One of the problems we have is recognizing that different drugs affect different people in different ways.
I hate opioids and won’t take them anymore unless I’m in really serious pain, like operation pain. And even then, a maximum of like 2 vicodin a day (morning and night).
I like Flexeril, it works for me. But I also take at most, one per day. Usually if I’m taking it because I hurt like hell, it’s going to be a half pill, maybe a second half 12 hours later. I tend to get one prescription per year of 30 pills and it lasts me almost the entire year. (And my laundry list of physical issues would make you scream from sympathy pain, even though you can’t see any of it.)
I like Marijuana. It’s great for me and I can function very well on it. It magically erases my depression. It, especially the CBD varieties, lessons my physical pain. My two sisters both tried it when they were younger and didn’t like it. It didn’t work the same way for them. Sadly, I can’t use it right now because I’m looking for a job.
I don’t like alcohol. I don’t like the taste, effects and I don’t like how it feels when it is in my bloodstream, because I have this odd ability to ‘taste’ things in my blood. I drink the occasional dark beer, have the occasional shot of good single malt. But I don’t drink to get drunk and haven’t done that since I was much younger.
Some people take opioids and go “Holy shit! This makes me feel GREAT!”, which is basically the same thing Heroin does to you. Then you want to keep getting that feeling, which is how people get addicted.
And in many respects, you can look at our modern society and how we’ve moved from one abused drug to another as being people’s search for something that either blots out their pain (mental or physical), or makes them feel good. Unfortunately, most of the things that do that are also seriously addicting and build tolerances that force people to use more and more to achieve the same effect.
Kurt Angle, the WWE (and former TNA) wrestler admitted that, at the height of his addiction, he was taking 65 extra strength Vicodin a day. An amount that would outright kill any of us. Now, where he was getting them from was never addressed and I’d hope those people were prosecuted for it, but that may be wishful thinking on my part. The point being that he was taking a ludicrous amount of opioids per day just to “function normally”, for whatever value of “normally” he was experiencing at the time. He was never the unemployed loser druggie that some people think of when they think “Opioid addict”. He was making solid six to low seven figures every year.
Just a few random thoughts for this conversation.