Pubdate: Thu, 15 Jul 2004 Source: Salt Lake City Weekly (UT) Copyright: 2004 Copperfield Publishing Contact: http://www.slweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/382 Author: Carolyn Campbell MIND OVER METH Addicts Struggle To Overcome Utah's Drug Of Choice. Dan Swenson considered himself dead the day he used the wrong syringe. While trying to extract ephedrine to make methamphetamine, he accidentally injected himself with epinephrine. He recalls, "I couldn't hold still and couldn't move, either." Swenson yelled for his brother. Then he vomited blood puddles. Flanked by two paramedics, he walked out of his parents' house. Three minutes after the mistaken injection, he lost consciousness on an ambulance gurney. "In my opinion, I was dead," he says. Swenson, 26, lay comatose for five days. His sister made travel plans to attend his funeral in Salt Lake City. After a six-day hospitalization, he required kidney dialysis. "They said I'd be on it for life, but I got off dialysis in five weeks." Five months after leaving the hospital, Swenson ended his nine-year drug habit. He quit using on his own, then went to a drug treatment camp for four months. From his first drug use at 15, he says he knew there was a way out of addiction through 12-step programs sponsored by organizations such as Alcoholics Anonymous and the LDS Church. But he wasn't ready to quit. A month after leaving the treatment camp, he smoked marijuana twice, then returned to using meth. Heidi Markham (not her real name) hoped to start a new life. Planning to leave the state, she pulled her daughter, Chelsea, out of school and rented a hotel room near the Salt Lake City airport. She had heard rumors that people were looking for her but never guessed that life as she knew it would end within hours. On a constant meth binge, Markham didn't really care if she was alive or dead. When she answered a knock at the hotel room door, five DEA agents stood there. Catching sight of a meth pipe in the room, they arrested Markham. "For someone who never even had a moving violation, it was terrible," she says. "Yet part of me felt a small level of relief." She suspects a hotel clerk, noting the amount of luggage she moved into the room, thought she was setting up a meth lab and called authorities. And she believes that if the agents hadn't confronted her that night, she wouldn't be alive today. "I had reached the point where nothing mattered. My addiction completely engulfed me." As she and her daughter sat on the couch waiting for Child Protective Services to arrive to take Chelsea, the 6-year-old looked up at her mom. She asked, "Are you going to jail?" When Markham said yes, Chelsea clung to her and began to sob. Eight years before her arrest, Heidi Markham had never even tried methamphetamine. But while she had decided she could no longer enable the addiction of her boyfriend, Dave, he repeatedly urged her to "try it just one time." Markham finally agreed. She describes the high she experienced as the most intense, happy and amazing feeling ever. She was elated. She told Dave she loved him and thought he was the greatest. "It's never the same as that first high," she says today. "You end up chasing that sensation constantly." Subsequent highs nearly reach the same peak--but not quite. "The fact that it's almost enough drives you to want more," says Markham. In the beginning, she tried meth a few times, and then stopped. When her boyfriend didn't quit with her, she ended the three-year relationship. She discovered her pregnancy two weeks later. Playing Mind Games Markham didn't plan to use meth again after the first time she quit. But the interval after Chelsea was born was a dark place. She felt lonely and depressed about being overweight. Her work as an international freight shipper earned her $55,000 a year but consumed lots of hours. There were calls at 4 a.m. from Japan and Europe. Baby Chelsea was 15 months old when a former friend of Markham's ex-boyfriend Dave--also a meth addict--visited her house. She began using again, alone at home. She didn't party. Her family and co-workers didn't know about her meth use. "It was a release for me. I felt numb. I had this great life, but secretly I was a drug addict." Markham admits she played mind games, thinking she wasn't becoming addicted because she only used on occasion, then left meth alone for months. Eventually, it crept up to using every weekend. Methamphetamine appears to appeal to young women in the short term because it provides the energy needed to take care of her children, maintain a home and keep working. Too, meth is an anorectic drug that results in weight loss, hence its nickname, the "Jenny Crank" diet drug. In Markham's case, all her pregnancy weight plus more pounds--70 in all--dropped away. Burnt out from work, Markham quit her job. She and Chelsea moved home with her parents, a shift she considers her greatest mistake. "I said I wanted to look for other employment and reevaluate where I was at. But my parents were there to watch Chelsea, and I started going out more." Her addiction grew to be "horrendous." "It was not daily --it was multiple times daily." As her addiction continued, Markham took "a little retail job" and went on welfare. "I bought food with food stamps and had nothing else to pay for because I lived at home--so I threw it all toward drugs." Markham found herself befriending several heroin addicts, in part because she perceived they didn't share the paranoia and delusions she experienced with meth-heads. During their relationship, her meth-addicted boyfriend consistently accused her of cheating and meeting someone else--even if she went to a 7-Eleven for five minutes. On one occasion, Dave kidnapped her and knocked her unconscious. When she revived, they were in Central Utah. In hopes of escape, she began to write his license number on a gas station toilet stall. He burst into the stall and ordered, "Let's go. Now." On that same trip, he dropped her off alone in a field at night, saying he would return for her. "I was in such shock, I didn't know if I wanted him to come back," she recalls. "Meth makes you so delusional that your reality isn't real. While heroin addicts have their own ailments, I felt they were safer." Kevin Taylor, deputy director of the Salt Lake County DEA Metro Narcotics Task Force, who has worked in narcotics enforcement for 25 years, has seen meth users become delusional and paranoid. He recalls an instance where a meth addict, when pursued by police, killed himself when he realized he couldn't escape. Another Addict's Tale Dan Swenson's story echoes elements of Markham's. Like her, he lost weight, dropping 50 pounds after three months of meth use. His began using drugs when he was 15, a time when he felt constantly depressed and suicidal. He perceived that he would smoke weed, drink and do drugs the rest of his life. "I thought the stuff was great. It numbed me enough to deal with my parents, friends and society." Glen Lambert, executive director of Odyssey House, says that drug addicts are rarely "pure addicts" who use only one drug but are prone to cross-addictions. Markham eventually used Ecstasy in addition to methamphetamine. Swenson was a heavy LSD user from age 15 to 19, during which time he also partook of mushrooms, marijuana, alcohol and barbiturates. He somehow pieced together several high school credits. Though he didn't graduate at 18, that was when he moved on to hard drugs--meth, cocaine and heroin. Also like Markham, Swenson was able to stay employed in the early years of his addiction. He originally financed his habit through full-time construction jobs. After a day of framing, drywall and finish work, he stayed awake all night using drugs. "Once I started using meth intravenously, I had it with me at work and used it whenever I could," he says. Though meth isn't considered an expensive drug, Swenson's habit skyrocketed to where he used enough to cost $150--then $300--a day. Taylor explains that, in Utah, meth usually costs between $80 and $90 a gram. While addicted, Swenson eventually used more than a gram a day. "My addiction started slow, then ate away at my life," he says. Swenson reached the point where he literally slept for a week at a time. "I tried to force down food. I couldn't do much of anything. I wouldn't get out of bed again until I knew there was some way I could get more drugs. I was ashamed at what I was doing to myself and didn't want to answer to it." He says he experienced a moral dilemma over how to support his habit. "By then, I really wasn't an employable person. I only held jobs for two weeks to three months. Each time, after a while, I just stopped going in to work." He pawned his tools. He forged and bounced checks. He told his family whatever they needed to hear to lend him money. "Ten times out of 10, as soon as I had money, I bought drugs. I had lost control." Even though his Dodge Dakota was paid for, he lost it when he took out a loan against it that he couldn't repay. When police pulled him over, Swenson had no valid license, no insurance, a fake sticker and an unregistered truck. Death and Hope A pivotal tragedy in Markham's life involved James, a heroin addict she viewed as a big brother. Both she and Chelsea grew close to the man she still views as a wonderful person who happened to struggle with addiction. She feared he would do too much heroin, nod out and forget to breathe. After six months of sobriety, he decided to use again one night when Markham planned to visit. She remembers, "He called multiple times, saying, `come over, come over.' During our last conversation, I thought I lost the phone signal." James didn't answer when she knocked on his door. She and a friend climbed up to look in a window. They saw him slumped over, still holding his cell phone, blue, cold and dead. "He overdosed, vomited on himself and died," says Markham. The fact that James kept trying to call her during his last moments was haunting. She experienced post-traumatic stress disorder. Though her parents didn't know about her addiction, they were tired of her behavior. She and Chelsea moved in with another friend who was a drug dealer and her supplier. Markham used a lot of Ecstasy. For a moment, she'd feel OK. For months after her friend's death, Markham says she was on a meth binge that seemed unending. Then she'd come down, her mind racked by images of finding James. She says she didn't neglect Chelsea in the sense that she was always bathed and fed, but admits to totally abandoning her emotionally. "She had her Xbox and Play Station. She was entertained, but definitely not by me," Markham says. After her arrest, Markham was court-ordered to the Odyssey House program for women and children. Lambert explains that pregnant women or those with up to