magic mushrooms".
There are no significant withdrawal effects and no physical dependence although there may be a desire to repeat the experience.
11. Ecstasy
What is it?
Pharmaceutically ecstasy is known as 3,4 methylene- dioxymethamphetamine, usually referred to as MDMA. It is one of a huge family of related drugs from the MDA family which fall between hallucinogens (like LSD) and the amphetamine family. It was first synthesized in 1912 by a German pharmaceutical company. Ecstasy is very popular at raves.
Class: A
Street Names
Ecstasy 'E', MDMA, MDA, MDEA, Pills, Love Doves, Adam, X-TC
It usually comes in small tablets that may have a picture printed on them such as a dove, a hammer and sickle, or a diamond and the drug is often referred to by its appearance (such as 'Doves').
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally.
What Does it do?
Most users feel an initial rush with feelings of nervousness, tingling and an uncertain feeling in the stomach (butterflies) followed by a warm euphoric glow lasting 4 - 6 hours, when the user feels calm and happy. It is a common belief that ecstasy will always provide a positive experience although there is a chance (although less than with a drug such as LSD) that a bad-trip will occur. Dry mouth, dilated pupils and various tingling sensations are common.
Taking ecstasy will exaggerate moods and feelings, therefore taking an 'E' when your mind is distracted by worry, or relationship hassles can be risky.
Initial effects are often 'butterflies in the stomach', a
Most of these deaths attributed to Ecstasy have been at clubs or raves where dehydration and over heating has been a major factor.
12. Tranquilizers and Barbituates
What is it?
Tranquilizers and barbiturates have two major effects they are sedative and hypnotic (sleepy). Many drugs have both effects, often having a sedative effect at low doses and a hypnotic effect at high doses.
Class: C
Street Names
Tranquilizers and Barbiturates Tranx, Jellies, Temazepam, Valium, Temazies, Barbs, Sekkies, Tuinal, Seconal and Nembutal
How is it Taken?
Usually taken orally, but it is sometimes injected for medical purposes
What does It Do?
Tranquilizers
Tranquilizers are used to help control anxiety and tension and sleep aid. Benzodiazepines are the most commonly prescribed of these drugs, which include Valium, Librium and Ativan.
A fatal overdose of pure Benzodiazepines is almost unheard of, but death has been reported when combined with other drugs, especially alcohol.
Psychological dependence is common in long-term users and without the drug they may be confused, irritable, anxious, and unable to carry on routine activities. Barbiturates are sleeping pills and include Tuinal, Seconal and Nembutal. These are the most misused because of their intoxicating effect.
Barbiturates
Like alcohol, barbiturates depress the central nervous system and have similar effects lasting from 3 to 8 hours depending on the dose. Small doses usually gives the user a feeling of being relaxed similar to the effects of alcohol.
Large does can cause extreme and unpredictable emotional reactions, mental confusion, unconsciousness, respiratory failure, and death. They are extremely dangerous when taken with alcohol
Users can develop strong psychological as well as physical dependence. Withdrawal effects can include irritability, nervousness, inability to sleep, faintness and nausea, twitching, delerium, and convulsions. Sudden withdrawal from high doses of barbiturates can be fatal.
13. Amphetamines
What is it?
Amphetamines are stimulants which speed up the way your body works. They make your heart work faster and they pump adrenaline into the system. The most common type of amphetamine on the street is a white powder called amphetamine sulphate. This is an illegally manufactured powder of varying strength, usually of between 6% and 10% purity. Another form of speed known as 'base' is far stronger and is between 25% and 35% pure.
Class: B
Street Names
Sulf, Whiz, Speed, Pep Pills, Copilots, Footballs, Uppers, Billy, Phets, Crystal, Glass, Ice Cream, Ice, Meth, Bipetamine, Dexies, Beans, Black Beauties, White Beanies, Crosses, Hearts
Crank, Meth, and Crystal are street names for Methamphetamines.
Dexies and Beans are street names for Dextroamphetamines.
How Is it Taken?
Usually taken orally, snorted, sniffed, smoked or injected.
What Does it do?
Amphetamines give users extra energy for 4-6 hours, prevents sleep, reduces appetite, speeds up breathing and heart rate and widens the pupils. The user feels more energetic, cheerful and confident, and because of these effects there is a high risk of psychological dependence.
Regular users who take high doses may develop delusions, hallucinations and feelings of paranoia. This can develop into paranoid psychosis from which it may take many months to recover or which may be permanent.
Many women who use amphetamines find that their periods become irregular or even stop.
14. Methamphetamines
What is it?
Methamphetamine is a very addictive stimulant drug that affects the central nervous system. It is a Schedule II stimulant, which means it has a high potential for abuse and is available only through a prescription that cannot be refilled. However, its medical uses are limited and the doses prescribed are much lower than those typically abused.
