• A costly high
    Telegraph | 14 June 2025
  • How can adolescents be kept away from drugs? The answer lies not in scare tactics but in sensitive handling — and in equipping those closest to them with the right tools. With this in mind, The Newtown School hosted a workshop on drug awareness — not for students, but for teachers.

    “Let’s not label any student as ‘good’ or ‘bad’. These are subjective terms,” said principal Satabdi Bhattacharjee. “Adolescents are at a vulnerable age. With hormones raging, they’re eager to explore. As mentors, our role is to grant them freedom, but also to stay alert for red flags. We wanted our teachers to be empowered with the latest insights from experts to protect our students.”

    The workshop was jointly organised by the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB, Calcutta zone), under the ministry of home affairs, and the Department of Psychiatric Social Work, Institute of Psychiatry-Centre of Excellence in Mental Health, state government, in collaboration with The Newtown School.

    S. N. Prasad, inspector at the NCB, said drug abuse was a threat especially among students of Classes XI, XII and college-goers. And he appreciated the teachers’ baseline awareness.

    Stay ahead


    At first, the teachers were embarrassed to even name any drugs they were aware but then opened up. Prasad discussed with them marijuana, heroin (brown sugar), LSD, methamphetamine (yaba tablets), Ecstasy…. “The fact is students already know all this, so teachers must stay ahead of them,” Prasad explained.

    He warned that while cannabis products like ganja and charas emit a distinct smell, costlier drugs like cocaine, LSD, or yaba tablets are harder to detect. “LSD looks like a stamp, often brightly coloured, and, are to be placed in the mouth. Yaba tablets resemble candy. These can be carried in a pocket or bag without raising suspicion so teachers must know what they are up against,” he said, sharing pictures of the contraband items.

    When asked how LSD is now-a-days sourced leaving no digital footprint, teachers offered vague answers like “dark web” or “Telegram”. Prasad said teenagers would be able to answer this without batting an eye. “The answer is VPN. A teenager could be sitting in New Town but using a VPN to make his IP address appear to be in the US. There would be no way tracking him down to New Town and the package would reach him safely,” he warned.

    He urged teachers to spread awareness not just about the health impact of drugs but also about the punishments under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.

    Just say no


    Debapriya Bhowmik and Supriya Dey from the Institute of Psychiatry then took over to discuss the psychological and social aspects of drugs.

    Bhowmik explained the meaning of drug use and abuse. “In the case of alcohol, many start with social drinking at parties. Then weekend drinking becomes a habit, then a daily need. Eventually, the body craves it to function. This is dependence and the quantity is ever-increasing,” she said.

    Why try drugs


    l Peer Pressure: “Many youths do it to feel cool or macho. Some groups will only accept them if they take a drag,” Bhowmik said. Dey added FOMO (fear of missing out). “They see a friend posing with a beer mug and getting likes on social media so they try to do the same,” he said.

    l Availability and exposure: “If parents drink or smoke openly, children are more likely to try it,” said Bhowmik. “It is common for adolescents, out of loneliness and boredom, to try liquor from the bottles in the showcase. When they tell their friends they get are idolised and so do it again. Teachers are also role models and so, even though they have the freedom to drink or smoke, they should do so discreetly.”

    l Curiosity: Keeping kids isolated in a room while parents and their friends drink only piques their interest.

    l Excess pocket money: Bhowmik cited the case of a mother who gave her teenage son nearly Rs 2,000 before he went to visit a friend. The boys bought alcohol, had an accident, and the son died.

    l Relationship issues: “Popular films like Kabir Singh and Rockstar glorify heartbreak-induced substance use, sending the wrong message,” said Dey.





    Drugs commonly used by Indian teens:


    l Tobacco – in cigarettes, beedis, gutka, khaini, zarda, and hookahs. “They are cheap and easily available and often teens steal them from their fathers to try,” said Bhowmik.

    l Alcohol– branded as well as home-brewed or illicit variants with dangerously high and unknown alcohol content.

