Pubdate: Tue, 17 May 2005 Source: Sun.Star Cebu (Philippines) Copyright: 2005 Sun.Star Contact: http://www.sunstar.com.ph/cebu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1690 Author: Vicente G. Aldanese Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?203 (Terrorism) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Philippines DRUG DEPENDENCY: IS IT A MORAL ISSUE (first in a series) I once heard someone say that drug dependents should be locked up in a cage and the keys thrown away. Some say that drug addicts are no different from common criminals. Others say that drug dependents are very bad people with no conscience and are very irresponsible. After hearing all these, I definitely never wanted to admit that I had problems with drug abuse and that I was probably an addict. So I hit it the best way I knew. I just numbed myself from my feelings and the outside world by taking more and more drugs. But today, after almost 30 years of active drug abuse and now going on my 17th year clean and free from all types of drugs, I know better. At the start of my recovery from drug dependency, the first thing I needed to learn and accept was the fact that I was sick with the disease of chemical dependency (drug addiction) and that I needed to understand what was happening to me so my own recovery treatment program could work. Here is what I understand and see what drug addiction is all about and what can be done about it. What Is Drug Abuse Any mind-changing, mood-altering substance including alcohol. The use of any drug for purposes other than for which it is intended, or in a manner, or quantities other than directed, is drug abuse. What Is Drug Addiction Drug addiction is the obsession with thinking about using drugs and the compulsion to continue doing so once started, despite adverse consequences for doing so. It goes through the following stages: * Experimental: curiosity and/or peer pressure. * Social: Just at parties and/or special events and with no set pattern. * Habitual: Here, a regular pattern is developed (ex. only on weekends) * Abuse: Starting to have problems with family, work/school, health, social, financial, and legal matters due to drug use but still continues to use/abuse drugs. * Dependence/addiction: The whole waking moments are concentrated on thinking about using drugs and once the use has started, the compulsion to use more and more kicks despite the adverse consequences in our lives because of drug use. What Factors Play a Causative Role The exact causes of drug dependency is not known. However, there are factors that can play a causative role, such as the make-up of the individual, the addictiveness of the drug, peer pressure, emotional distress, such as low self-esteem and depression, family dysfunction, genetic predisposition, excess unsupervised time, lack of mental and emotional resources against stress, and low tolerance for frustration. The sad part is that even a societal attitude (such as marijuana isn't that bad) has contributed to increased drug use among adolescents. Younger children may even first see drugs, sad to say, used by their parents or friends of their parents. These children often grow up in an environment of illicit drug use. Denial Another sad aspect of drug abuse and dependence is that it has become easy for the drug user, and even their families, to make excuses for the drug abuse, such as: I still have a job, addicts are jobless; he's just having a hard time at work, he needs it to relax; I'm only selling and pawning my own things; that's just a phase of his growing up; He'll outgrow it; I'm not an addict, I'm a hundred pounds overweight; that can't happen to me, I'm a professional and even own my own company; I'm just having a good time, I deserve to enjoy my life; she just needs to learn self-control; I'm not an alcoholic, alcoholics are those bums you see in the streets; I still dress well, eat well, and have my car; she just lost her boyfriend/girlfriend/mother/father, she'll get over it. These are just but a few examples and these can go on and on endlessly filling up the pages for a book of excuses. It's sad but most addicts, and their significant others, believe these excuses. This is what we call denial of what is really happening so that they do not have to accept defeat, or accept there is a problem. - ---