Class: A+!!!!! (VERY BAD!!)
Street Names
Meth has the longest list of names of any drug in the history of the world.
They are as following.
20/20 ("Clear Vision" Hawaii)
222 (Chiacgo)
Agua
Albino Poo
Alffy
All Tweakend Long
Anny
Anything Going On
the attenborough (London; 11/29/07)
Bache Knock
Bache Rock
Bag Chasers
Baggers
Barney Dope
Batak (Philippine Street Name)
Bato
Bato-(Philippine Steet Name)
Batu Kilat (Malaysia, it means shining rocks)
Batu or Batunas (Hawaii)
Batuwhore
Beegokes
Bianca
Bikerdope
Billy, Or Whizz, (Britain - after a cartoon character in a kids comic called Billy Whizz who seemed to be always on the stuff!)
Bitch
Biznack
Blanco
Blizzard
Blue Acid
Blue Funk, (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Bomb
Booger
Boorit-Cebuano (Filipino Street Name)
Boo-Yah! (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Bottles (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Brian Ed
Buff Stick
Bugger Sugar
Buggs
Bumps
Buzzard Dust
Caca
Candy
Cankinstien
CC
Chach
ChaChaCha
Chalk
Chalk Dust
Chank
Cheebah
Cheese
Chicken Flippin
Chikin or Chicken
Chingadera
Chittle
Chizel
Chiznad
Choad
Chunkylove (Missouri)
Clavo
Clean out the chimney (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Coco
Coffee
Cookies
CR (California Central Valley)
Crack Whore
Crank Is "Walk" & Coke Is "Talk."
Crankster Gansters
Cri,Cri (Mexican Border in Southwest Arizona)
Criddle
Cringe
Critty
Crizzy
Crothch Dope
Crow
Crunk
Crypto
Crystal Meth
Crystalight
Cube
Debbie, Tina, And Crissy
Devil Dust
Devils Dandruff
Devils Drug
Dingles
Dirt
Dirty
Dizzy D
Dizzle (Missouri)
Dizzo (Missouri)
D-Monic Or D
Do Da
Doody
Doo-My-Lau(H.B.)
Dope
Drano
Dummy Dust
Dyno
Epimethrine
Epod
Eraser Dust
Ethyl-M
Evil Yellow
Fatch (Mexican Border In The Southwest Arizona Area)
Fedrin
Fil-Layed
Fizz Wizz
G (short for Glass or Go-fast)
Gab
Gackle-a Fackle-a
Gak
Gas
Gear Or Get Geared Up
Gemini
Gina or "I want to talk to Gina tonight" (Calif; 11/18/07)
Glass
Go
Go Fast
Go-ey
Go-Go
Gonzales (Like the cartoon "Speedy")
Got Anything
Grit
Haiwaiian Salt
Hank
High Speed Chicken Feed
High Riders (Used in New Zealand 7/31/07)
Highthen
Hillbilly Crack
Hippy Crack
Holy Smoke (Hong Kong)
Homework (This is because homework is generally done on paper which had lines)
Hoo
Horse Mumpy (Tampa, Florida)
Hydro
Hypes
Ibski
Ice
Ice Cream
Icee
Ish
Izice
Jab
Jasmine
Jenny Crank Program, (jenny crank diet) (Seattle, WA 11/4/07)
Jetfuel
Jib
Jib Nugget
Jibb Tech Warrier
Jinga
Juddha
Juice
Junk (San Diego)
Kibble
Killer
KooLAID
Kryptonite
Lamer
Laundry Detergent
Lemon Drop
Life
Lily
Linda
Lost Weekend (Bay Area SF)
Love
Low
Lucille
M Man
Magic
Meth
Meth Monsters
Methaine
Methandfriend
Methandfriendsofmine
Methanfelony
Methatrim
Methmood
Method
Moon Juice (Missouri)
Motivation in a bag (cleve or Columbus, Ohio; (11/19/07)
Nazi Dope
Ned
Newday
Night Train (11/7/07)
No Doze
Nose Candy
On A Good One
(New Zealand)'place where meth is made is a "P lab"
Patsie
Peaking
Peanut Butter
Peel Dope
Phazers
Phets
Philopon (East Asia)
Pieta
Pink
Poison
Poop
Poop'd Out
Poor Man's Coccaine (Philippines)
Pootananny
Powder
Powder Monkeys
Powder Point
Project Propellant
Puddle
Pump (Bay Area SF)
Quarter Tee Bag
Q'd
Quick (Canada)
Quill
Rachet Jaw
Rails
Rails
Rank
Redneck Heroin (Atlanta)
Richie Rich
Rip
Rock
Rock
Rocket Fuel
Rocky Mountain High
Rosebud
Rudy's
Rumdumb
Running Pizo
Sack
Sam's Sniff
Sarahs
Satan Dust
Scante (Hispanic Population in Southern California)
Scap
Schlep Rock
Scooby Snax
Scud
Scwadge
Shab
Sha-Bang
Shabs (San Francisco)
Shabu
Shamers
Shards
Shit
Shia (Missouri)
Shiznack, Shiznac, Sciznac or Shiznastica
Shiznittlebang
Shiznit
Shiznitty
Shizzo
Shnizzie Snort
Shwack
Skeech
Sketch
Ski
Skitz
Sky Rocks
Sliggers
smack
Smiley Smile
Smurf Dope
Smzl
Snaps
Sniff
Snow, Motivation (Colorado Springs, CO)
Space Food
Spaceman
Spagack
Sparacked
Sparked
Sparkle
Speed Racer
Spin, Spin, Spin
Spinack
Spindarella
Spinney Boo
Spinning
Spishak
Spook
Sprack
Sprizzlefracked
Sprung (Mississippi)
Spun Ducky Woo
Squawk
Stallar
Sto-Pid
Styels
Sugar
Suger
Sweetness
Swerve
Syabu (pronounced "shabu" - SE Asia)
Ta'doww (Southwest Area of SD Ca.)
