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The 3 Dumbest Ways I Tried To Get High In Jail

The 3 Most Ridiculous Ways I Tried to Get High in Jail (And Why They Failed)

CommentarySoberdogs10,481 viewsJul 7, 2022

Soberdog shares his raw, firsthand experiences of desperate and dangerous attempts to get high while incarcerated, revealing the harsh realities of addiction behind bars.

Addiction
Recovery
Prison Life
Homemade Hooch
Claritin D
Drug Abuse
Soberdogs
Certified Addiction Recovery Coach
Desperation
Methamphetamine Precursors
Jail
Opioid High
Banana Peel Smoking
Orange Peel Smoking
Sobriety
Addiction Recovery

Blurb

In this brutally honest video, K-Ruggs The Soberdog recounts three of the dumbest and most desperate ways he and others tried to get high while in jail. From brewing homemade hooch with bread and cafeteria juices, to abusing Claritin D pills for a miserable stimulant effect, to smoking dried banana and orange peels hoping for an opioid-like high — none worked and all left him feeling sick or worse. This candid storytelling highlights the extreme lengths addiction can drive people to, even in the harsh environment of incarceration.

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Highlighted Clips

1.

Introduction and Sobriety Disclaimer

K-Ruggs The Soberdog introduces the video and emphasizes that Soberdogs does not promote drug use, encouraging viewers to seek professional help.

2.

The Desperation of Addiction in Jail

Explains the intense craving for getting high in prison, comparing it to basic survival needs like food and water.

3.

Attempt #3: Homemade Hooch

Describes learning to make prison hooch from bread, sugar, and cafeteria juices, the process, and the disastrous results of drinking it.

4.

Attempt #2: Abusing Claritin D Pills

Details how inmates tried to get high by taking large amounts of Claritin D, the unpleasant stimulant effects, and the miserable experience.

Introduction and Context

K-Ruggs, known as The Soberdog, opens the video by setting a candid and raw tone about addiction and desperation in incarceration. He immediately clarifies that Soberdogs does not promote drug use but aims to share honest experiences from recovery and addiction. He invites viewers to support the channel and acknowledges the difficult mindset of addicts, especially in prison.

"During those times of desperation our brain is literally craving getting messed up craving that getting high is like the same pull of food and water."

This comparison to basic survival needs like food and water highlights the intensity of addiction cravings behind bars. K-Ruggs wants viewers to understand that the actions he’s about to describe come from a place of extreme desperation.

Key points:

  • Addiction cravings in prison can feel as urgent as hunger or thirst.
  • The video is a personal recount of three of the dumbest ways K-Ruggs and others tried to get high.
  • Emphasis on recovery and the reality of addiction, not glorification.

Homemade Hooch Disaster

The first story K-Ruggs shares is about making homemade alcohol, or hooch, in prison. A fellow inmate, a "raging alcoholic," taught them how to ferment bread, sugar, and cafeteria juices in peanut butter jars. The process involved letting the mixture "breathe" every couple of days.

"He had done it successfully... thousands of times but he was selfish with it... he would not sell it or trade it."

Despite the expert’s success, when K-Ruggs and a friend tried it themselves, the results were terrible. The hooch tasted off and made them feel sick. Desperate, they drank more of it hoping for a better effect, which only led to hours of vomiting.

"We each chug our last two... it ended with both of us over the toilet for about an hour and a half each hurling."

This story illustrates the dangers of homemade substances in prison—lack of proper fermentation and hygiene can cause serious illness.

Key points:

  • Homemade hooch made from bread, sugar, and juice.
  • The original maker was experienced but selfish.
  • Their batch tasted bad and caused sickness.
  • Drinking more out of desperation led to prolonged vomiting.
  • Highlights the risks of improvised alcohol in prison.

Claritin-D Abuse

Next, K-Ruggs discusses the misuse of Claritin-D, an over-the-counter allergy medication containing pseudoephedrine, a precursor chemical used in methamphetamine production. In prison, inmates could get large supplies of Claritin-D without supervision, unlike other meds that required daily witnessed ingestion.

"Somebody figured out if you eat like eight of these things you get messed up."

K-Ruggs, deep in addiction, tried taking seven pills at once. The result was a harsh, unpleasant stimulant effect with no pleasure—just a miserable, wired feeling lasting 16 hours.

"I had this like uppity alert awake feeling with zero pleasure at all... it was the most miserable and brutal feeling I have ever experienced."

He compares it to a cocaine comedown but worse, with twitching, inability to focus, and total misery.

Key points:

  • Claritin-D contains pseudoephedrine, a meth precursor.
  • Prisoners could stockpile it due to lax controls.
  • Taking multiple pills caused a miserable stimulant high.
  • No euphoria, just anxiety, restlessness, and misery.
  • K-Ruggs calls it the dumbest high he ever tried.

Smoking Banana and Orange Peels

The final and arguably most absurd method involved smoking dried banana and orange peels. Rumors circulated in county jail that drying and smoking these peels could mimic an opioid high.

"Taking a banana... leaving the banana peel on your windowsill... let it dry out and smoke it and you get a similar effect as an opioid high."

K-Ruggs and a friend tried this, rolling the dried peels into joints using whatever paper was available, including ripped Bible pages. The experience was terrible: the smoke destroyed their throats and gave them a brutal two-hour headache with no high.

"Absolutely destroyed our throat... it tasted so bad... and a two hour straight brutal headache."

This story underscores the extreme lengths addicts will go to, even trying completely ineffective and harmful methods.

Key points:

  • Rumor that smoking dried banana and orange peels produces an opioid-like high.
  • Used dried peels rolled in makeshift papers, including Bible pages.
  • Resulted in throat pain, bad taste, and a severe headache.
  • No intoxicating effect at all.
  • Demonstrates desperation and misinformation in jail.

Closing Reflection

K-Ruggs wraps up by reflecting on the desperation that drives addicts to try anything, no matter how stupid or harmful. None of these methods worked, and all left him feeling sick or miserable. Yet, in the moment, the craving was so strong he might have tried them again.

"Those are some of the desperate measures us addicts will go to to get high. None of them worked. All of them sucked."

This honest admission reinforces the brutal reality of addiction behind bars and the importance of recovery.

Key points:

  • Addiction desperation leads to dangerous, ineffective attempts to get high.
  • None of the three methods provided a real high.
  • The experience was physically and mentally punishing.
  • K-Ruggs emphasizes the importance of seeking help and recovery.

This video offers a raw, unfiltered look at the extremes of addiction in incarceration, told with K-Ruggs’ straightforward and personal storytelling style. It serves as both a cautionary tale and a testament to the harsh realities addicts face behind bars.

Key Questions

Homemade hooch is a type of prison-brewed alcohol made by fermenting bread, sugar, and cafeteria juices in a container like a peanut butter jar, allowing it to ferment over weeks.

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