Anonymous wrote:It's really tough and striking to see how much sympathy and understanding there is for this most recent drug crisis now that the face of addiction is white.

Anonymous wrote:It's really tough and striking to see how much sympathy and understanding there is for this most recent drug crisis now that the face of addiction is white.
Anonymous wrote:I have a terrible feeling in the pit of my stomach every time I think about this. In some rural communities, it is so widespread - think of all the children of these addicts. What is their future? We desperately need to do something about this problem, but what?
It seems not to be so simple as educating doctors (so that they don't over-prescribe opioids as pain meds). So what next?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thus the heroin epidemics in Colorado and Washington and Oregon, right? All that legalized pot in OH, PA and WVA and MD must be pushing users for more more more.Anonymous wrote:been happening for along time, things most parents don't think about when they turn a blind eye to casual drinking a pot smoking and then kids try to reach that original high and can never reach it so they turn to other things.
sure, argue alcohol and pot are harmless or your kid can handle it as long as they get good grades etc. Many other parents thought the same, fortunately I got help and i was just like your kids from the W schools and private schools.
Signed a recovering addict![]()
Yes, WA has a huge heroin epidemic. I live in the eastern suburbs of Seattle - home to Microsoft, Google, Amazon techies and high HHI families. Three students in a 1400 student high school died in 2016. Heroin and meth are also issues for the lower class rural communities.
http://www.kirklandreporter.com/news/384106411.html
But the good news is that the tax payers in Seattle will soon fund safe shoot up locations.![]()
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As they should. And I'm a conservative. Drugs are not going away. Americans are very broken and many have serious mental health problems which lead to drug use. Pot doesn't lead to addiction, personal problems and mental health problems lead to drug addiction . it costs much much more to treat the addict for hep C, aids, and blood poisioning from dirty needles. Taxpayers are ALREADY funding drug addict fall out. Plus having these addicts passed out in drug dens is no good for the surrounding communities.
Anonymous wrote:#thanksObama
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why and what is this heroin epidemic? Is it only getting so much attention because it's afflicting middle class white people? How do so many people just start using heroin? Growing up in the 80's/90's, heroin was considered to be like crack and really hard core. I couldn't imagine middle class kids (of any race) doing it.
Middle class whites are lazy, entitled, and poorly raised. The self indulgence revealed by the heroin epidemic is just a symptom of the general lack of values that exists among whites who think the world should be theirs because they are white. To hear some of these losers crying that they should be able to afford a house, car, two kids, and stay at home wife on a plumber's job without bothering to work for a degree makes me want to barf. Their parents coasted on white privilege and now that the kids have to put in a little work, they turn to drugs because work ethic was never part of the culture.
Anonymous wrote:Mother of former heroin user here.
I'll probably catch flack for this, but if there is one thing I would have done differently it would have been to re-arrange my work to be home after school every day when my child hit high school.
Another thing I would have done differently would have been to be much more aggressive when my child complained of pain constantly. After the pediatrician formed the opinion it was probably psychological I went after it half-heartedly. It turned out to be a real illness for which pain is a symptom. Untreated pain that doctors didn't believe was a major, although not the only, reason for my child turning to heroin. Getting a diagnosis was an important factor in diagnosis, which of course was all the harder to get because of the heroin.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I read this this entire story that a PP posted:
http://www.bethesdamagazine.com/Bethesda-Magazine/November-December-2015/A-Mothers-Heartbreak-Heroins-Toll-in-Montgomery-County/index.php?cparticle=5&siarticle=4#artanc
As the mother of a former heroin addict I found the story incredibly frustrating. I did not see evidence in the story that any of them practiced hyper warrior momism with their kids. To save your child you need to pursue this as zealously as Demeter pursued Persephone to pull her out of Hades.
My child freely acknowledges that it was I through my unrelenting efforts who pulled her out of her addiction. Of course DC had to do the hard work of at home detox, going to countless NA meetings, etc. but none of this would have happened had I not been doing huge amounts of research and putting effective steps in place, as well as having enough flexibility to deal with new circumstances.
An addict does not have to hit rock bottom to be helped. In fact the farther from rock bottom the greater the chances for success. He does not have to want treatment for treatment to be effective (court ordered rehab is as effective as voluntary rehab). Tough love often is not effective and many times results in the kids being on the street where their chances for recovery are very low. Thinking that parking them in rehab will take care of problem is wistful thinking. The about dealing with the problem many parents believe really get in the way of their saving their children from this scourge.
I shudder when I think of the approaches I was using until my child OD'ed (saved by Narcan). Had I kept it up I am not sure my child would be alive today.