Pubdate: Fri, 23 Mar 2012 Source: Record, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc. Contact: http://www.royalcityrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1654 Author: Niki Hope, The Record 'I WAS SO BROKEN DOWN AND BEATEN' Myles Murphy started smoking pot when he was just nine years old. "Weed was around us a lot. ... it didn't even seem like a drug," the 19-year-old says. When he was 13, Myles' drug use accelerated after his older brother committed suicide. "That was one of the hardest things for me," he says. By 14, Myles, whose parents were both addicts, tried ecstasy. Then he graduated to harder drugs - Oxycontin, cocaine, heroin. He also started selling drugs, falling into a violent crowd, using more than he owed and getting beaten up by his peers in the vicious drug trade. It was a turbulent and troubled life, but through the help of New Westminster's Last Door, he found a way out. Myles turned up at "the Door," as its known by staff and residents, on Dec. 6 - his "clean date." Myles landed in drug treatment before he was even old enough to take a legal drink. He was just 18, but he'd already been through a lifetime of hell. "I really had nothing left," Myles says, describing his bottom. "I was so broken down and beaten. I had nowhere to turn. I destroyed everything. "I was like, 'my life is going nowhere, so I'm basically willing to do whatever it takes,' and then I came here," he says, during an interview at the Last Door's youth house on Ash Street. "I came here, and I talked to kids my own age. They are happy, and I see them laughing. They don't even know me, and they are investing in my life - talking to me and wondering what's going on, making it comfortable for me. It's like the first time I felt like I could just be myself. That was really appealing for me." For 15 years, the Last Door has been helping drug-and alcohol-addicted male youth - like Myles - find a solution. The agency's work with teens has garnered the attention of other groups trying to help young people overcome addiction. Last Door staff were recently invited to speak in Hay River in the Northwest Territories. Louise Cooksey, Last Door's director of development, was among the group that went north. "This group is spearheading a charge to see if they can get some services locally, so they held a meeting," she says. "The point of the meeting was to hear what Last Door does. They're interested in how we work, how long we've been operating." Currently, drug-addicted teens in Hay River have to go outside the community to get treatment, Cooksey says. "The minister of health from the Northwest Territories was there, and he let them know that there's not going to be any government money. The group is choosing to go forward and look at various models - one that is community based rather government based." Finding funding seems to be an ongoing challenge for those in addiction-treatment services. It's especially tough for young people who might not qualify for welfare. "Unfortunately, the kids who get left out of that are the working poors' kids," she says. "They really can't afford to pay to have their kids in treatment, but their kids don't qualify for an under-age welfare bed or anything like that, and that's just really sad." Some youth, like Myles, are able to access a bed that is paid for by the Fraser Health Authority. Others are in government care and qualify for funding, or some can access treatment through their parents' work health-care plan. But for many, it's impossible to find the funding. "Really, Last Door youth program is underutilized almost solely due to lack of funding for the kids," Cooksey says. "It's not like there isn't a wait-list of kids waiting to get in." As for Myles, he spent seven months in the Last Door, getting involved in a 12-step program, learning to contribute to society and getting his high-school diploma. Today, he has a job and is writing and playing music. He has a good relationship with his family - his mom and him even have the same clean date. "My life's amazing compared to what it was," he says, smiling. If the music career doesn't take off the way he hopes, Myles has a backup plan. He wants to be a firefighter. "I want to do something that helps other people," Myles says. For more information on the Last Door's youth program, visit www.last door.org . - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.