A Deal with the Devil
More, more, and more… “Sweat? Pain?” No more. More, more, and more… “Right now?” Yes. While life is never perfect, avarice and sloth tempt human beings to trade their souls for tangible gains. Ironically, drugs, the manmade devil, become the ultimate winner in this compact. Not only are characters in Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea enticed by drugs, but also Samuel Coleridge, the author of “Kubla Khan”, indulges himself with drugs. While some of them yield to the great pressure in their life, others simply can not overcome their own lusts. Although substances can induce desirable mental states, they are detrimental in the long run.
Some think that drugs can bring them power that is inaccessible within their physical limits. In
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What hath quenched them hath given me fire.” Her earlier calling for “spirits” to “unsex [her], fill [her] from the crown to the toe top-full of direst cruelty, and make thick [her] blood” echoes with these words since “thick blood” provokes “fire”, according to humorism, and “full of direst cruelty” points to boldness. Under the influence of alcohol, she seemingly exceeds the restrictions of her gender while attaining the throne. In fact, she abandons humane characteristics like compassion and gentleness, which are commonly considered to be feminine qualities in her era. Nevertheless, her dream comes true; she executes her plan of assassination with such composure that no human being displays. Similar to Lady Macbeth, Antoinette, the protagonist in Wide Sargasso Sea, seeks control, but in her case, over her husband. When Antoinette entreats Christophine to revive Mr. Rochester’s love for her, Christophine asks her to “speak nice and make him understand. However, Antoinette claims that “[She] [has] tried,” but “he does not believe [her]” (105) and insists on using obeah, which is considered to be evil
This is a summary taken from “Saying Yes” by Jacob Sullum; Chapter 8; “Body and Soul”. An ever-present theme in Sullum’s book is what he calls “voodoo pharmacology”—the idea, promoted in large part by the government, that certain drugs have the power to hijack people and enslave them in an inescapable prison of craving and compulsion. Sullum seeks to show that this idea is a myth, that only a tiny percentage of illegal-drug users become addicts, whereas the vast majority of people who use illegal drugs live normal, productive, loving lives. The book is filled with valuable insights derived from deconstructing government statistics about drugs and drug use. Sullum shows how even the most vilified drugs, such as heroin and crack cocaine, are
Drug addiction affects millions worldwide, and the harmful stereotypes associated with it have always existed. In Randy Ribays Patron Saints of Nothing, we explore stigmas associated with drug usage, revealing the poverty which leads to addiction and selling, resulting in harmful stereotypes challenged by the experiences and beliefs of Jun. It’s seen that because of the issues in the Philippines around poverty, drugs provide a way for some to deal with pain and hunger. The drug war in the Philippines has killed thousands suspected of drug usage to make the country a "safer" place. Drug addicts fit harmful stereotypes surrounding drugs and get murdered because of it.
This is a no brainer. The effects of a drug could apply to anyone; not just the mentally
Each part explains something different about the drugs and how it has influenced millions of people. The first part is “The Confluence of Psychoactive Resources” and this section helps to explain what was products were part of this new revolution. The second section of the book is called “Drugs and Commerce” and here we get to read about the medicinal value, but also the psychoactive revolution. Then the third part of the book is called “Drugs and Power” and here it explains to us the power of alcohol and drugs.
Drugs do not define an individual, they only limit one’s potential. Unlike any other work, “Water by the Spoonful” uses the online world to establish the central theme of redemption. The online chatroom for addicts and substance abusers, such as Odessa and Fountainhead, is a strategy placed within the play
There are rarely second chances for meth abusers, the drug defeats 24.7 million people daily; there was no second chance for Chase. The novel Tweaked, written by Katherine Holubitsky, focuses on a character named Gordie and his experiences in his life and his families, with having a meth addicted brother, Chase. Throughout the book, Chase puts his family in very precarious situations with dealers, finances, and everyday life. Everything is miserable but manageable until Chase gets arrested for aggravated assault. With Chase’s parents already worried about getting money for his bail, Chase asks his brother, Gordie for cash that will literally save his back from his dealers, Gordie agrees.
“A gram is better than a damn,” is a statement that reflects the mindset of contemporary America to use drugs to palliate the problems rather than dealing with them. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley shows the relationship of drug usage in the near future by alluding the use of drugs to the real world. Huxley creates a drug, soma, in his novel that makes a person who takes it instantly becomes tranquil. This drug is commonly used throughout the novel by giving an instant source of gratification and also is used to control the population. Huxley’s prediction of drug usage became a reality because both legal and illegal drugs are commonly used in contemporary society.
The legalization of drugs has been at the center of interminable debate. Drugs have widely been perceived as a dominant threat to the moral fabric of society. Drug use has been attributed as the source responsible for a myriad of key issues. For instance, it is believed that drugs have exacerbated the already weak status of mental health in the United States in which some individuals suffering from mental illness administer illicit substances such as heroin or cocaine in an attempt to self-medicate. Moreover, drugs are blamed for turning auspicious members of the community into worthless degenerates.
I am afraid that her mind might concoct some awful violence! Plunge a sharp sword into her heart. And I’m afraid she’s capable of working her way into the palace, enter the king’s chambers and murder the princess and Jason, her groom! Plunge a sharp knife deep into their body.
Literature Resource Center, http://link.galegroup.com.proxy151.nclive.org/apps/doc/H1420096909/LitRC?u=ncliverockcc&sid=LitRC&xid=706af6fe. Accessed 11 Feb. 2018. Originally published in The Languages of Addiction, edited by Jane Lilienfeld and Jeffrey Oxford, St. Martin's Press, 1999, pp. 175-192. Tackach, James.
It is clear that Lady Macbeth is the dominant one in their relationship as she seizes control of all situations. Although “women are perceived as the primary caretaker of the home among other oppressive notions that pertain to them. They
She is malicious not only in words but also in her intent. Her sole object is to obtain power and wealth, with its attendant treasures. Lady Macbeth lacks humanity and regrets that she was not born as a man. She understands that power and violence are synonymous with manhood and bravery. Additionally, Lady Macbeth interests’ and ambition, override her love for even her husband, Macbeth.
She could just be a very evil person who only wants to murder and manipulate people. However, Lady Macbeth reveals evidence that this is not the case about her. Lady Macbeth begins to sleepwalk and speak about the murders she has been a part of. “Attack, I am afraid, they have awoke. And tis not done.”
Drugs are substances that trigger temporary changes in the body which may result in such a pleasurable and relaxing effect. Some of the types can slow down the nervous system’s action, while other types can have the exact opposite effect; spurring the nervous system into rapid action. Drugs are connected to cravings or addiction since a person’s body starts yearning for drugs after he or she has taken it for a while. Drugs affect consciousness significantly! They may cause people to hear or see things that aren’t real (hallucinations), experiencing mood swings, or may even distort people’s perceptions.
After all, the novel sets out to explain the origin of Antoinette’s madness through her own narrative, something she was denied in Jane Eyre. The definition of madness is quite critical in Wide Sargasso Sea as Antoinette is premeditated to lose her sanity due to the original plot in Jane Eyre. There are two types of madness discussed in the novel. The first type is madness as an inherent mental illness. This is carried over from Jane Eyre, and described to be the underlying cause of Antoinette’s madness.