Former OWN TV host Dr. Laura Berman is educating parents about the slang and emojis teens are using to secretly talk about drugs after losing her 16-year-old son to an overdose during the pandemic.
Dr. Laura Berman, a renowned relationship therapist, lost her son Sammy in February after he connected with a drug dealer on and bought Xanax that was laced with fentanyl without his knowledge.
jasa pembuatan company profile ‘does an amazing job trying to keep up with current slang and emojis over on their blog for the modern-day drugs and their various monikers.’
The grieving mother also recently shared a chart featuring the drug-related emojis that parents should know about, explaining: ‘Teens today talk about drugs in a language they’re fluent in — emojis.’
According to the chart, a snowflake stands for cocaine, a pill is code for heroin, and a tree represents marijuana.
Helping other parents: Berman recently shared a chart listing the emojis teens use to talk about drugs, including a snowflake for cocaine and a pill for heroin
Berman announced Sammy’s tragic death on Instagram in February, writing: ‘My heart is completely shattered and I am not sure how to keep breathing. I post this now only so that not one more kid die.’
She explained that Sammy was a ‘straight-A student’ and ‘getting ready for college’ when he overdosed in his bedroom.
Despite how closely she and her husband Sam Chapman watched him, he still managed to have the drugs delivered to their house. The teen’s drug experimentation ended up costing him his life.
Berman and Chapman opened up about the loss of their son on shortly after his death, recalling how they had previously discovered he was experimenting with marijuana.
‘Obviously, we came down very firmly, we had a zero-tolerance,’ Berman said. ‘We even got him a drug counselor that he met with. There was also a therapist that he met with once a week.’
The relationship expert has been using her platform to raise awareness for teen drug use by sharing guides to help parents decipher their kids’ coded messages
She added that they ‘regularly’ tested Sammy for drugs, but that didn’t stop him from connecting with a drug dealer on social media.
‘Laura went up to talk to him about his internship and discovered him lying on the ground on his back, passed away. Vomit coming out of his mouth in what they call the classic fentanyl death pose where the respiration slows down so much they pass out, they vomit and they choke on it,’ Chapman told Oz.
Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 80 to 100 times stronger than morphine, according to the . It has a number of street names, including China Town, Dance Fever, Goodfellas, Poison, and Tango and Cash.
Drug dealers often add fentanyl to other narcotics, particularly heroin, to increase the potency without the user knowing.
Berman, the former host of In the Bedroom with Dr. Laura Berman on OWN, has three children with Chapman, with Sammy being their middle child. Her eldest son Ethan was born in 1999 and their youngest son Jackson was born in 2005.
Family: Berman and her husband Sam Chapman have three sons, with Sammy being their middle child
Strict: The couple ‘regularly’ had Sammy (pictured as a boy) drug tested after they discovered he was experimenting with marijuana
Tragedy: Sammy had the drugs delivered to their house in the middle of the night, and Berman was the one who found him dead in his room
In February, a spokesperson for Snapchat said the company was ‘heartbroken’ by Sammy’s death and was working with police who were investigating whether the app was used to purchase the drugs.
‘We have zero tolerance for using Snapchat to buy or sell illegal drugs,’ the spokesperson said in a statement to DailyMail.com. ‘Using Snapchat for illegal purposes is firmly against our community guidelines and we enforce against these violations.
‘We are constantly improving our technological capabilities to detect drug-related activity so that we can intervene proactively. We have no higher priority than keeping Snapchat a safe environment and we will continue to invest in protecting our community.’
However, Berman and her husband don’t believe Snapchat has done enough to help them or other parents. During her interview with Dr. Oz, she recalled how she showed the police the drug dealer’s Snapchat and Twitter handles and being told the information likely wouldn’t help their case.
‘They said, “That’s great, but don’t get your hopes up because we don’t even bother to call the social media companies anymore because they use the privacy and free speech laws to not give us any identifying information,” she said.
‘The only thing they’ll do is take the profile down and then the dealer will just pop up two seconds later within a completely different profile name.’
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