NCTE Drug Awareness Play



Introduction

On 13th September 2025, Semester 3 B.Ed. students staged a play on Drug Awareness at Loreto College Auditorium under the NCTE initiative to spread social consciousness. The performance highlighted the physical, psychological, and social consequences of drug addiction while stressing the need for awareness, empathy, and rehabilitation. By presenting lived experiences on stage, the play urged the audience to reflect on the dangers of substance abuse and the importance of community support.

Performance Overview

The play began with a narrator describing the inner turmoil of a person caught in the grip of addiction. Subsequent scenes brought to life different aspects of this struggle. The physical toll was portrayed through frailty, trembling, and exhaustion, showing how substance dependence erodes the body. Emotional instability and psychological conflict were dramatized through shifts between euphoric highs and crushing lows, highlighting the mental strain of addiction.

Another sequence focused on societal stigma, where characters represented family estrangement, public judgment, and media stereotypes. These scenes emphasized how addicts are often shunned rather than supported, deepening their isolation.

The turning point arrived with the entry of a teacher figure who extended care instead of condemnation. This character symbolized awareness, guidance, and the possibility of recovery through understanding and support.

Key Perspectives

The performance addressed three major dimensions of addiction:
Physical Consequences: Decline of health, energy, and strength.
Psychological Effects: Emotional turbulence and mental distress.
Social Stigma: Judgment and alienation that worsen the crisis.
Together, these depictions conveyed a holistic view of addiction as both a personal and societal issue.

Conclusion

The play concluded with the message that drug addiction must be treated not as a crime or weakness, but as a challenge that requires awareness, compassion, and collective action. The final declaration, "Addiction is not the end-it is the beginning of a fight for life," reminded the audience of the need to replace stigma with support. The performance left a strong impression, encouraging everyone present to become advocates of drug awareness and rehabilitation.



Images