Pubdate: Fri, 28 Feb 2003 Source: Eastern Door, The (CN QU) Copyright: 2003 The Eastern Door Contact: http://www.easterndoor.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2464 Author: Greg Horn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) DRUG PROBLEM CONCERNS I'm writing this because of a conversation I had with some friends recently. The gist of the conversation was that we couldn't believe the extent of the drug problem in this community and how little some people think of this problem. The fact is there is a real problem in Kahnawake when it comes to drugs. As recently as ten years ago the biggest thing a high school student had to worry about was peer pressure to smoke marijuana. Now high school students have to worry about being pressured into snorting cocaine or smoking crack. No, I'm not being an alarmist or blowing the situation out of proportion. The fact is that there are a large number of people in Kahnawake doing cocaine and they are getting younger and younger. One Kahnawake parent recently told me that one of her daughters is in rehab because she was always out with other Kahnawake teens either smoking crack or doing cocaine. How could something like this happen? A few short years ago marijuana used to be the drug of choice for many Kahnawake teens. For many in Kahnawake smoking marijuana is bad enough, but wouldn't it be nice if that's the only drug-related thing we had to worry about? Now there are teens doing hard drugs such as cocaine and crack. When I was in high school the few people that smoked weed would usually say when asked, "Well, at least I'd never do coke." Now there are numerous teens and adults doing cocaine in its various forms who say, "Well, I'd never try heroin." I think that everyone in the community needs to wake up. The Mohawk Council of Kahnawake has declared that Kahnawake has a zero tolerance policy with regards to illegal drugs, but that has done nothing to curb the drug problem in the community. Is this an actual policy or is it just lip service to those community members who feel strongly about the drug issue? Parents need to talk to their children about the dangers of using drugs. Because that's exactly what it is: dangerous. People think that they can start doing drugs and stop whenever they want to, but it's not that simple. Once you're addicted to cocaine, your body actually needs the drug in order to function. Cocaine interferes with the natural recycling process of the chemical dopamine. The brain produces dopamine during pleasurable activities. Normally, dopamine is recycled back to the neuron which transmitted it. But when cocaine is present this process is blocked and there is a buildup of dopamine in the synapse which contributes to the pleasurable effects of cocaine. After continued use, a tolerance builds and more cocaine is needed to achieve the desired effects. Once you're addicted it's not as easy as just stopping taking the drug to overcome the addiction. Even years after not taking the drug, a former addict can begin having cravings and start using again as if he or she had never stopped. The fact is, cocaine ruins lives. Trying the drug even once is enough to create an addiction. Cocaine is even more dangerous when mixed with alcohol. When the two substances are mixed, the body converts them into cocaethyiene. This chemical has a longer duration of action in the brain and is more toxic than either cocaine or alcohol alone. The mixture of alcohol and cocaine is also the most common two-drug combination that results in drug-related deaths. Does that sound like it's not serious? The mixture of cocaine and alcohol is enough to kill you. That sounds pretty serious to me. It's high time that the community as a whole steps up and does something about the drug problem. It's not just the responsibility of the Peacekeepers, or the MCK, or Kahnawake Shakotiia'takehnhas Community Services. It's up to us all to put an end to the drug problem, because one way or another it affects us all. - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl