Pubdate: Wed, 19 Nov 2003 Source: Kitimat Northern Sentinel (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Kitimat Northern Sentinel Contact: http://www.northernsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2136 ADDICTIONS: GETTING IN AND GETTING OUT Dan O'Neill is the counsellor at Kitimat's Northwest Addictions Service office, located on the third floor of Century House. As such, he knows better than anyone the extent of addiction problems in our community. And in blunt terms he shares that knowledge with Sentinel readers. Alcohol and marijuana are called 'gateway drugs' for a reason, says Northwest Addictions Services counsellor Dan O'Neill. That's because those who become addicted to them "more often than not" move on to hard drugs. And, according to his caseload, that means cocaine. Describing cocaine as "rampant" in our community, O'Neill points out this is an ideal place for a coke dealer to set up because of the number of high paying jobs. "That's why it is so prevalent in Kitimat." That and the fact cocaine addicts infect others - "What you hang around with, you learn," he explains. O'Neill uses a car analogy to explain the difference between alcohol and cocaine. Alcohol, he says, is the Volkswagen, cocaine the Cadillac - once you drive the Caddy, your interest in the VW falls off. "And every time you get in the Volkswagen, you want to be in the Cadillac." Whichever you drive, the result is the same: "it brings out the lowest levels of human behaviour". People will sell things, young women prostitute themselves and young people commit crimes to get their drug of choice. After 14 years as a counsellor here, O'Neill has seen the pattern: high school aged kids starting out drinking and smoking pot, graduating to cocaine and ultimately ending up on the streets of Vancouver. Saying chemical dependency is ego-driven, he explains ego is nothing more than the mental picture a person has of him or herself. It all revolves around the individual's quest for "inner freedom" - which he describes as a sense of fulfillment or peace. "Happiness is an inside job," O'Neill stresses. "It has to come from within you, you don't get it from the external." Yet for some people ego tells them to do just that, to find that inner freedom on the outside. Some people try to consume their way to that freedom believing more is better. Others turn to sex. Still others to gambling. It's what O'Neill calls "counterfeit freedom". When all those attempts fail to deliver the sought after inner peace, they take the chemical path, be it alcohol or drugs. O'Neill explains the drug, whatever it might be, "creates a paradise for a short period of time", the illusion of having achieved "freedom". The sad irony is that in the pursuit of that freedom the users end up in slavery. Of course, there are those who will say they won't get addicted, that they can handle it. "That's ego talking," O'Neill says. And it's that same ego that, having got them in, keeps a lot of people from beginning the process of getting out by walking through his door - - especially males. (Next week, Getting Out) - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake