Monday, October 01, 2007

Meth, how do you feel about it?

I've been to my share of parties, talked to more than a few "pharmaceutical majors" and read plenty of Bukowski and Burroughs, but I've never heard people describe a drug with such simultaneous reverence and revulsion as the meth-heads in Montana, where a PSA campaign has helped reverse the prevalance of this drug. (To watch the videos, click here.)

"You feel like God," one young woman told me about her experience with the drug. Another described feeling "10 feet tall and bulletproof." She cracked a guilty smile when she spoke, and I was able to count her six remaining teeth.

Methamphetamine was invented in Japan in the late 1800s, and years later, the Nazis mixed it with chocolate to keep their pilots focused in battle. A graph charting American meth use looks like a hockey stick; a low plateau through the '60s and '70s that cranks skyward.

By the '90s, it was no longer a fringe weight loss aid or trucker's buddy. It became a smokeable, snortable, shootable party drug that has devastated rural America.

Why here? For years, it was cheap — and everywhere. Unlike cocaine, heroin or marijuana, meth is not grown but mixed; a witches brew of cold medicine, antifreeze, drain cleaner and other store-bought or farm-pilfered chemicals.

One needs only time to cook it, and space to mask the fumes. The American West has plenty of space, along with plenty of small-town kids eager to experiment on a slow Saturday night.

But calling meth addictive is like calling water wet. As it floods the brain with dopamine and serotonin, it also explodes the vesicles that receive these pleasure-producing hormones in the future.

Soon, the only way for a user to experience joy is with more meth. "If someone tells you they're a recreational user, they're full of crap," a veteran drug cop told me with a wry laugh. What begins as recreation often ends in soul-crushing depression and physical decay.

---Hah, I didnt know Nazi's used the shit, did you? I cant begin to tell you how many lives I have known that have been impacted by meth. My former sister in law lost her kids because of it. Iowa is pretty big for meth users. If you head out into "Corn Country" you can see plenty of old, abandoned trailers that were used for meth manufacturing. Drugs, how fun. Well, I just wanted to post a story to the board maybe spice things up a bit, me done.---

4 comments:

dad-e~O said...

ZERO experience with meth, thankfully

Sickboy said...

good for you, its fucking nasty!

steve butt said...

this drug has got to be one of the worst ones i've ever heard of. i think we need to legalize it in order to gain some amount of control over it. we can only regulate drugs that are kept off the black market.

Sickboy said...

Yeah, this is a nasty ass drug. Its totally synthetic and has no natural elements to it, I mean hell, you can make it in your sink for Gods sake.

I dont think it should be made legal, thats silly, but I think Congress or The Pres. need to put a little more green towards trying to fight this drug rather than some stupid war halfway across the world that we are losing.