    Opioids – such as heroin, opium, and codeine-based cough
    syrups.

    l Cannabis – ganja, charas, bhang. “Again, youths manage to source
    these easily and a huge number of OPD patients with cannabis-induced
    psychosis,” Bhowmik said.

    l Sedatives – prescription drugs like alprazolam.
    “These can be prescription pills so parents are advised to hide their
    prescriptions safely,” she advised.

    l Inhalants – sniffing glue, petrol, nail
    polish remover, whitener.

    How to handle it

    Talk openly: Bring up news reports
    on drug busts to casually discuss the topic with students. And show interest,
    not suspicion. “If a youth seems suspicious, take him aside and ask more.
    Assure confidentiality and maintain it. Your job is to guide them back to the
    right path. Let them know they can come to you to share anything,” says
    Bhowmik.

    Positive role models: “Cite icons like Virat Kohli and Cristiano
    Ronaldo, and let children know that being clean is cool,” she said.

    Teacher-parent forums: Encourage joint discussions on drug abuse.

    Warning
    signs:

    Frequent nosebleeds, sudden weight loss or gain, red eyes, slurred
    speech.

    Secrecy—hiding items, stealing money.

    Drastic behavioural changes— drop
    in academic performance, mood swings, isolation, aggression. Hallucinations,
    memory loss, and inability to focus. “You may catch a student sleeping in class
    and ask him what date it is. He may not even know what month it is,” Bhowmik
    said.

    Keep them motivated

    “Addicts don’t recover overnight,” said Dey. “If you
    tell them to quit, they won’t quit at once so you must plant the seed and keep
    them motivated, as relapses are common.”

    He noted that simply listening is
    often the best support. “One need not be a trained counsellor to just lend a
    patient ear. Guide them to channel their energy into hobbies, volunteering,
    meditation, and positive self talk,” Dey said.

    Addiction to advocacy

    Thirteen
    years. That’s how long it took Nikhil Maity, a Sector I resident, to beat
    heroin addiction. Today, he runs Sarani Wellness Centre near Santiniketan and
    helps others on the path to recovery.

    “In the 90s, drug use was rampant. I
    started with marijuana at 18, since all my friends were doing it. It proved to
    be a gateway drug for me but now, I find youths straightway doing heroin,” he
    said, recalling one Durga Puja when he had thousands of rupees in his pocket,
    but sat alone, high, unable to enjoy anything.

    “The irony is stark— an addict
    may have everything, yet relish nothing.” Awareness is greater now and the
    majority of teens are conscious and career-oriented, not to get distracted by
    drugs. Maity is also an IT professional working with AI, and has taught
    computer skills to his patients.

    “We have built our centre’s website together.”
    He also has a message for parents of addicts. “Firstly, don’t have them
    forcibly ‘picked up’— this is a traumatic practice banned in many countries and
    makes the patient averse tothe treatment from the start,” he said.

    “Also, don’t
    expect an overnight cure after which your son can return and take exams the same
    semester. If you rush him out he may relapse. And once back home, don’t believe
    him blindly. Let him earn your trust.” While narcotic addiction is common in the
    20–35 age group, alcoholics often seek help much later, after losing everything.


    “Alcohol is socially acceptable, so alcoholics stay on at home much longer,” he
    said, adding that very few women come to rehab. “That’s because women in rehab is
    a big taboo but the addiction problem is huge among them, especially in the
    Sector V and New Town workforce.

    Many women from small towns join the IT sector
    there. They cannot handle the freedom that they suddenly get. To fit in, they
    overdo smoking, drinking, and drugs,” Maity said. Another former user from
    Sector III said his curiosity stemmed from pop culture.

    “We saw rockstars using drugs
    and though I knew it was bad, I lacked the foresight to realise they would be so
    addictive,” said Raj Basak(name changed). He recalled a teenage
    neighbour, slightly older to him, who would borrow money from his mother
    for movies but was secretly funding a heroin habit.

    “He soon started stealing
    too. My friends and I began with marijuana and later experimenting with
    everything, including prescription drugs that were sold at two well known
    medicine shops in sectors Iand III in the late 90s.”

    Basak quit when he realised
    the drugs were ruining his health and hampering his studies. “Some friends weren’t
    as lucky. One died of an overdose as a teenager. Another committed suicide.
    Those who couldn’t quit do not keep in touch with us. Despite having brilliant
    minds, they are unable to work, and are lost in a toxic loop.”
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