Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Nadia Okorn ONE SMALL STEP TOWARDS AN ADDICT'S MIRACLE It is incredibly sad and painful for me to watch this heated and pointless debate over the heroin injection room trials. Heroin addiction is a full mind-and-body disease. Its debilitating effects on the individual far outweigh the discomfort of non-drug users jolted out of their "lucky country" bubble. Emotional, financial, psychological and physical support need to be made available to addicts of all ages. It is a sick joke to think supervised injecting clinics glamorise drugs; anyone who has ever known or seen a junkie knows that it is about as far from glamor as you get. Open wounds, utter despair and a cruel, shaking craving are not "cool" or exciting. I am a 19-year-old who has experimented with various qualities and quantities of hard and soft drugs, and have a history of homelessness, depression and anxiety. My own personal motives to experiment were many and varied, including self-sabotage, an ill-defined need to fit in, the glamorisation of the rave scene (which is mostly an ecstasy, speed and LSD scene), a love of altered consciousness, escapism, peer pressure, a justification for failure in this increasingly competitive society, the physically and mentally addictive properties of the drugs themselves and - in times of extreme poverty and homelessness - an escape from feeling cold and hungry and powerless. The circumstances of drug addictions are so varied and intense and personal that to deny addicts access to specialised services because of statistics and generalisations is not only narrow-minded but cruel. Also, it is ridiculous to think that first-time or casual users could "infiltrate" the system. This is an insult to the professional integrity, training and experience of social workers and nursing staff. Try faking the huge, vicious scars (tracks) on the arms. Heroin addicts are treated with the same stigma of fear and misunderstanding that disabled persons, mental patients, and AIDS victims suffered in decades past. Addicts need to be treated as a minority of the population suffering a life-threatening disease. Heroin clinics should not be subject to "success" rates of clear, recovered addicts. Their "success" is in preventing cold, ugly, lonely deaths. A clean, recovered addict is beyond success; he/she is a living miracle. Heroin injection clinics are only one part of the miracle process. Nadia Okonn - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D