There is still a considerable lack of understanding and awareness
about the nature of drug and alcohol misuse. Too many people brush
away someone else's problem with the attitude, "Well it's their
fault. They shouldn't have started."
There are also naïve views about people stopping taking drugs.
"It's easy enough to stop. Why don't they just use a bit of
willpower?"
Central pieces of government policy are sometimes built on simple
sound bites - "Just Say No" being a classical example.
Reality presents a more complex picture than is often portrayed.
Many young people try drugs or alcohol. Most do not develop a problem,
but a significant minority do.
These people are not the renegades of society. They come from every
aspect of life. There have been many parents who have been shocked
when their son or daughter confesses they have become addicted to
heroin.
A major aim of WIRED is to enhance awareness and understanding
of substance misuse. As part of this aim, we have been writing "Personal
Stories" in collaboration with the person who has experienced
the problems.
It is sometimes difficult to understand and appreciate how a person's
life can change so dramatically once they have a substance misuse
problem - and recover from this problem. We want to help our readers
better appreciate these situations.
We remind you of our first three "Personal Stories" -
those of Natalie, Debbie and David. We also include a "Parents
Story" and a copy of en email we received, "My Son is
a Drug Addict."
Importantly, people we have interviewed have said that the experience
of working on their story has helped them. In addition, our feedback
indicates that the personal stories are a source of inspiration
and encouragement for people at varying stages of recovery.
| Treatment
in Prison |
| A series of interviews of clients on a 12-step based treatment
programme in prison. |
| |
| My
Son is a Drug Addict |
|
Difficulties experienced by a father in trying to get help
for his son who wants to overcome his heroin addiction.
|
| |
| Alison's story |
|
Alison describes her descent into alcoholism and her recovery.
"Learning to live clean is good, coz theres lots
of things you think you cant do but you can."
|
| |
| A
Parents Story |
|
Talk delivered by a mother at a recent conference entitled
Families in Focus.
|
| |
| Cheryl's
Diary |
|
Cheryl Hancock had become interested in the work her daughter
Becky was doing as a member of our team. We asked her if she
would like to spend a week in a drug and alcohol treatment
agency and write up her experiences for our web site.
|
| |
| David's
personal story |
|
David has been receiving injectable diamorphine on prescription
for over ten years. He explains how polydrug use and dealing
grew to become his driving force. He now leads a 'normal'
life, but chooses to stay in touch with drug culture, despite
the fact that his offending ceased when he received his first
script.
|
| |
| Debbie's
personal story |
|
Debbie had tried many drugs by the time she first smoked
and developed a strong habit for heroin at the age of 16.
She describes the positive and negative effects of heroin,
and her terrible withdrawal experiences. She tells us of a
life spent with, and then without, heroin.
|
| |
| Natalie's
personal story: Part 1 [With audio
extracts] |
|
Natalie talks about her addiction to heroin. She describes
her childhood and the development of her polydrug use. She
starts to smoke heroin at the age of 21 and over the next
18 months the drug takes over her life. Natalie describes
the impact of constantly smoking heroin on herself and her
family. A situation is reached where her father, boyfriend
and most of her friends are using heroin. Her mother gives
her an ultimatum - Natalie decides she must quit.
|
| |
| Natalie's
personal story: Part 2 [With audio
extracts] |
|
Natalie visits a treatment agency for her heroin addiction.
She describes how she stopped smoking heroin and how, with
the help of others, she has stayed away from drugs and repaired
the damage they caused. Natalie is a much stronger and happier
person. She has been clean and sober for two years.
|
| |
|
We show how two newspapers in the UK
have conveyed the experiences of those that have developed
drug and alcohol problems. Links to a number of original newspaper
articles are provided.
|
| |
| 'I
didn't stop to think. I didn't care if I died' |
|
Leah - not her real name - was 11 when she started using
heroin. Now 16 and on a methadone programme, she is living
in supported accommodation in Dumfriesshire. She has been
electronically tagged and is under curfew [Guardian, UK]
|
| |
| Our
battle with the bottle |
|
Life with a drunk can be hell, as George Best's wife, Alex,
knows to her cost. Increasingly these days, though, it's the
woman who's the alcoholic. Here one long-suffering husband
tells his story [Observer, UK]
|
| |
| Scoured
to the soul |
|
Tham Krabok monastery in Thailand runs the toughest drug
rehabilitation regime in the world. And it might soon be available
on the NHS. Ian Belcher joins one addict in search of salvation
[Guardian, UK]
|
| |
| Adams'
inside story |
|
This time 11 years ago, Adams was serving 58 days in Chelmsford
Prison for drink-driving. Now, more than five years sober
in his recovery from alcoholism, the Arsenal and former England
captain sometimes returns to jails to talk to any inmate who
wants to hear about his experience, strength and hope
[Observer]
|
| |
| 'It
was like a mad animal trying to burrow its way out of my abdomen'
|
|
Arthur Smith relives the moment when he was forced to give
up the booze or die [Guardian]
|
| |
| They
risked jail and spent £40,000. But they saved their son from
heroin |
|
Julie and Ian Gell had no one left to turn to, so they had
to break the law, pay the dealers and undertake DIY rehab
for their addicted son. Tracy McVeigh reports on the plight
of the families who must fend for themselves [Observer]
|
| |
| Billy
Connolly: The lost years |
|
With his career now in full flow, Billy Connolly is growing
apart from his first wife and developing an addiction to drink
and drugs. Our second extract from Pamela Stephenson's candid
biography of her husband reveals how Connolly coped with fame
- and she ended up in bed with the Hairy One [Observer]
|
| |
| On
sober reflection |
|
Andy Mayer knew his relationship with alcohol was rather
too close for comfort, but it was years before he finally
accepted help. Then he tried it all - the NHS, the Priory,
Alcoholics Anonymous. So what worked? [Guardian]
|
| |
| Dark
days … A British academic is offered a prestigious job at a
Californian university |
|
There is just one problem: he is an alcoholic, and his life
is spiralling out of control. In the first of two extracts
from his remarkably frank new book, the man who went on to
become professor of English at University College London describes
his descent to an all-time low [Guardian]
|
| |
| Back
from the brink |
|
He had reached rock bottom - now the drinking had to stop.
But it's not easy for a hardened addict to quit and he needed
help. In the second extract from his remarkably honest new
book, John Sutherland enters the weird and wonderful world
of Californian Alcoholics Anonymous [Guardian]
|