three children may enter the treatment program. "We treat them as a unit, offering a full course of assessments in individual, group and family therapy to address parent and child interaction skills. They learn to have the ability to set boundaries to enter and maintain healthy relationships." Markham and her daughter have undergone a lot of therapy together. They examined Chelsea's sorrow, answered her questions and addressed Markham's neglect, including an incident when Chelsea witnessed a male friend of Markham's injecting meth in their apartment. Chelsea asks Markham pointed questions, such as, "Why wasn't I enough for you?" Markham says, "It breaks my heart that my daughter wasn't enough to keep me off drugs, but at the time, she wasn't." Today, Swenson finds it ironic that although he went to jail an estimated 50 times, there is only one drug offense on his record -- for possession of drug paraphernalia. Though most of his jail stays lasted only a night or two, he was on probation for a felony forgery at age 19. He served seven months in the Oxbow Jail at age 24. He says he found a measure of peace in jail. He earned his high school diploma and began attending 12-step recovery programs. Yet the second he got out, he started using drugs again. Robert Gray says that both Markham and Swenson suffer from the bane of every addict--a compulsion that, unless treated is 100 percent fatal. He describes meth as a "monster nightmare, an evil drug that came out of the deepest darkest office of hell." Gray has been a missionary in the LDS Substance Recovery Program for eight years. The 12-year-old program is modeled after the 12-step program in Alcoholics Anonymous. "No earthly power can relieve that overpowering compulsion to use drugs," says Gray. Within the LDS 12-step program, participants are counseled to obey a passage from the Book of Mormon in First Nephi, Chapter 8, where Lehi has the vision of a straight and narrow path and an iron rod. A Taste of Calm Gray explains that when the addict or alcoholic can see no possible way through his addiction, he is advised not to take counsel from his fear, but to hold on to the iron rod by doing three fundamental things: Read scripture daily; pray every day; and go to a daily substance-recovery meeting. "It is hard not to resist the still, small voice within that is the spirit of Jesus Christ," says Gray. "If an addict endures and goes forward, he will reach step 12, which, in AA, is described as `a spiritual awakening, or serenity with the grace of God.' At that time, he carries this message to his whole family, and to other addicts who still suffer." He adds that if an addict lets go of the `iron rod,' he goes down strange and forbidden paths that lead to death, jail, disease, divorce, fear and anxiety. Swenson has now put his trust in the program--and been drug free--for six months. "There's a sparkle in his eye called hope," says Gray. Swenson has a job installing flagpoles, attends church and is welcome in his family home after a long estrangement. He tells his story today because people always said he could offer great help to others if he could get off drugs. He attends four LDS Substance Recovery meetings each week. "I've had my first sense of being peaceful. My first taste of calm," he says. Markham continues to credit her recovery to the Odyssey House treatment program. She has been clean for a year. She regained custody of Chelsea and they live in Odyssey House's transitional housing that helps former addicts ease back into traditional society. She has a full-time job. Markham continues to explain to Chelsea that some of the adults she knew and loved were drug addicts, and will not return to her life. "Meth addiction is very aggressive. There are constant triggers to use," says Marjean Searcy, coordinator for the Salt Lake City COPS Meth Initiative. "Women who are in a substance-abuse program say that the smells of certain cleaners trigger them to want to use meth. Whenever one woman walked down a certain street, it triggered her to want to use. The only way to beat meth is to completely change friends and change lifestyle." Lambert feels that the fact the Odyssey House program offers help to both mothers and their children is significant. "One of the barriers that keeps women from seeking treatment is that they don't know what to do with their children [while they're in treatment]. Our concern is to break up the whole multigenerational cycle of child neglect and abuse and substance abuse by getting the mothers and children treated." Regarding Markham's success, he says, "It's great to see an addict grow and overcome difficulties and build a new life. As a mother, an employee and a citizen, Heidi has become responsible in every way." The Hard Numbers Dan Swenson and Heidi Markham aren't alone. In 2002, the ADAM (Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring program) funded by the National Institute of Justice, evaluated 872 adult male and female arrestees at the Salt Lake County Metro jail within 48 hours of their arrests. They found that some 30 percent of males and 40 percent of females tested positive for meth use. That year, Salt Lake City females and males ranked fourth--and sixth--highest in the nation for arrestees testing positive for methamphetamine. The upward trend continues according to statistics from the Utah Department of Human