Texas
Related: About this forumUT Austin Handed Out Drink With 'Opioid-like' Ingredient As Poison Calls Climbed
This is the viral gas station drink that landed me in rehab, McKenzie Wisdom announced, pointing to a little blue bottle labelled Feel Free. Wisdom is a wellness influencer, a Bali-trained yoga instructor, and Founder and CEO of Wise & Well. Her small business curates luxury wellness experiences to restore your body, mind, and spirit, according to their website. Today, she is the picture of health.
Three years ago, that was not the case. She says she was heavily addicted to Feel Free, taking anywhere from 6 to 7 bottles a day. She was spending a large portion of her income on the drink, and described how her life began to literally revolve around this substance, it was all I could think about. Like many addicts, she describes how she could not get out of bed without her drug of choice, and chose to enter rehab after hitting a breaking point: I was miserable while I was using, and I was miserable when I was going into acute withdrawals.
Wisdom is one of many health-conscious young people who say they developed an addiction after encountering Feel Free through wellness marketing. In her case, a favorite podcast promoted the drink as a social lubricant and alcohol alternativewith no mention of its active ingredients: a mixture of kava and kratom. Kratom contains 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH), a compound the Texas Department of State Health Services recently classified as opioid-like, noting it can be up to 13 times more potent than morphine. Despite these warnings, Feel Free gained mainstream traction across Texasincluding on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin, where the drink was distributed at student events under official sponsorship.
Botanic Tonics, the makers of Feel Free, began sponsoring Texas Athletics in January of 2022 via a deal brokered by Longhorn Sports Properties. On April 1st, 2023, a Feel Free booth was erected at the Longhorn Run, an annual tradition since 2010. Sana Haider, a student and runner that day, had the foresight to Google the active ingredients after taking a free sample that had been marketed as a study aid.
Read more: https://texassignal.com/ut-austin-handed-out-drink-with-opioid-like-ingredient-as-poison-calls-climbed/
Ray Bruns
(5,985 posts)get the red out
(13,958 posts)I am one of those people who doesn't support banning everything that anyone could misuse or become addicted to, but there needs to be a push to publicize problems with ingredients and that "Wellness" is a suspect term. The fact that the university didn't actually look into the product's ingredients before providing it to students would be gross negligence, but the added fact that the makers of the product are athletics sponsors seems criminal.
There might have been more investigation into the product if they wanted to sponsor the debate team though.
bonzotex
(873 posts)These Kratom products are addictive as hell. They are sold under misleading claims and users suffer horrible withdrawal symptoms if trying to quit cold-turkey. People sometimes start using it to calm urges for opiates and alcohol. They end up needing a detox and treatment regimen to get off the Kratom!
I fear we will just see an endless parade of unregulated addictive drugs like this as long as the producers can make money and politicians turn a blind eye.