Dear Elaine,
A beloved member of my family began to use drugs around the age of 15. She saved lunch money, pocket money etc, and purchased small amounts of marijuana whenever she could. Occasionally, empty bottles of alcohol could be found in her room, in cupboards, behind beds – this is how it all started. After leaving home at 18, she added amphetamines to her list of ‘recreational drugs’.
Suddenly, one day she lost her mind. She could hear voices, believed that people were stealing her brain and seemed to be pursued by all kinds of terrors. This is a true story, and many young people are having similar experiences.
The beautiful relative of whom I speak is my daughter who is now in her early twenties. She was once highly intelligent and extremely beautiful and had an exciting future ahead. NOT ANYMORE!
She is now unable to care for herself. She doesn’t worry about how she looks, how she lives or what happens to her. She is unable to concentrate for maybe 15 minutes on any given subject and her only solace is drinking alcohol, for she is now afraid of other drugs. She needs to be constantly on medication. Five years have gone from her life, when her school friends have completed university education or gotten married and made families. She has no job, hardly any possessions and few friends and no motivation to help herself.
To those who wish to decriminalize the use of marijuana, I say: ‘You are ignorant of the extent of the damage being done to vulnerable children and of the pain being suffered subsequently by their families. To those who smilingly tell us that marijuana is a ‘harmless recreational drug’, I say: ‘The proof is in the pudding.” I know better.
From YN, NSW - Source: Pages 62 and 63 – ‘Street Drugs – The New Addiction Industry’