Services Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health. The year 2003 marked the first time that more women were admitted for treatment for methamphetamine use than alcohol, says B.J. Van Roosendaal, Public Information Officer for the Division. Admissions for meth use accounted for over 31 percent of female treatment admissions. In 2001, methamphetamine surpassed marijuana as the drug most commonly abused by patients in treatment programs, and its popularity is ongoing. While marijuana remains one of the most frequently used drugs in Utah, in 2003 (the latest year for which statistics are available) the gap between meth and marijuana widened significantly, with some 24 percent of total treatment admissions listing meth as their drug of choice while only about 18 percent picked marijuana, according to Van Roosendaal. During 2001, over 2,400 women were treated in Utah for addiction to meth, which is 37 per cent of the state's substance-abuse population. These women are distinctive from Utah's general treatment population in that they are significantly younger: 40 percent had not yet completed high school. According to Van Roosendaal, methamphetamine appears to particularly appeal to young women. Kevin Taylor, deputy director of the Salt Lake County DEA Metro Narcotics Task Force, explains that law enforcement has worked hard to defeat the problem of meth labs in Utah. While there were 260 labs seized here in 1999, this year DEA agents seized about a hundred. Taylor says in the past five years, the DEA has aggressively pursued the incarceration of methamphetamine cooks. Changes in laws have made the precursor chemicals required to make meth--such as iodine and pseudoephedrine--harder to obtain. Yet busting the labs hasn't done away with the demand. Despite the DEA's successes, "Meth is still the drug of choice in Utah," says Taylor. Today, most of Utah's meth is imported from California and Mexico. When Marjean Searcy became coordinator for the Salt Lake City COPS Meth Initiative in 1998, she says police discovered about one lab a day in Salt Lake City. "As far as meth being available and people choosing to use meth, use is still going up despite the fact that there are fewer labs," says Searcy. "While we used to find meth that was 80 percent pure, still wet and obviously made locally, today Utah's Californian and Mexican meth is above the 90 percent purity level." She adds, "Lots of meth addicts will go two to three days before they come off their high completely. During this time they don't eat, sleep or take care of their children. Then they crash, become irritable and sleep constantly. Their lives fall apart quickly because of the way the addiction works." - --Carolyn Campbell Chemistry Lesson Why do Utahns such as Heidi Markham and Dan Swenson use meth? Glen Lambert, executive director of Odyssey House, explains that the drug interacts with the pleasure centers of the brain to alter brain chemistry. It causes brain elevations of the neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine. High dopamine levels can cause feelings of intense pleasure and norepinephrine increases alertness. B.J. Van Roosendaal, Public Information Officer for Utah's Department of Human Services Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, says that while cocaine offers a short high that lasts 20 to 30 minutes, one aspect of methamphetamine's appeal is that it can offer a high that lasts for hours. Meth--which can be snorted, swallowed, injected or smoked--can be made anywhere: in a house, hotel room or van. There is a reaction similar to the "fight or flight response" as the drug boosts heart rate, respiration, blood pressure and body temperature. While cocaine prevents the normal recycling of dopamine once it's released, meth goes a step further and actually enters the nerve cell to cause excess dopamine release. "It fires up such an overload of dopamine that it would be hard for a person naturally to feel anything to approach that," says Lambert. The user feels energetic, invincible and incredibly powerful. A meth-induced high artificially boosts self-confidence. "There's a feeling of `I'm everything. I'm on top of the world. I feel good about myself,'" says Lambert. Because she was initially able to continue working and hide her addiction from her family, Markham's story illustrates the phenomenon that methamphetamine brings an illusory impression that it is harmless. Lambert explains, "If you use heroin, you pass out and don't sleep, so you know you are not functioning, but with meth the ability for denial is greater, no matter how dysfunctional your life becomes." Lambert adds that meth use "really increases irresponsibility, as the drug becomes more important." Typical signs are employment difficulties and declining school attendance and grades. "There are antisocial activities such as living a criminal lifestyle to support the habit. As behavior becomes riskier, there's a tendency to get involved in a series of highly dysfunctional relationships," he says. Sexual behavior also becomes riskier, adding a greater likelihood of sexually transmitted disease. As a stimulant, meth tends to increase paranoia and violence, says Lambert. "The incidence of domestic violence increases. If you have a propensity for mental illness, such as a developing schizophrenia, meth use will make it much worse." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D