Heroin and opiates in general are for the birds case

.. really they
may make us feel ok for an hour or two.. but you won't feel like you think and then they will start to slowly chew ya up and in a week they will swallow you and you will spend your whole life obsessing over, finding and trying to pay for that slave creating crap and will actually feel worse for 98% of the time then you feel 100% now..
Addiction uses a snapshot of a time when the drugs made us feel real good.. that was just a moment and if you look at the way they made us feel the other 96% of the time you realize that they made us feel absolutely awful. IMO psychedelics like boomers can definitely be a strong weapon in the fight against addiction. The dont really manipulate the dopamine system and thus
IMO wont excite the VTA and cause a surge in the addictive drive. Since the fellowships are an abstinence only group and are against the use of all substances you would likely feel guilty after using even boomers and this combined with thoughts of the loss of clean time may cause emotions that may drive use. There is also the fellowship idea that if we use any drug it will lead us to our DOC and this idea sure gives addicts an excuse to use their DOC, like we need excuses.
In my opinion the responsible use of boomers as a tool to occasionally ticket out of the cycle of addiction, used during a hard addictive push and before a relapse or occasionally to possibly prevent this from ever happening, can be a really beneficial
tool. They can "reset the mechanism" and allow us to see right through the insane thinking that is getting strong and driving us back towards hell. I dont advocate anything close to regular use IMO this should be used as a spiritual tool and not a recreational activity.
As a person's recovery is their own responsibility and the decisions and consequences theirs to make and bear.. an addict needs to consider and evaluate this for the benefits and drawbacks to their own recovery. Every one can be triggered by different things and something like may well be a trigger for one person but a wonderful tool for another addict.