http://www.customerssuck.com/board/s...d.php?t=106534
I found myself really wanting to reply to the above thread, but the bits I want to reply to have become a Fratching topic, so here I am....
Several people expressed that they don't understand why people take 'recreational' and/or illegal drugs. Bast has known several addicts, in part because she was in a group for disadvantaged people that put a wide group of such people together - including mental health patients and drug addicts. (She's mentally ill.) She has also known mentally ill people who were also drug addicts, from many times in hospitals.
So here are some reasons.
Self-Medication
To 'self-medicate' mental health conditions: basically, to make the mental pain endurable, or balance out delusions, or make hallucinations go away, or make hallucinations make sense: there are as many ways that self-medicating with street psychoactives as there are psychological symptoms.
Why would anyone do that instead of seeing a psychologist/psychiatrist?
- it can be prohibitively expensive to see a psychologist or psychiatrist. Even in Australia with socialised medicine, most psychiatrists insist on patients paying them (then getting a Medicare rebate) rather than the doctor charging Medicare. I don't know about you, but I don't have a spare $300 to pay someone up front.
- it can be shameful to have a mental condition.
- it can be harmful to be officially recorded as having a mental condition - yes, even now. Discrimination against the mentally ill does happen, and even among people who should know better (such as medical people).
- some medical conditions include problems such as paranoia, making the patient less likely to believe that doctors can help them.
- they might not believe they have a mental condition; they just know that when they take (street drug) they feel better.
- medical treatment for mental conditions is usually very slow; (street drug) makes them feel better right now.
Escape from intolerable circumstances
Suffering can cause people to want escape, especially short term escape.
Victims of abuse, tragedy or trauma are particularly prone to failing to see good solutions, and thus having only a collection of bad answers to their problems.
Patients with severe pain, especially those who are not getting adequate help from the medical community (or who perceive themselves that way) are highly vulnerable to the temptation to seek street-drug help. Those who are not able to understand the complexity of drug interaction, or desperate enough not to care about the risks to their long term health, are the most easily tempted.
People in chronic poverty can seek to escape awareness of it, especially if they've given up hope of ever getting out of poverty.
Noone ever makes the decision 'I'm going to do what's totally worst for me'.
Some people have a lot of difficulty with delayed gratification and thus seek instant solutions, which means they can make really bad decisions out of impatience.
Some are simply unable to perceive good solutions which others can see (this is especially true of people with some mental illnesses, but everyone is prone to it).
Some people genuinely don't know about good options which are available to them.
Some people kid themselves about the downsides of the options they're interested in.
I'm not saying we can ever completely rid ourselves of those who take recreational drugs out of sheer decadence. I think those people will always be with us. But there are people who fall prey to the temptation of street drugs for reasons which we, as a society (or cluster of societies) can choose to solve.
I found myself really wanting to reply to the above thread, but the bits I want to reply to have become a Fratching topic, so here I am....
Several people expressed that they don't understand why people take 'recreational' and/or illegal drugs. Bast has known several addicts, in part because she was in a group for disadvantaged people that put a wide group of such people together - including mental health patients and drug addicts. (She's mentally ill.) She has also known mentally ill people who were also drug addicts, from many times in hospitals.
So here are some reasons.
Self-Medication
To 'self-medicate' mental health conditions: basically, to make the mental pain endurable, or balance out delusions, or make hallucinations go away, or make hallucinations make sense: there are as many ways that self-medicating with street psychoactives as there are psychological symptoms.
Why would anyone do that instead of seeing a psychologist/psychiatrist?
- it can be prohibitively expensive to see a psychologist or psychiatrist. Even in Australia with socialised medicine, most psychiatrists insist on patients paying them (then getting a Medicare rebate) rather than the doctor charging Medicare. I don't know about you, but I don't have a spare $300 to pay someone up front.
- it can be shameful to have a mental condition.
- it can be harmful to be officially recorded as having a mental condition - yes, even now. Discrimination against the mentally ill does happen, and even among people who should know better (such as medical people).
- some medical conditions include problems such as paranoia, making the patient less likely to believe that doctors can help them.
- they might not believe they have a mental condition; they just know that when they take (street drug) they feel better.
- medical treatment for mental conditions is usually very slow; (street drug) makes them feel better right now.
Escape from intolerable circumstances
Suffering can cause people to want escape, especially short term escape.
Victims of abuse, tragedy or trauma are particularly prone to failing to see good solutions, and thus having only a collection of bad answers to their problems.
Patients with severe pain, especially those who are not getting adequate help from the medical community (or who perceive themselves that way) are highly vulnerable to the temptation to seek street-drug help. Those who are not able to understand the complexity of drug interaction, or desperate enough not to care about the risks to their long term health, are the most easily tempted.
People in chronic poverty can seek to escape awareness of it, especially if they've given up hope of ever getting out of poverty.
Noone ever makes the decision 'I'm going to do what's totally worst for me'.
Some people have a lot of difficulty with delayed gratification and thus seek instant solutions, which means they can make really bad decisions out of impatience.
Some are simply unable to perceive good solutions which others can see (this is especially true of people with some mental illnesses, but everyone is prone to it).
Some people genuinely don't know about good options which are available to them.
Some people kid themselves about the downsides of the options they're interested in.
I'm not saying we can ever completely rid ourselves of those who take recreational drugs out of sheer decadence. I think those people will always be with us. But there are people who fall prey to the temptation of street drugs for reasons which we, as a society (or cluster of societies) can choose to solve.
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