Pubdate: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 Source: News Journal (DE) Section: Delaware Voice Copyright: 2006 The News Journal Contact: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/opinion/index.html Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Author: Stephen Burns Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) DRUG TREATMENT IS VERY HARD WORK I can't envision drugs being legal. What would be the purpose of going to treatment then? In treatment, counselors teach people how to get and stay off drugs and to find a better way to live. If you are talking about legalizing drugs and sending people to treatment, how are you not condoning the very thing you are against? Even if drugs can be gotten legally, there is always going to be some knucklehead who's not going to wait to go through a program to get his drugs. As with everything else, somebody will always try to get around whatever is legal. Advertisement Also, understand that some people don't try drug treatment because they think they have to go to jail first. Although that's not true, something has to be done about that fear. If drugs are made legal, there will have to be incentive for going. Treatment will have to be made mandatory and available to everyone -- in the way I went through treatment. I got sick 15 years ago and ended up in Wilmington Hospital. The emergency room doctor identified that I had a problem with drugs. He called Brandywine Counseling Center. Right away, a guy was sent over. It turned out he was somebody I had met in prison. I was not ready to stop using drugs, but I was ready to stop all the pain and agony that goes along with using drugs. I was a heroin addict from way back, so I was on the methadone program. Legalization could work like the methadone program: You have to go to treatment in order to get it. The man took me to Brandywine Counseling Center from the hospital and I was assigned to a woman there. She was new to the job. She had been a hard-core drug addict like me. She shared her life story and how she was making it. That sounded interesting to me -- to try to live normal again. She took me to my first 12-step meeting. I started going to the meetings and daily individual counseling. I also had to go to group meetings, to get counseling with other addicts. I did all of this every day. It was intense, but I started to see myself differently. I began to think that maybe I could get back to being the person my mother raised me to be. It takes all three of those elements to make a difference -- individual counseling, group counseling and 12-step meetings, all at the same time. Now I work as a leader in a program that has the worst clients of all. But everybody on my caseload is clean because of those three things. If drug legalization is to work, people will have to be made to realize that they have to change their lives. Stephen Burns, of Wilmington, is a counselor and employment specialist for the Brandywine Counseling Center. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman