Pubdate: Sun, 17 Aug 2003
Source: Daily Tribune, The (Philippines)
Copyright: 2003 The Tribune Publishing Co., Inc.
Contact:  http://www.tribune.net.ph/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2973
Section: LIFE
Contact  http://www.tribune.net.ph/
Fax: (632) 521-55-22
Copyright: 2003 The Tribune Publishing Co., Inc.

ON A HIGH

Table Talk (Monthly Forum) Condensed from a group interview by Ro-Charmaine 
M. Pidal Lunch and venue sponsored by Tin Hau Restaurant, Mandarin 
Oriental, Manila

They have all had a trip with the devil.

Their entry point was either small doses of cough syrup or some grass 
puffed with the barkada. What were experimental trips became a habit of 
sorts, and as it became more frequent, the rituals increased -- and smoke 
was almost always accompanied by alcohol and sex.

While the puffing continued -- once a week, twice a week, everyday -- new 
trips emerged to try, like the most popular ice. Still they denied their 
addiction: "We're no druggies, we're just fine, peace, man!"

Together a post-modern addictions therapist, Carlos "Cass" Syyap of 
Recovery Circle Foundation Inc., three brave souls came forward to tell 
their stories in a no holds barred encounter with the Life staff for this 
month's TABLETALK at the Mandarin Oriental's Tin Hau Restaurant. In the 
interest of privacy, we have ommitted their surnames.

Cherry's story

Mine was a dysfunctional family. I was never loved. I was yearning to be 
loved. I was deprived of it. That's why I took drugs. The barkada 
introduced me to it. It started when I was in college. I was 20 then. 
Hanggang sa magtuloy-tuloy. Until I dropped out of school.

My parents learned that I was taking drugs, because I seldom went home. I 
enjoyed the nightlife. Rain or shine, I was in the disco. That time, we 
were taking cough syrup. Wala pa 'yang shabu. There was cocaine, but it was 
very expensive. It went on for three to four years. One day, my father 
bluffed me. He said we were going to Bicutan for a check-up. I was high at 
the time. Kaya sama naman ako. Pagdating namin dun, iniwanan na n'ya 'ko. 
So I cried when he left. I saw my father leave my things with the rehab's 
staff.

Huli na nung mahimasmasan na ko. I was confined for rehabilitation in 
Bicutan. I had to wake up four o'clock in the morning. At five o'clock, we 
had to exercise. I had to follow rules or else there would be punishment. 
They would make us carry pails of water up and down the stairs. Imagine, 
girls carrying full pails of water to and from the second floor!

How was life inside the rehabilitation center?

Cherry: It was hell. I stayed there for six months. I never thought a place 
like that existed. My father would visit me every weekend. I told him I was 
having a hard time inside the rehab, because I already had scoliosis then. 
Kaso sabi n'ya talagang ganyan, you have to follow the rules.

A nice thing happened though -- we had Bible studies every week. I found 
the Lord there in Bicutan. That was the time I really prayed for the Lord 
to help me. It must have worked, they got me as an office girl. Nalaman 
nila na nagta-trabaho ako dati, kaya mas maganda na ang privileges ko. 
Salamat! Nawala na 'yung pag-iigib ko.

While I was in Bicutan, I didn't have privacy. Kasi, sabay-sabay kami 
naliligo. Hindi 'yung isa-isa kayo. Tapos, bibilangan ka pa habang 
naliligo. Kailangan limang tabo lang ng tubig ang magagamit mo.

I was praying for God to make my stay there lighter, more bearable. It was 
there that I experienced doing a hundred push-ups for a violation.

One time, we were caught smoking because of the cigarette butts we had left 
in the room. One of the supervisors, we call them Mummy, saw the butts. You 
know what she did? She collected all the butts, tapos pinakain sa 'min. 
Kaya ako na ang naunang ngumuya. After that, I rushed to the comfort room 
and brushed my teeth. When I came back, I saw the others chewing the butts 
I had chewed full of saliva.

How did you recover from chemical dependence?

Cherry: After six months, I was released. I was thankful for I knew Jesus 
Christ there as my Lord and Savior. With the Bible study we had there, I 
realized his presence in my life. At the time, sa kanya lang ako kumapit. 
But after a month, I went back on using drugs. This time, shabs naman. I 
was still searching for somebody to love me. I went from one man to another 
because I was really searching for that love. But I was only used and 
abused. It was all due to the deprivation of that love I was searching for. 
After a year, I felt God working in my life. You know what He did? He made 
me feel so rotten inside. I felt I was decaying inside. For three months, I 
was out. I started going to Grace Bible Church. I recovered from drugs and 
surrendered myself to Christianity. Through prayers, I was able to fight 
the temptation of going back to drugs. I consulted a doctor once in a 
while, and he gave me some medicines to help me cope with the withdrawal 
symptoms.

Chris' story

Separated ang parents ko. I didn't have a smooth relationship with my 
siblings. I started using drugs when I was in high school. But I started 
drinking and smoking when I was in first year high school. Later on, I used 
the weed. Pag high ka sa weed, it's either kain ka ng kain o tawa ka ng 
tawa. Ganun naman 'yun, peace brothers! Naging parte na siya ng ritual ko 
after school hours. When I would feel I was getting a heavy dose, I would 
always remind myself not to panic, it's just organic.

I got hooked on cough syrup also. When you use cough syrup, kailangan may 
kasabay na alcohol,

A dependent is a person who continues to use or indulge despite negative 
consequences. That's the simplest definition of dependency. Kung walang 
negative consequence, technically, he hasn't crossed the line.

para mas swabe ang amats. Ako 'yung taga-bili sa pharmacy kasi ako daw yung 
mukhang inosente. May reseta naman ng doktor. Hindi naman ako pinaghinalaan 
na nagtuturok nung high school, maliit kasi ako. Alam na ng mga kasama ko 
yung dapat isulat sa reseta, kaya na rin gayahin yung pirma ng doktor.

We had a ritual we called "complete sentence." Andyan na 'yung subject and 
predicate. Ang subject namin, e, 'yung weed, predicate naman 'yung kasabay 
namin na Ginagamit. We would take 60 ml na cough syrup, tapos magsisindi na 
kami ng marijuana. Iinom na ng konti. Tapos 'yung Amphile naman. Hanggang 
naging habitual. But I never considered that as an addiction. During that 
time, okay lang kasi wala pang bumibigay sa grupo. There was a time I 
wasn't using as much drugs, I was third year college then. Kaso dumating 
'yung shabu.

Nag-high school ako sa Mindanao. Dumating ako sa point na pumunta kami sa 
Osamis City para bumili ng mas murang drugs. Doon gramo-gramo ang bentahan, 
sa Iligan kasi mas mahal na. Hanggang dumating sa punto na nagamit na namin 
yung pagiging business-minded namin. Nagtulak kami para matustusan ang 
bisyo namin.

Dahil nagluko nga ako nung high school, I took the DECS classes. I came to 
Manila and studied college. When I was in first year, pahinga na ko sa 
drugs. Wala na talaga. Kaso nu'ng nagtagal, di na nga ako tumitikim ng 
kahit ano maliban sa shabu. Napabayaan ko uli 'yung pag-aaral ko, di na ako 
nakakapasok.

But I wasn't your typical junkie na payat, malalim ang mata. Good boy 'yung 
dating ko, malinis ang damit, plantsadong-planstado. I had a double 
personality. Sa bahay mabait at tahimik ako, pero paglabas ng bahay 
tumitira sa isang sulok.

Pag sa bisyong ito, marami kang makikilala. Mga anak ng influential na tao, 
pero pag nasa session, pare-pareho na kayo. Anak ka man ng kung sinong opisyal.

For three days, we would not sleep, we would not go home. Nagsusunog ng 
pera. I was just lucky that when I felt I was having too much, I would stop 
for awhile. Ang iba kasi, nagsa-snap na lang sa session. Makikita mo 
naggi-gitara na lang sa isang tabi. May mga namatay na rin dahil 
nasobrahan. May mga nagdadala na ng tatay sa pot session. Mawawala na lang 
sa sirkulasyon. Malalaman mo na lang na-ibenta na nila yung bahay nila.

During that time, I was demanding for extra atttention and love. I became 
selfish. When I used rugby, dun ko nakita yung puno tumawid sa kalsada. 
Grabe 'yun!

How did you recover from chemical dependence?

Chris: My sister introduced me to the Gospel. Doon nag-start mabago lahat. 
Dati, ang philosophy ko, philosophy ni Bob Marley. I started attending 
Bible studies and felt the sincerity of the people around me. I became more 
curious learning the words of God. Later on, by reading the Bible, I 
understood salvation and personal acceptance. I had to endure the 
withdrawal syndrome. Although in my case, it wasn't physical, I just got 
more depressed. Kaya naging alcoholic naman ako! Addiction pa rin. I 
countered my depression every time I had a drink. Pero patikim-tikim pa rin 
ng drugs. But now, I totally quit. Even smoking and drinking. Now, I'm a 
sports buff.

