In the social lexicon of Kashmir, izzat or honor is not merely a value; it is a governing principle. It regulates conduct, preserves reputations and often dictates silence where speech is most needed. Nowhere is this more tragically evident than in the realm of drug addiction, where the fear of dishonor has become an accomplice to suffering. For countless families, addiction is not confronted as a health crisis but concealed as a social blemish. The household becomes a chamber of denial, where truth is suppressed to preserve appearances. The question is no longer how to heal, but how to hide.
In my work as a mental health professional at a prominent rehabilitation centre in Kashmir, this pattern reveals itself with unsettling consistency. Individuals are often brought for treatment not when dependency first emerges but when it has already eroded academic pursuits, employment, relationships and self-worth. Many arrive carrying an exhaustion that predates the substance itself ; an exhaustion born of years spent hiding, lying and living under the weight of unspoken distress. Families frequently acknowledge that help was delayed not due to ignorance, but due to fear: fear of neighbors, relatives and the perceived permanence of social labeling.
I have sat across from parents who lower their voices when speaking of their ward, not because the room is unsafe but because secrecy has become second nature. I have seen this silence up close. Fathers avert their gaze, burdened by concern and the immense weight of honor. Mothers soften their voices when they speak of their sons and daughters as though utterance itself might render the affliction permanent. Pain is whispered not because it is insignificant, but because it is feared. Without assigning blame, many parents report delaying treatment under the belief that marriage would somehow correct the problem, that responsibility and routine would succeed where professional help had not.
More than once, families have admitted with visible regret that they knew help was needed years earlier but hoped the problem would resolve itself quietly. Substance dependence is frequently miscast as a defect of character rather than a disorder of the mind and brain. Such moral reductionism breeds condemnation instead of care.
Parents oscillate between shame and fury; communities respond with whispers instead of support. Professional intervention is postponed until the affliction becomes unmanageable. By then, the cost; psychological, relational, and existential has multiplied. It is not uncommon to encounter young men who speak less of craving and more of invisibility, less of intoxication and more of emotional suffocation. Their narratives reveal that the substance was never the first refuge; silence was. I have heard this not as theory, but in therapy rooms where young men describe feeling unseen long before they ever felt addicted.
The paradox is striking: in the pursuit of izzat, families sacrifice the very well-being that honor is meant to safeguard. A culture that prizes endurance over expression inadvertently legitimizes suffering. Silence, masquerading as dignity mutates into neglect. In clinical spaces, I often see that what families call patience is, in reality, prolonged fear dressed as restraint. Within therapeutic settings, it becomes evident that recovery is as much about restoring dignity as it is about abstinence. When families finally choose treatment, what often replaces fear is relief ; the quiet realization that seeking help has not invited disgrace but has interrupted further loss. Families frequently report that their greatest surprise was not rejection but the support they encountered once they stopped hiding.
Seeking help for addiction is not an act of disgrace; it is a declaration of responsibility. It signifies an ethical commitment to life, healing and accountability. The refusal to acknowledge addiction does not preserve social order; it corrodes it. Untreated substance use fractures families, destabilizes communities and perpetuates cycles of despair. Children inherit silence, and trauma quietly becomes generational. What is hidden does not disappear; it metastasizes. I have watched this inheritance form in younger siblings who learn early that some truths must never be spoken aloud.
Honor stands illuminated and protected while addiction remains hidden, marginalized and misunderstood. Yet what is forced into the shadows does not vanish; it persists and intensifies.The moral irony is that in protecting honor from public scrutiny, families often allow addiction to deepen its hold in private.Addiction does not respond to honor codes. Kashmir stands at a moral crossroads where the preservation of appearances must no longer outweigh the preservation of lives.
A society that confuses silence with honor risks sanctifying suffering and normalizing loss. The true measure of izzat lies not in how expertly pain is concealed, but in how decisively it is confronted. It is not the absence of visible wounds, but the courage to tend to them. To seek help is not to diminish one’s standing but to affirm one’s humanity. Addiction is not a moral collapse, it is a chronic relapsing health condition; biological, psychological, and social in nature and addressing it openly is not dishonor.
The writer is Counselling Psychologist. qureshipsy1113@gmail.com

