Pubdate: Tue, 25 Feb 2003 Source: Herald-Citizen (TN) Copyright: 2003 Herald-Citizen, a division of Cleveland Newspapers, Inc Contact: http://www.herald-citizen.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1501 Author: Jill Thomas, Herald-Citizen Staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) NATIONAL GUARD TACKLES 'METH' EDUCATION Anyone who has read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C. S. Lewis will remember a scary dish called 'Turkish Delight.' It was food so delicious that the eater would continue to eat and eat and eat ... until he died. Turkish Delight in the real world is called methamphetamine and it has eclipsed marijuana as the most popular drug in the US, has passed cocaine as the most dangerous and has put youngsters throughout the US at risk. "Of all the users nationwide of methamphetamine, 53 percent are under the age of 15," said Cpl. Michael King of the Tennessee National Guard in Cookeville. King is in the Counter Drug Force Division of the Guard and works with communities and law enforcement agencies to both eradicate drugs and educate the public to the dangers of drug use. The National Guard has several anti-drug programs that can fit into the school schedule such as "Be Like Me," a mentoring program in elementary school, and 'Ropes' -- a program of exercises that foster trust in friendship. In addition, the Guard makes presentations to schools, organizations and businesses. It even has a display trailer to take on the road. The programs are supported by a grant from Drug Enforcement Agency in Washington. The Counter Drug Force Division members are trying to reach as many people as possible with a simple message -- 'Methamphetamine Kills.' "Peer pressure is the biggest problem," King said. "Because the first time user usually gets a tremendous high, the drug can capture users after only one time. If kids fall prey to friends wanting them to 'party,' that can be tremendously dangerous. "Once you start, it is hard to stop. It has one of the lowest rehabilitation rates of any drug because it's so addictive mentally and physically. King called it a drug "without prejudice -- it doesn't care if you're in the low, middle or upper class," he said. "It has addicts who range from extremely young to grandparents." And once someone becomes addicted, they don't care about anything else. "Parenting stops," King said. "Kids no longer matter. Parents don't even think about their children. In Tennessee it's a felony to manufacture meth and parents are considered to be child abusers if they are involved in the manufacture of the drug." One of the reasons that parents forget about or are dangerous around their children is that a side-effect of methamphetamine use is hallucinations. "We have a video of a user who is convinced that he's being attacked by black helicopters -- each about one inch high," King said. Meth is so powerful a user will be unable to sleep for up to 16 days, when he or she will then 'crash' for one to three days. People lose their appetites with the drug, so some people have gotten addicted in an attempt to lose weight. "So people who want to party, people who need to stay awake are most at risk," he said. Coming down from a meth 'high' often results in violence as the user becomes desperate for more of the drug. "There is no peaceful withdrawal," King said. Users become so desperate for another 'fix' when they 'come down' from a high that they've been known to suck at sores on their body for the bit of meth that might be there. "Symptoms include paranoia, figetiness, body shakes, and terrible depression -- to a point where a user can become suicidal. Meth depletes the body of dopamine, a chemical in the brain that produces happy feelings. "We don't know yet if the body will reproduce dopamine. Right now scientists think the body has a stored surplus of dopamine that lasts a lifetime. Meth tricks the body into using up that supply." King said that how soon one becomes addicted to methamphetamine depends on the make-up of one's body. "It will take anywhere from one time to two weeks of use," he said. Meth does more than create hallucinations. It also destroys one's body, eating away at the brain, liver, kidneys and lungs. "The body ends up cannibalizing itself," King said. "Addicts are only expected to live five or six years after they start using methamphetamine." For people in Putnam County, the threat is pretty close. "Putnam County has one of the larger drug cultures," King said. "Especially because it's a college town. It's known to be doing a high traffic in drugs. "And there are counties in Middle Tennessee that are some of the leading manufacturers of meth in the US. Grundy County, for instance, is considered the eighth largest producer," he said. King hopes to educate people sufficiently to stop them from ever gambling with a drug that has such disastrous and immediate consequences. By working with kids, he hopes to help grown-ups. "This information may be enough to stop kids from starting drug use," King said. "But it's not our job to teach kids to 'just say no.' We're simply educating them about what drug use will do to them. "We'll leave the other to teachers, counselors and parents. We actually hope that kids will talk about the program enough to get parents to think about the problem." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D