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Maybe not, but still a valid question.That's not what I said.
Great idea.Maybe it's time we teach coping and addiction classes in high school with hands on requirements for volunteer time in the community centers to help drive the points home.
I don't know just throwing out ideas. It seems more useful for today's day and age then a lot of what is taught.
The thing is it's really not just meth anymore. Meth is a Busch Lite compared to some of this new stuff...
My mom took me to see “Reefer Madness”* when I was in high school. I had heard of marijuana by this time (1965ish). I think that film became a cult classic for many stoners as a comedy classic.I went through DARE in the early 90s, and don't remember hearing about Meth until adulthood. I remember very well how well they beat it in to our heads that marijuana was quite possibly the worst thing on the planet, though.
I think that a lot of these people have reached a point of depression and after some time, they've just given up. Once someone has reached their low point in life, it becomes extremely hard for them to see any positive outcome and hence they give up trying. They need someone to steer then in the right direction and offer them some hope..There are enough resources for people who truly want to get off the street to seek out. They might need some guidance to get there, but it exists. But there are a WHOLE LOT of them who don't want to climb out of it, don't want help, and don't want to live the lives you and I live.
i saw it sometimes when i was a kid fishing lake washington tributaries like juanita creek in kirkland, bear creek in redmond, and little bear creek in woodinville. not encampments - but like one guy living under a bridge near a grocery store where he'd have a steady supply of dumpster food - that kind of thing. you'd know you were getting close to one as the trail along the creek became more cluttered with discarded food and packaging. that would have been from around '80 - '84.Just to tether this back to rivers and fishing - if you were actively fishing in our local riverscapes in the 50's through the early 00's, how common was it to encounter a scene like this? One of my mantras is "Things didn't used to be like this" but you can only see what you see, so maybe I'm wrong and it's not so much that our rivers weren't festooned with encampments as it was that I just wasn't out there to see them.
Your perspective is the one we need. The rest of us are just guessing.I remember standing in our assistant safety officer’s office looking at a poster on her wall that listed all the drugs you could be tested for. I was going down the list saying “That one, that one…”. She asked what was I doing. I told her picking out the drugs I had taken and I should be looking for the ones I hadn’t. The list would be shorter. She jokingly told me to get out of her office. At the time I was the network manager of a multi-state, 350 million dollar a year heavy civil construction company.
Prior to working for that company I am a drug addict and I spent a couple years homeless on the streets of Seattle. Very few of you have any understanding of what is happening on those streets.
I dunno. Before I retired I got pretty good at building and supporting midsize WANs and LANs. Prior to that I was good at or at least good enough at surviving on the streets. I have few if any answers to the homelessness issue. I know what I did to get out of the situation. I can safely say I did not do it alone. It took a bunch of people including my family supporting me. I can say with some confidence I am the exception. Most addicts don’t survive. If we think the solution is getting people off drugs we are likely going to continue to fail.Your perspective is the one we need. The rest of us are just guessing.
So on my ambulance ride last week they asked me if I wanted 50 or 100 Mike's of fentanyl.. I took 50 because that word makes me nervous. How much is a Mike? Must be a mcg?The drugs are very different these days, synthetic, low cost and powerful + increasing wealth disparity (record corporate profit taking) = recipe for disaster.
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mcg, micrograms. 100 micrograms to a milligram. 100 milligrams to a gram.So on my ambulance ride last week they asked me if I wanted 50 or 100 Mike's of fentanyl.. I took 50 because that word makes me nervous. How much is a Mike? Must be a mcg?
Dang, so 1/20th of a fatal dose made me feel pretty good, that would barely be able to be seen on that penny.mcg, micrograms. 100 micrograms to a milligram. 100 milligrams to a gram.
That's the mass, but the relative amount matters too. The LD50 of fentanyl is reported as 62 mg/kg body weight. Acetyl fentanyl is 9.3. carfentanil is 3.39.
Lots (like thousands of hours) of first person testimonials from people that have been completely consumed by their (still active) addictions if you've got the stomach for it. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=soft+white+underbellyYour perspective is the one we need. The rest of us are just guessing.
Thanks for a first hand perspective. I appreciate it.I dunno. Before I retired I got pretty good at building and supporting midsize WANs and LANs. Prior to that I was good at or at least good enough at surviving on the streets. I have few if any answers to the homelessness issue. I know what I did to get out of the situation. I can safely say I did not do it alone. It took a bunch of people including my family supporting me. I can say with some confidence I am the exception. Most addicts don’t survive. If we think the solution is getting people off drugs we are likely going to continue to fail.