Talkie
Tasmanian Devil
Tenner
The New Prozac
The White House
Tical
TIK (1/27/08 - South Africa)
T. D. - for - Tink Dust (as in: ''Tinkerbell", from Disney)
Talkie
Tina Or Teena
Tish - Shit Backwards (C.V. Calif. area)
Tobats
Toots
Torqued
Trippin Trip
Truck Stop Special
Tubbytoast
Tutu (Hawaii)
Twack
Twacked Out
Tweak
Tweedle Doo
Tweek (A Methamphetamine-Like Substance)
Tweezwasabi
Twiz
Twizacked
Ugly Dust
Vanilla Pheromones
Wake
Way
We We We
Whacked
White Bitch
White Ink
White Junk
White Lady
White Pony (Ridin' the White Pony)
White
Who-Ha
Work: I think that came about from it being my dealers "work" (1/22/08 Arlington, TX)
Wigg
Xaing
Yaaba (Thailand)
YAMA (Pattaya, Phuket, Ko Samui And Bangkok)
Yammer Bammer
Yank
Yankee
Yay
Yead Out
Yellow Barn
Zingin
Zip
Zoiks
Zoom
How is it taken?
Methamphetamine can be swallowed, smoked, snorted, or injected.
What does it do?
When the crystal form of methamphetamine is smoked or injected, it produces an immediate rush, followed by hours of euphoria. When any form of methamphetamine is snorted, swallowed, or inserted, it may take up to 20 minutes to take effect. Most often the feelings of pleasure and well-being that follow last for 4 to 12 hours, but some people stay high for much longer. This is because methamphetamine binds strongly with the pleasure receptors in the brain.
A low dose of methamphetamine may produce the following effects: an increase in energy, increased feelings of self confidence, heightened libido, ‘wakefulness’ and alertness, reduced appetite, and improved physical and mental performance.
The effects often diminish and change with high dose and frequent use. Effects may include: teeth grinding/clenching, agitation, restlessness, insomnia, decrease in libido, and a decrease in mental clarity and concentration. Other negative effects include mild to severe tremors and athetosis (writhing, jerky, or flailing movements), hostility and paranoia.
People who use methamphetamine repeatedly often develop tolerance to the drug. That is, they require larger and larger amounts of the drug in order to feel its effects. Tolerance develops because the brain tries to rebalance itself by limiting the impact of the drug. Tolerance to any drug may lead to dependence, which is the need to continue using a substance in order to function normally. Users of methamphetamine often state that the initial experience of intense euphoria is rarely experienced again, resulting in repeated use to chase the original high.
Long-term use of methamphetamine can lead to a lifestyle that is very destructive to one’s body. The failure to provide the body with adequate food, water, and sleep, combined with the drug’s impact on mental processes, can lead to significant brain and organ damage.
15. Salvia
What is it?
Salvia divinorum is a plant from the mint family and a species of sage that is used for its psychoactive effects.
Class: Unclassified
Street names
Diviner’s Sage, Sally-D
How is it taken?
Orally or Smoked
What does it do?
Salvia can produce a wide range of effects, but the duration is very limited. Really, you won't be in a super-weird state for more than 15 minutes at the longest, and it's much, much more likely that you're only going to be in it for about 5 minutes. Most likely, you won't do anything bad. Uncontrollable laughter is common. You might have some immediate difficulty in walking or talking properly, but that will pass quickly.
Some of this was taken from http://www.puberty101.com/
and some of this was taken from wikipedia
and a bit of the rest was typed by me.
and i will also add more drugs as i feel like it.