Pubdate: Thu, 20 May 2010 Source: Canadian Champion, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Ltd Contact: http://www.miltoncanadianchampion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1503 Author: Steve LeBlanc HELD HOSTAGE BY DRUGS Recovering Addict Shares Frightening Tale of Dependency Waiting to address the audience at Milton District High School, Paul Christie sits hunched over with his head down as the highlights - ah, make that lowlights - of his life are read out. For those looking his way, an air of remorse and guilt is readily apparent. And for good reason. Over a two-decade span - one that serves as a truly frightening cautionary tale - Christie was shot, stabbed, repeatedly jailed, deceived pretty much everyone who cared about him and often found himself begging for food and waking up in ditches. Behind each of these horrible turns was a substance abuse problem, something he now battles to keep kids from ever having to suffer through, doing so via his outreach website (paulchristie.ca) and regular in-school visits with both students and parents. "I ruined my life and my family's. That's what drugs do," said the award-winning anti-drug advocate to a group of a dozen attentive parents - having spoken to Grade 9 and 10 students at Milton District earlier in the day. "Every time I drank or did drugs, bad things happened." And those bad things started early. Already drinking and using marijuana on a regular basis by the time he was 15, despite coming from a good home, Christie and some friends broke into a couple of homes during a beach party. He blacked out at some point in the night, and when it was all over the million-dollar houses were burned to the ground and he was under suspicion for arson. Arrested a year-and-a-half later - once he was 17 and no longer a juvenile - he was unable to properly defend himself because of his hazy recollection of the night. So while firmly believing he didn't actually set the fires, Christie received 20 months for each count when his 'buddies' testified against him. By that time he'd graduated to heroin, often shooting up in school - flushing the needles down the toilet before heading off to class. Along with starting to use drugs early, Christie knew early on that he was an addict. "It wasn't long before the drugs weren't fun anymore. That's one of the things I really try to get through to the kids today," he stressed, adding that he continued using because he was hooked and not because the sensation of the drugs was still there. "The brain adapts pretty quickly (to reaction of drugs), so the fun-ness is over pretty quickly." While the thrill of drugs was long gone, his dependency on them was far from over. With a $300 a week job in his early twenties not nearly covering his habit - primarily crack cocaine at that point - Christie got a gun and started robbing people. One of the truly low points in his largely misspent life soon followed. "One night I robbed a gas station, bar and night club in the span of a few hours. Shortly after I was arrested at my home, which I could see my mom's home from. Ironically, she was woken up to see me getting arrested." Fast forward several years, and a now California-based Christie - back in jail after a slew of impaired-driving arrests - would cause his mother even more anguish. "At this one detention centre there was a buzzer that would go off and every time it did you had seven seconds to get back to your cell. So a lot of times I'd be on the phone with my mom and that buzzer would go off just a few minutes into the call and I'd have to hang up on her," recalled Christie, who through a "phone kill" instead of "phone call" slip of the tongue offered a fitting picture of the emotional turmoil his mother endured during those frequently interrupted talks. "God bless my mom. It's amazing she's still alive. I put her through a lot of bad stuff." Christie's salvation - by no means an over-the-top characterization, given the circumstances - would finally come during a would-be suicide attempt in 1999. Vowed to get clean Truly looking at himself in the mirror for the first time in God knows how long, he chose not to down a bottle of pills but instead vowed to take control of his life. He did so through a nine-month stint at a rehab clinic. He didn't want to leave at the end - believing a relapse was imminent - - and begged the facility's operators to let him stay on as "a janitor or something." "I was so happy to get off drugs. Having my mom and son (Jesse) see me clean was amazing. If someone had offered me $20 million to trade that, I would have said 'Get out of here.'" Though more than a decade removed from his nightmarish addiction, Christie stressed that he'll never be completely free from drugs. And he's got the fidgety mannerisms - as well as Hepatitis C - to prove it. "You don't get clean. All you can do is try to stay clean and sober for today," he said, noting that all seven members of his adolescent drug group are now dead. Addressing questions and concerns from parents following his presentation, the anti-drug crusader said he's faced resistance from elementary school educators, who've felt his story is too harsh for pre-teens. And given that it includes such grim accounts as ignoring a then-toddler Jesse at Christmas to stick coke-filled needles into his head - since the veins in his arms and legs were no longer accessible - - he understands their reservations. "Yes it's hard to hear this, but do you want these young kids dead on a bathroom floor, because that's the alternative. We've got to get to these kids earlier. By Grade 9 or 10, it's often too late." He said today's youth are under the misguided notion that marijuana is harmless - pointing to the 25-to-30-per cent rise in THC content since its '60s and '70s 'experimental' era - and are being brainwashed with 'legalize pot' campaigns. Regular use of marijuana, he said, can often lead to schizophrenia, while the drug is sometimes laced with crystal meth - making it even more dangerous. Christie also sympathized with parent concerns that kids are trying all kinds of different chemicals these days, like the painkiller-turned-street drug OxyContin. "Kids are even snorting household products. It's scary what they're getting into." Tips for detecting drug use Christie said simply talking to your children and keeping tabs on their grades, behaviour patterns and hygiene can be an effective tool in detecting possible drug use. "Kids that are consistently getting good grades and are clean generally aren't doing drugs," he told parents. "Red eyes are another big giveaway. Often the kids use Visine (to hide red eyes), but they may still be squinting. If you find that in your kid's room, there may be a problem." Touching on some of the horror stories of kids he's counselled through his website - barely maintaining his composure as he tells of one young girl who had unprotected sex with three guys while high - Christie says the government needs to do more to help parents and educators safeguard children from drugs. "It's not about me anymore, it's about these kids." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake