Pubdate: Wed, 12 May 2010 Source: Merritt Herald (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Merritt Herald Contact: http://www.merrittherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1446 ACTION NEEDED ON ADDICTION Sometimes it takes courage and at times it is heartbreaking too, but something has to be done about drugs and alcohol on reserves. One reserve on Vancouver Island, with its band membership, chief and council, with the aid of their hereditary chiefs, has told twelve band members they must get treatment for drug and alcohol or get out of the community. How does one become addicted? An individual has to be introduced to this illegal substance, a free sample here and there, and soon that individual is addicted. Once addicted, the person's body craves more and more, until there is no controlling the body or its addictions. People addicted to these illegal substances forget about family, about their responsibilities, or meeting their social commitments like paying their rent, phone, hydro, etc. They even get to the point where personal hygiene is no longer their priority. Once the addiction has control, it rules the individual's life. The drugs and alcohol become expensive, especially if that person is on social assistance, so they borrow, steal, tell lies, and go as far as prostituting themselves, male or female. The life of an addict is not a fancy one. It is very poor. Self - -esteem hits bottom, respect is a word they do not hear or even recognize anymore. Unless one has lived in the world of addiction, one cannot know what it does to a fresh, clean young child, innocent until that first free sample of drugs or alcohol, then that sweet child is lost, gone. People think that eight weeks in a treatment center is the cure. Well, it will take much longer for the cure to happen than the time it took for the addiction to take hold. Look at what drugs and alcohol have done to so many lives: children grow up in an environment of empty beer cans, pot butts in cigarette ash trays, and whatever else drug users have in their homes. If the addicts are a bit on the wealthy side, perhaps there are empty whisky bottles too. Employment is no longer feasible for a drug addict or alcoholic. Their resume is no longer up to date or their references are not available. Children are the ones who suffer, but we must also remember their parents suffer too, because of their addictions. Grandparents who think they might be able to help, offer shelter, but soon they find that their family has stolen from them, or they often suffer elder abuse. In the First Nations, family means the whole village. If one is suffering or needs help, someone in the village offers to help. First Nations people do not say, let's ship these bad folk off to the Vancouver ghetto, where lots of these addicts live. You can see their strength of a nation, any nation, by the way its people take care of their weak. We, as aboriginal people, face a huge dilemma. What are we to do? Do we look the other way and ignore the issues, or do we say, no, our people are sick - we are going to find a way for restoration. We do not condemn those who are attempting to bring health to their community. Instead, we should take their example. Drug addicts are the users. The drug dealers are also addicts, addicted to how much they can sell. The more they sell, the more they want to sell. They need help, too. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake