ICH | Here's one example of an experiment that is happening all around you,
and may well happen to you one day. If you get run over today and you
break your hip, you will probably be given diamorphine, the medical
name for heroin. In the hospital around you, there will be plenty of
people also given heroin for long periods, for pain relief. The heroin
you will get from the doctor will have a much higher purity and potency
than the heroin being used by street-addicts, who have to buy from
criminals who adulterate it. So if the old theory of addiction is right
-- it's the drugs that cause it; they make your body need them -- then
it's obvious what should happen. Loads of people should leave the
hospital and try to score smack on the streets to meet their habit.
But here's the strange thing: It virtually never happens. As the
Canadian doctor Gabor Mate was the first to explain to me, medical
users just stop, despite months of use. The same drug, used for the
same length of time, turns street-users into desperate addicts and
leaves medical patients unaffected.
If you still believe -- as I used to -- that addiction is caused by
chemical hooks, this makes no sense. But if you believe Bruce
Alexander's theory, the picture falls into place. The street-addict is
like the rats in the first cage, isolated, alone, with only one source
of solace to turn to. The medical patient is like the rats in the
second cage. She is going home to a life where she is surrounded by the
people she loves. The drug is the same, but the environment is
different.
This gives us an insight that goes much deeper than the need to
understand addicts. Professor Peter Cohen argues that human beings have
a deep need to bond and form connections. It's how we get our
satisfaction. If we can't connect with each other, we will connect with
anything we can find -- the whirr of a roulette wheel or the prick of a
syringe. He says we should stop talking about 'addiction' altogether,
and instead call it 'bonding.' A heroin addict has bonded with heroin
because she couldn't bond as fully with anything else.
So the opposite of addiction is not sobriety. It is human connection.
1 comments:
Here's the original article.
The author has something of a colorful past too...
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