“I don’t care if it’s heroin in my cup. It’s in my cup. F!#% you.” — Lil’ Wayne.
Along with many other reasonably intelligent rappers, Wayne has brought a new pimp cup into the limelight in the last decade. Stars like Lil’ Wayne, Three 6 Mafia and Lil’ Boosie have even been seen publicly carrying their new, trendy white Styrofoam cups filled with their new favorite concoction.
And it seems the main ingredient of this mixture has grown out of celebrity status into students’ hands at the University.
But just what is the main ingredient of Weezy’s favorite drink? You guessed it. Promethazine with codeine.
If you don’t know what promethazine (Phenergan, “purple drank,” “sizzurp” or “lean”) is, it is a non-narcotic prescription cough and nausea medication combined with codeine — an opiate. When consumed, it not only alleviates cough and nausea, but produces a sense of drowsiness and an opiate- induced euphoria.
Oh, and codeine is also a Schedule II narcotic with a “high potential for abuse,” according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
So just how is this super syrup getting on campus?
Is the beloved Weezy F Baby dealing it out of his tour bus?
Of course not. Wayne is in jail where he belongs. The precious syrup is coming from a place all too familiar to any student who has been sick.
It is coming from the Student Health Center.
With that said, I’m not about to bash the Student Health Center and ruin your connection, nor do I really care that the stuff is floating around campus. I just find a level of irony in the whole situation.
And the Health Center is not blind to the amount.
“[The Student Health Center is] aware of a growing trend of students abusing prescription medication,” Julie Hupperich, associate director of the SHC, said in an email. She also said the abuse is not the fault of “[the Student Health Center’s] clinicians’ medical expertise or prescribing protocol.”
Not satisfied, I interviewed 35 students about the matter in the Quad. I was met with people agreeing with the fact promethazine and codeine is prescribed on reasonable terms. Others claimed it’s possible to acquire without illness.
Some said “they had no idea” what I was asking about. Others smirked and told me they wouldn’t comment because of the nature of the subject. And one said, “Dude, I need to get to the frat house.”
One student agreed with Hupperich’s statements. Lauren Thibault, mass communication sophomore, said she was prescribed “antibiotics, steroids and promethazine for a ‘hacking’ cough” she had during the spring 2010 semester. Sounds reasonable.
But some students disagree.
Ryan Williams, graphic design sophomore, claims he has heard “[the syrup] is easy to get at the Student Health Center.”
Ben Cicero, English senior, stated he “met a guy at a party who was drinking ‘lean’ he got by telling the Health Center he smoked too many cigarettes during exam week and got sick.”
And to top it off, a former student who wished to remain anonymous told me, “I smoked a bunch of ciggies, told the doctor I was sick and got a big ole bottle from the Student Health Center.”
Although the accounts differ, the main idea is the medication is being prescribed to students, even some who don’t need it, in turn adding to the amount of the liquid present on campus.
So if you haven’t found the irony yet, it lies (or at least I think it does) in the fact that the powerful concoction is being prescribed to college students on campus. This isn’t the Adderall you buy from your girlfriend’s roommate during exam week to study or the pot you vaporize in your dorm. This is a bit bigger of a deal — actually a lot bigger.
People aren’t buying it from friends — it’s being prescribed.
“Lean” has caused deaths by respiratory depression (see: Pimp C and DJ Screw). It has also caused arrests (see: JaMarcus Russell).
But overall, don’t beat me up and tell me I ruined your campus connection. I’m not asking for anything to change, nor do I believe anything actually would, no matter what I write about the infamous “purple drank.” I simply find a bit of dark humor in the situation.
And on that note, assuming nothing changes, when released from prison, somebody should call up our boy Lil’ Wayne. We can be his Baton Rouge connection when the “pro-methazine fiend” returns.
Chris Grillot is a 19-year-old mass communication and English sophomore from New Orleans. Follow him on Twitter @TDR_cgrillot. —-
Contact Chris Grillot at [email protected]
The C-Section: Student Health Center now prescribing ‘purple drank’
August 26, 2010