Drugs

What are drugs? | the substances behind addiction

Drugs change the way your brain works, lifting your mood, energy or sense of escape for a while. The trouble starts when your mind learns it can only reach that feeling with a substance in hand.

 

A person sits at a table surrounded by drugs and alcohol, illustrating the destructive impact and emotional burden of drugs addiction.
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If you've started planning your week around drugs, or you need a substance to feel calm, confident or simply okay, you're not imagining the pull. Drugs change the chemistry behind your mood, and that's exactly why cutting back can feel far harder than you expected. Below you'll find what drugs actually are, how they affect your brain and body, the risks involved, and what real recovery looks like at Connection Mental Healthcare.

A person leans against a wall in the dark, reflecting the loneliness, emotional struggle and hopelessness often linked to drugs addiction.
Drugs can leave you feeling isolated, even when nothing on the surface looks wrong.

A drug is any substance that changes how your body or mind works. That covers a huge range, from everyday substances like alcohol, caffeine and tobacco to prescription medicines and illegal substances such as cocaine, heroin and ecstasy. Some are legal, some are not, but they all share one thing: they alter your brain chemistry, and with repeated use they can quietly reshape how you feel, think and cope.

How drugs affect your brain

Most drugs work by flooding your brain with chemicals tied to mood and reward, such as dopamine and serotonin. That surge is the high, the calm or the relief you're chasing. The catch is that your brain can't keep producing those chemicals on demand, so over time it adjusts. You need more of the substance to feel the same effect, and ordinary life starts to feel flat without it. If you want to understand this pattern more deeply, our page on what is addiction explains how it develops.

Are all drugs addictive?

Not every substance carries the same risk, and not everyone who uses becomes dependent. Some drugs create a strong physical dependence, where your body reacts badly when you stop. Others hook you psychologically, so you come to rely on them to feel social, relaxed or in control. Tolerance tends to build either way, and that rising pattern is where casual use can quietly turn into something you can't put down.

The effects of drugs can feel powerfully positive in the moment, and that's exactly what makes the downside easy to ignore. The same substance that lifts you up takes a measurable toll on your body and mind, both during use and in the days that follow. The exact effects depend on the drug, but some patterns show up again and again.

Common effects of drug use

  • short bursts of euphoria, energy or deep calm
  • changes in mood, from heightened confidence to anxiety and paranoia
  • disrupted sleep, appetite and concentration
  • a racing heart, sweating or nausea
  • low, anxious or depressed mood in the days afterwards
  • cravings that grow stronger the longer you use
A therapist speaks with someone during a counselling session, showing the professional support and treatment available for drugs addiction recovery.
With the right support, the cycle of drug use can be broken for good.

Drug addiction rarely looks dramatic from the outside. It builds in small steps, and the signs are often clearer to the people around you than to you. If you're not sure where you stand, our am I addicted page can help you think it through.

Patterns worth taking seriously

  • you can't picture relaxing, socialising or coping without it
  • you've tried to cut back and found yourself using again within weeks
  • you need more than you used to for the same effect
  • the comedowns are getting longer, darker and harder to shake
  • you're spending money you don't have, or hiding how much you use
  • work, studies or relationships are slipping and you keep going anyway
Recognise yourself in this? Let's talk

If a few of these feel familiar, it's worth taking them seriously. Would you like to talk it through? Call Connection Mental Healthcare on +27 21 541 0643 and we'll help you get clear on what a sensible next step could look like.

Rehabilitation Center

Our location in South Africa

Set in the quiet coastal village of St James in the Western Cape, our centre gives you the space and distance to focus fully on recovery. Away from daily triggers and surrounded by the calm of the South African coastline, lasting change becomes possible.

  • Luxurious sleeping

  • Ocean view

  • Swimming pool

  • Sports facilities

  • All food included

  • Ensuite bath and shower

Because drug use is often wrapped up in socialising, stress relief or simply getting through the day, its risks are easy to wave away. They're real, and some of them are serious.

What heavy drug use can do

  • physical dependence, where stopping triggers painful withdrawal
  • damage to your heart, liver, lungs and kidneys
  • memory, concentration and decision-making problems
  • panic attacks and lasting anxiety
  • debt, job loss and breakdowns in relationships
  • a rising risk of overdose as tolerance grows

In some cases an overdose can be fatal, particularly when substances are mixed or used in higher doses than your body can handle.

For many people, drug use sits on top of something else, such as anxiety, depression, trauma or a sense of not quite fitting in. The drug offers a few hours of relief from all of that, which is part of why it's so hard to give up. At Connection Mental Healthcare we treat the addiction and what sits beneath it together, because dealing with only one rarely holds.

Experiences
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recovery-stories

Coming off drugs isn't about willpower alone. It's about understanding what the substance was doing for you and finding steadier ways to get there. That means looking honestly at your patterns, your triggers and what you've been using to manage, then building real alternatives in their place.

If you'd like to know more about how we approach this, please call us on +27 21 541 0643.

“People rarely come to us because of the drug itself. They come because of what it keeps taking from them, and that's the part we can actually work on together.”
Portret van Marianda Eras, klinisch psycholoog bij afkickkliniek Zuid-Afrika.
Marianda Clinical psychologist
+27 21 541 0643

If you recognise yourself or someone close to you in this, the hardest step is usually admitting it's real and that you can't fix it on your own. That isn't weakness, it's the moment things start to change. Treatment at Connection Mental Healthcare is confidential, personal and grounded in evidence, and where it's needed it can include a medically responsible detox.

You don't need to have it all worked out before you reach out. A first conversation is just that, a conversation, with no obligation. If you're worried about yourself or someone you love, call us on +27 21 541 0643 or fill in the contact form and we'll take the next step together.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions about drugs

What is a drug?

A drug is any substance that changes how your body or mind works. That covers legal substances like alcohol and caffeine, prescription medicines, and illegal substances such as cocaine, heroin and ecstasy. They all alter your brain chemistry.

When does drug use become an addiction?

It's less about how often you use and more about control. If you keep using despite the consequences, can't cut back when you try, or can't cope without it, that loss of control is the clearest signal.

What are the symptoms of drug addiction?

Common signs include needing more for the same effect, longer and darker comedowns, using to cope with anxiety or low mood, hiding your use, and continuing even as work or relationships suffer.

What are the risks of drug addiction?

Risks range from physical dependence and withdrawal to damage to your heart, liver and kidneys, memory problems and lasting anxiety. In some cases an overdose can be fatal, especially when substances are mixed.

How is drug addiction treated?

Treatment at Connection Mental Healthcare combines therapy, a structured environment and work on the issues underneath the use, alongside a medically responsible detox where it's needed.

Is drug addiction hereditary?

Genetics can raise your vulnerability to addiction in general, but they're never the whole story. Environment, mental health and the reasons you started using all play a part in how drug use develops.

“Help with drug addiction starts with one honest call.”
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