Boy Addictionz: Black

Let us stop asking, "What is wrong with you?" And start asking, "What happened to you?"

Gaming addiction is particularly pervasive. Studies show Black boys spend 40% more time on video games than any other demographic. When the world outside is dangerous, hostile, or indifferent, a headset and a virtual battlefield offer control. In Call of Duty , you can win. In real life, you are told you are already a suspect.

For decades, the image of the "addict" in mainstream media was white, rural, or suburban. But the opioid crisis, the crack epidemic backlash, and the mental health crisis have revealed a stark truth: Black boys are drowning in addictions that the system refuses to name, treat, or humanize. black boy addictionz

He puts it into a substance. He puts it into a screen. He puts it into the street.

According to data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), Black adolescents report lower rates of substance use than their white peers—yet they exhibit higher rates of addiction progression and overdose deaths once they start. Why? Because intervention rarely happens at the first sign of trouble. For a white teenager caught with pills, the response is often a therapist and a treatment center. For a Black boy, the response is a juvenile record and the school-to-prison pipeline. Let us stop asking, "What is wrong with you

There are people—Black men who walked your path, who sipped the same poison, who lost the same friends—waiting to catch you. They are not in the graveyard. They are in the community centers, the recovery houses, the poetry slams, the college dorms.

Because your addictionz do not get the final word. You do. The road ahead is long. We cannot arrest our way out of this crisis. We cannot shame our way out. We cannot pray it away without also providing beds, therapists, and unconditional love. In Call of Duty , you can win

Healing is not about becoming "hard." Healing is about allowing the soft parts to breathe again.