fairnymph
Ex-Bluelighter
I think this is a very interesting assertion, possibly a very true one. Thank you.True addicts don't use to get high, they use to feel normal.
N&PD Moderators: Skorpio | someguyontheinternet
I think this is a very interesting assertion, possibly a very true one. Thank you.True addicts don't use to get high, they use to feel normal.
That sounds like rubbish to me. How can someone do something they have never done before, to feel something they have never felt? Once someone becomes addicted, as I have allready said, they have become physiologically rewired on a structural level to crave drugs, but before that, they don't. No one (well almost no one) is born or develops an overwhelming urge to do drugs. They take drugs for whatever reason, to be cool, becasue they are curious, (or in the few cases, because of misinformation by a health professional) and then they become addicted through misuse.True addicts don't use to get high, they use to feel normal.
They take drugs for whatever reason, to be cool, becasue they are curious,
So the 500 million+ tobacco smokers worldwide all are doing it to escape?But when people keep taking drugs long enough to get addicted, its because they are trying to avoid some kind of pain or discomfort
I could say the same about the idea of shifting blame for drug misuse off the individual.If all you can do is just stereotype addicted people as character flawed, without understanding their particular situations, you aren't helping anyone or the cause of harm reduction at all.
So the 500 million+ tobacco smokers worldwide all are doing it to escape?
I could say the same about the idea of shifting blame for drug misuse off the individual.
Everyone always has a choice.
gloggawogga said:Addiction in itself is not disease or an illness per se. People who drink coffee/caffeine every day are addicted. Thats not considered a disease, and thats the majority of addicts in the world. Similarly, there are people who are dependent on medications, such as prozac for depression or narcotics for chronic pain. Now you can say the depression or chronic pain is a disease, but the drug dependency in those cases is just a side effect of the medication used to treat the disease. If using a drug on a daily basis helps a person function better, and the use is not compulsive, I don't see how it can be called a disease.
In some situations though addiction is a disease, like if someone is using compulsively or is using more than they need to and is unreasonably harming one's self or others by using that much. That might be the case with vast majority of younger people losing control with recreational use of opiates/opiods. But don't generalize it to all addiction, or even all addiction to opiates/opiods.
Lol... you got that right....If I had to guess, he doesn't support teachers not using red pens/markers because it puts too much pressure on a student.
I think it's using compulsively AND without control that makes it's a disease. (Although can you use compulsively with control?)Using compusively or without control does make it a disease