Pubdate: Thu, 30 Mar 2006 Source: Macleod Gazette, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 The Macleod Gazette Contact: http://www.fortmacleodgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3375 Author: Frank McTighe, Macleod Gazette Editor MIKE RYAN TELLS STUDENTS OF BETTER PATH Mike Ryan walked a long and torturous path to salvation. On Wednesday, the 53-year-old recovering addict and career criminal did his best to deter Fort Macleod children from following in his footsteps. "We feel it's important we carry a message strongly to young people that they don't want to do drugs," Ryan said. "Some of you have already started down the path. I'm going to give you a little view of where it leads." Ryan is now chief executive officer of Clean Scene, an Alberta organization dedicated to steering children away from drug use. His two presentations at F.P. Walshe school were sponsored by Fort Macleod Rural Crime Watch Association. "I'm standing in front of a gentleman now that 20 years ago I wouldn't stand in front of," said Des Grant, past president of the Alberta Rural Crime Watch Association, as he introduced Ryan. "I would have my back to the wall, protecting myself. This guy was one bad dude." Grant told students at F.P. Walshe school that Ryan bought and sold drugs and lived a life without concern for the people around him. "Something happened when he was in the penitentiary that changed his life," Grant said. "That something was he saw the light, he saw that there are other ways to do things." Ryan now spends his time visiting schools on behalf of Clean Scene, sharing his story with children in the hopes they won't follow the same path. "He's been there, done that, and he's going to stop you from doing the same thing," Grant said. Ryan told the F.P. Walshe students he wasn't there to preach to them. "I can tell you, Stop,' and you'd do it anyways." Ryan began getting in trouble at the age of 13. "I didn't fit in," Ryan told the students. "I didn't like it, and I became a bully because I got treated badly. My potential changed at 13 forever." Ryan explained that in 1966 he chased another youth into the corner of a hockey rink and hit him from behind at full speed. The youth suffered three broken vertebrae. "That young man is a quadriplegic because of me. That's what happens when teammates get you doing things you wouldn't do otherwise. It was my teammates who said, Mike, make sure he doesn't come back for the next period'." That incident solidified Ryan's reputation as a hard-hitting defenceman, and helped elevate him to a Midget team the next fall. However, the success was short-lived. Ryan was hospitalized following a motorcycle accident brought on by his own recklessness and spent eight days in a coma. He became addicted to morphine, demerol and codeine, and his bright hockey future ended. "I didn't even blame myself. I blamed everybody else," Ryan said. "That's what we do when we screw up. We blame somebody else." He came out of hospital with a bad attitude, and soon found himself in trouble at school and on the streets. Ryan quit school, ran away from home and began experimenting with new drugs and alcohol. "The downward spiral was well on its way," he said. Ryan eventually developed a $2,000 a day drug habit that he financed through crime, including robbing jewelry stores and banks. He started selling drugs, and would not hesitate to use violence to collect money or to scare people into doing his bidding. "I never realized that when I started doing these things I would cause the deaths of six people, that I was gradually killing myself," Ryan said. Ryan explained that during his life of crime he had little emotion or feeling. Hardened by a hard life he had no qualms about using other people for his own gain. He contracted Hepatitis C from drug use, and will eventually face the choice of undergoing a liver transplant, or dying. "Those aren't things I like, but that's the way it is. I never thought that would happen to me," Ryan said. "I'm 53 years old. I shouldn't be considering my death at this point in life, I should be looking at being a grandparent, not being a messed-up former addict." Ryan warned the students not to be fooled into thinking there is anything glamorous or rewarding about selling and using drugs. "Drug traffickers may make some money at it, but there are three places they end up -- jails, institutions and death," Ryan said. "Most of the people I trafficked drugs with are already dead." Ryan told the students peer pressure is responsible for most teens experimenting with drugs. "The No. 1 driver of drug use today is you pushing each other into doing it," he said. He warned them against believing marijuana is harmless. It's likely the person offering them a joint has laced it with crystal meth, a highly addictive drug. Ryan cautioned students against negative self-talk -- a process through which people convince themselves they have no worth and are unlikely to succeed. He also spoke of the dangers of blindly following the crowd, of being talked into doing things that are bad because you don't want to stand up to the others in the gang. On April 9, Ryan marks 18 years of sobriety. A native elder helped Ryan in prison, and he successfully completed a rehab program. Ryan said while he escaped from a life of addiction and crime before it killed him, many of his friends didn't. And he urged the F.P. Walshe students to follow a different path. "Think about your future," Ryan encouraged the students. "If you play, you're going to pay." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek