Pubdate: Sun, 21 Feb 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Caroline Overington, Sydney ...AND A USER WHO THINKS A TRIAL IS OUR BEST CHANCE I had intended to out myself as an injecting heroin user today, in an attempt to match the courage being shown by Premier Jeff Kennett and the police chief commissioner, Mr Neil Comrie, in supporting a heroin trial in Victoria. But the personal cost to me and my family is still too high. I will save ``coming out'' for when the community learns the truth about heroin and its use. Any suggestion of reform or provision makes people think the drug is being promoted. On the contrary, this is about regulation where there is none. This Christmas I lost two dear friends - one in her early 20s, the other in his mid-40s - from overdose. Both casualties of a war they didn't want to fight. Overdoses are accidents in most cases, tragic accidents for which only our prohibition policy is ultimately to blame. It couldn't get much worse for the user. I don't want my young son, or your children, to pay all their lives for making a choice like the one I made 25 years ago. I grew up in Melbourne's affluent eastern suburbs and attended an exclusive private school. I was academically bright, successful on the sporting field and had a loving, caring family. So what went wrong, you might ask. Nothing really. During an age when all of us are self-determining, moving out of home, asserting our independence, testing out the boundaries, breaking taboos, I came into contact with the drug through friends and I liked it. I soon found out the education my parents, media and school had given me about drugs bore little resemblance to reality. It only served to make me mistrust most of what I was told. The best thing you can do for a user is to maintain them in a way that puts them at least risk of harm and facilitates a person becoming drug free when they are ready to do so. With illicit drugs seen as a health issue rather than a legal one, users could focus on rebuilding their lives and creating an environment that makes it easier to succeed at stopping once they are ready. I am not promoting heroin use, rather accepting the powerful attraction the drug can have and accepting that legal deterrents will not prevent people using. We have made heroin sexy. Eventually the romance goes and you are in a situation that can be very difficult to change. To be continually punished or face the risk of disease or overdose is not the way to help people stop using. - --- MAP posted-by: Pat Dolan