Winston's story

I didn't have any reason at all; I don't blame my parents for my addiction. 
Wala lang. Kasi boring e. Everything was just...so...boring. I didn't have 
problems at home. Kaya nu'ng mauso 'yung skateboard, I was there. Gimik, I 
was there. Drugs, boom! I was everywhere!

The number one thing you learn when you're into drugs is lie. When you lie, 
bida ka pa sa barkada. Then, you get so far, you don't know who you are. 
You start to make up an image of yourself. You lose friends and gain new 
ones, except that the only way to strengthen your friendship is to share 
money to get drugs. Drugs pa rin. Ang nakaka-awa 'yung mga lonely people, 
who think that the best thing that happened in their lives was shabu. Sila 
'yung mga hirap makalabas sa bisyong ganun. In my case, it's my wife who's 
helping me.

I made the mistake of drawing the line between popularity and success. When 
I was in high school, I used to leak out tests. I made money out of it in 
college. I found a way to support my habit by moving things around, so to 
speak. I'm not gonna say what things I moved around. Tapos, dun sa world na 
ganun sa mga shady dealings, there's the presence of drugs. I didn't move 
around drugs. I didn't push free loaders, no. I used the drugs to soften up 
other people, to get me confidence. The sorriest thing I ever did was to 
introduce people to drugs. If you ask my friends and say who taught you, 
they'd say it's Winston. For me, it felt so good then. When I started, I 
didn't know what I was doing. Basically, sometimes it wakes me up at night 
and for no reason, I would run after my breath. Because I would remember 
the lives na isinama ko dito. But from time to time, hell, I think, if they 
didn't learn it from me, they would have learned it from someone else. But 
the fact is they learned it from me.

How did you recover from chemical dependence?

Winston: I'm still in the process. To tell you honestly, four months ago I 
smoked a joint with her brother (referring to his wife Gina, seated next to 
him). (Laughter) We were fighting most of the time then. I really got this 
close to the devil. Two months ago, I scored and I burned it. If you're 
talking of recovery, you're not talking to the right person. I'm still 
there. Delikadong-delikado pa ko ngayon. When you say ex-user and a user 
drinking? No, you're not two hours away from a score. Not even an hour away 
from a score. What I do now is tell my friends that I stopped already. I'm 
33, and if I keep on doing this, I might not see my grandchildren. I'm 
thinking about that now. I'm sober. When you're high, you don't think about 
that. You don't even think of the next six hours. When you're high, you 
just think of what's the next score and how to cover up your last score or 
how you got your last score.

'Yung demography -- I mentioned in an article I wrote for Tribune -- if you 
will make a nation of users, you'll have a president, a congressman, a 
senator, everybody! A priest, a nun. You'll have a 14-year-old, 
10-year-old. The youngest I've met was eight and the oldest was 60-plus. He 
learned it when he was 15. Sabi niya, pampabata. P--, mamatay ka rin. Sa 
Ilocos ko siya na-meet dati. There was a ship na hinarang ng coast guard 
because of drugs. I read it in the newspaper. When I asked my friends, he 
confirmed they had it. That was 1991. So I went to Ilocos. For only P100, I 
bought some, nasa isang lata ng langis, tapos may kalakalawang pa. 
Hinugasan ko sa tubig. May mga matatanda na may posisyon sa barangay, sila 
yung gumagamit. It was like a privilege for them. I don't know where they 
are now.

When I stopped taking shabu, I cut on drinking. But not so much. The first 
time I met Cass, I was asking him kung pwede ba mag-cheat. (Laughter) But 
it has something to do with your moderation and your desire to stop. I may 
be talking like this now, but sometimes I get the urge to smoke and it's 
really, really powerful sometimes. All you've got to do is to keep yourself 
busy.

Gina: Last year, we were fighting really bad. He would do things that I 
didn't know about. So the first thing that would come to mind was 'he might 
be taking drugs again.' When I couldn't stand it anymore, I went to Cass. 
He told me it was co-dependency that I was going through. When you are 
involved with someone who takes drugs, maybe the wife, or a family member, 
you are the co-dependent, because you suffer along with them.

Winston: Sorry.

Gina: Actually, I was called back for a couple of seminars, but I didn't 
go. I had just started with my new job. But I wish....I should have gone 
there. It would have taken away a lot of pain and anger. I don't know what 
he's into and that was hard. Talagang traumatic. I was having a hard time, 
too. Kasi napa-praning ako. He just had a drug test. Just to put 
everybody's mind at ease.

Winston: Pero ang pinakamahirap 'yung mabawi ang image. Akala ko, nung 
gumagamit ako, ang galing-galing ko magtago. 'Yun pala pinagbibigyan ka 
lang. Hindi ko na-realize 'yun. Omigod, ang yabang-yabang ko pa. 
Pinapaniwalaan mo lang yung gusto mong paniwalaan.

Cherry: I was traumatized. I would wake up from bad dreams. Talagang takot 
na takot ako. It was because of the rehab.

Winston: I have bad dreams din. I would wake up in the middle of the night, 
dreaming of using. You wake up and you can't sleep. Grabe!

Gina: What do you do?

Winston: You don't wanna know. (Laughter)

Gina: After you wake up?

Winston: You don't wanna know. (Laughter) I do something and I go back to 
sleep. (Laughter)

Tribune to Gina: Was there ever a time you tried it yourself?

Gina: No, no, I'm scared!

Tribune: What can you tell us about your encounters and interviews with 
people who use drugs? What was the first drug they used?

Gina: It varies, e. They started with smoking, drinking. But no one starts 
with hard drugs. From my interviews, it's a progression. One common thing 
is the social aspect, interaction. Coming from there, they do it by themselves.

What constitutes addiction? When can you say someone is already an addict?

Cass Syyap: How do we know chemical dependence? This is the politically 
correct way to address them, because of the trauma stuck with the word 
"addict." People in the First World try to avoid the word "addict." The 
word they use is dependent -- dependent to chemicals.

For chemically dependent people, there is no stereotype anymore. You can be 
this yuppie, a graduate of a good school and belonging to a good family, or 
you can be a less fortunate person who is buying it from a stable career. 
It's not even based on the frequency. For example, in alcoholics, often 
people would say he's an alcoholic because he drinks everyday. Another 
would say he's an alcoholic because he drinks once a month. As a therapist, 
I would look deeper. Because you may have a person who takes a glass of 
wine everyday; compare that to a person who drinks once a month, but 
finishes a bottle of vodka and crashes the car and beats up his wife when 
he gets home. So whose the alcoholic? The one who drinks everyday or the 
one who drinks once a month? Who's the one with a problem? What's the 
definition then?

A dependent is a person who continues to use or indulge despite negative 
consequences. That's the simplest definition of dependency. Kung walang 
negative consequence, technically, he hasn't crossed the line. So what is a 
social drinker and what is an alcoholic? When drinking leads to negative 
consequences. Anything that's negative. It can be a hysical or medical 
problem; car or vehicle accident; weight loss; bad complexion. Emotional 
problems may lead to legal problems, an arrest, fights within the marriage, 
fights within the family. Spiritual problems include turning your back on 
God, values or morals. Or financial problems: running out of money or 
issuing bad checks.

It's like when you indulge in a lot in food: if it doesn't result in any 
negative consequence, then it's not addiction. You apply that to alcohol, 
drugs, or gambling or whatever, and you would see magkakagulo 'yung tao. 
It's just a matter of time. If he progresses and gets out of control and 
reaches the bottom. The bottom is when your world is closing in already. 
Iba-iba na, nagkakapatong-patong na. May problema na sa pera, may problema 
na sa asawa, may depression na. Because addiction really will affect most 
aspects of your life -- biological, physical, medical... And as an 
addiction therapist, that's what we used to see. We cannot trace it to 
self-report alone because there's the word denial. So we need collateral 
information from the family, employer, best friend. Usually, when we meet 
the dependent, he would tell you, 'I don't have a problem.' When I say, can 
we meet the family? Often, the wife or the family has a different story. 
He's saying this thing, she's saying this thing. At that point, I cannot 
base it solely on the report of the dependent, because part of the 
addiction, like you say, you have to go on a denial stage or minimizing 
your consequences. So that it appears not so bad.

Why does a person resort to that? Because of the shame and the trauma. It 
is easier to admit almost anything aside from addiction. It's easier to 
admit that I didn't finish school, my marriage failed. But once you say, I 
have a problem with drugs, society, automatically, shuts down on you. Ang 
tingin sa'yo outcast. Mas malala ka pa sa may leprosy. When you look at it 
that way, it's natural for a dependent to be in denial. I don't want 
anybody to look down on me. So what happens? I will pretend that I am okay. 
I will dress up in my designer clothes and get to work. But the other side 
of me is already suffering.

And it's not only on the part of the dependent; it's also on the part of 
the parents or co-dependents. To admit that my husband is like this, or my 
son is like this, but I'm the mother or I'm the dad, and I am a successful 
businessman, e 'yung anak ko nagkagan'to na. So what happens? Let's not 
talk about it. Let's sweep it under the rug. It's still the case, 
unfortunately. They (parents) don't want to loosen up until they reach a 
point that they don't have any choice because the person is arrested or 
nakapatay ng tao, nakasagahasa. For a person or a family in denial, only a 
situation like that can wake them up. That's when education comes in. If we 
can educate them to stop looking the situation like that, we can actually 
break the denial.

What causes chemical dependence and how do you get out of it?

Cass: A lot of it is based on what's called a behavioral model, where a 
person does drugs dahil walang disiplina. Hindi kayang magdisiplina ng 
sarili niya. Therefore, walang internal fortitude. If you look at it that 
way, who wants to admit they're palpak? From the behavioral model, you're 
either weak or bad, yun ang belief nila. Kaya you become addicted because 
you don't have that capacity to say "no" and you have some criminal tendencies.

The next model is the psychosocial, which is the belief that a person 
becomes addicted because of cultural and environmental factors, like broken 
homes, economic chances in life and peer pressure. You can see it is more 
humane because you take the focus away from the dependent. Kaya hindi nila 
kayang ituwid ang buhay nila is because of external factors. What kind of 
home did he grew up in? What was his educational level? To the point of 
looking at the steroetype of some cultures that are more prone to 
addiction. This model takes away the shame and the guilt from the 
dependent. But it creates a blame on external factors. 'I wouldn't be like 
this if my parents didn't separate' or 'siguro di ako nagkaganito if dad 
gave me a capital for my business.' It is effective in taking the blame 
away from the dependent, but it puts the blame on the rest of the society 
in general. So we've been looking for another one.

Some time in 1940, a relatively new theory came up. Two people came accross 
what's called the medical or disease model. It was born out of the need to 
look deeper into a person and why addiction happened. And they found out 
that addiction can be traced from a genetic pattern. There is a genetic 
pattern much like hypertension or diabetes. Napapasa pala siya from one 
generation to another. At least, in terms of chemical addiction. Put it 
this way, if you look at the history of your family, you will see the 
obssessive pattern in the people within the family. There should be an 
uncle, an aunt, a cousin, lolo, or lola, who had this tendency. Any of them 
may have some form of obssessive behavior. The study became controversial 
because the society wasn't open to it. But with clinical research some time 
in the '70s, it slowly became part of genetic science. So they were already 
able to see the pattern. I have here an article stating that "addiction is 
a brain disease with biological patterns." It's not only about discipline. 
It's not the only one that causes the problem. [For a copy of the article, 
please email  or call the numbers below.]

Last year, I had eight female patients. Five of those patients have 
complete families, meaning they have moms and dads. Three are from broken 
families. So hindi lang pamilya ang pinagmumulan ng problema. Kasi mas 
marami pa rin ang may buong pamilya sa mga nagiging chemical dependent. If 
it is economics naman, how come it affects both the poor and the very rich? 
Addiction respects no environment or cultural factor, because it's an 
illness. Like cancer, you can be rich or poor, pag ikaw nagka-kanser na, 
nagka-kanser ka.

The way out is to manage the illness. Go into rehabilitation, a humane way 
of rehabilitation, like the one we advocate in the Recovery Circle 
Foundation. For an individual under rehab, you have to be more vigilant. 
Stop going to bars, don't smoke and keep expressing your feelings. 
Addiction respects no age, race, economic standing and educational 
attainment. Pag ikaw natamaan nun, that's it. Addiction could hit anybody.

(The Recovery Circle Foundation Inc. offers a 45-day rehabilitation program 
for dependents, which integrates physiological, psychological, social and 
spiritual therapies. For more information, contact the Foundation at 
telephone numbers 912-7929 or 9115934. Visit their offices at 25 Kingsville 
St., White Plains, Quezon City or their Web site at 
www.recovery-circle.org. E-mail eosregalado.pacific.net.ph.)
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart