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- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
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- From: petersen@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Jim Petersen)
- Subject: Re: LSD and alcoholics posting on usenet
- Message-ID: <petersen-281292194033@aragorn6.acns.nwu.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.drugs
- Sender: usenet@news.acns.nwu.edu (Usenet on news.acns)
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- Organization: Chicago IL
- References: <1992Dec27.012019.1@pomona.claremont.edu> <petersen-271292060001@elvex33.acns.nwu.edu> <1992Dec27.201453.1@pomona.claremont.edu> <1992Dec28.094636.11709@news.acns.nwu.edu> <1992Dec28.135235.1@pomona.claremont.edu>
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 01:57:26 GMT
- Lines: 149
-
- In article <1992Dec28.135235.1@pomona.claremont.edu>,
- cblanc@pomona.claremont.edu (Muffavore) wrote:
- >
- > In article <1992Dec28.094636.11709@news.acns.nwu.edu>, petersen@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Julie Petersen) writes:
- > > In article <1992Dec27.201453.1@pomona.claremont.edu> cblanc@pomona.claremont.edu (Muffavore) writes:
- > >>> Well, certainly one good experience isn't going to make someone
- > >>> suddenly wake up and never drink again. But it can be a powerful
- > >>> start just to realize there's something else 'out there'. One of
- > >>> the keys to AA is acceptance of a 'higher power'. This is much
- > >>> easier when one has experienced the higher power directly through
- > >>> LSD or MDMA.
- > >>
- > >> The 'higher power' argument is nice; however, it's just substitution of
- > >>one addiction for another, and in the long run doesn't cure the more
- > >>intellectually active alcoholics. Besides, you fail to address the point: it
- > >>is a disease, whether physical or mental, and simply giving a substitute drug,
- > >>whether bullshit icon (gOD) or MDMA is not going to cut it.
- > >>
- > >
- > > I'm not sure I'm getting your point here... Are you implying that
- > > alcoholics never recover? I'm saying MDMA could be used to aide
- >
- > No, I'm saying that the way to treat alcohol is not to assign more
- > drugs to it as miracle cures. That is bullshit, as is giving gOD (DOg) to the
- > poor fucks in treatment -- the only way is to face the problem, and I don't
- > think that hallucinogens are going to aid that (this is not from lack of
- > understanding, but too much understanding). Alcoholics never do recover, in a
- > sense -- you are always an alcoholic, but you may not be drinking. Do you
- > understand now?
-
- MDMA is no miracle cure, nor have I claimed it as one. It is a tool,
- valuable as part of a complete recovery process. Yes, alcoholics
- never recover--their brain chemistry remains the same. I am well
- aware.
-
- > > the recovery process, and you keep saying that I'm wrong because
- > > alcoholism is a disease. I don't see how the fact that alcoholism
- > > is a disease ('disease' is subjective term, how about 'biological
- >
- > Great. Semantics. Hey -- recovery is a subjective term, too, pal. I
- > know some alcoholics who don't want to recover....
-
- I'm one.
-
- > > difference') discredits the idea of using MDMA as part of working
- > > towards a solution. In the first place, MDMA can allow a person
- > > to look at themselves honestly. It can break down the defenses
- >
- > No, it can take away their inhibitions about doing so, which fosters a
- > dependency in itself. Are you understanding yet?
-
- Using MDMA, and even liking it, does not automatically lead to
- dependency. It may for some people, it won't for others. So why
- not open it up as an avenue. I'm not claiming it will work for
- everyone, that would be stupid. But it will work for some people.
-
- > > that an alcoholic uses to avoid seeing what they're doing to
- > > their life. And the nice thing is that at the same time that you
- >
- > I know quite a few who will admit openly that they are alcoholics, and
- > recognize that fact (that is, they're not just saying "oh yeah iman alcoholic"
- > and writing it off quantitatively) and do not want to change.
-
- Once again, I know this attitude quite well. I am an alcholic and
- as of right now I am not ready to change.
-
- > > see yourself clearly, you are more inclined to accept things for
- > > what they are. Acceptance is the first step towards recovery.
- > >
- > > As for MDMA being 'substitution of one addiction for another',
- > > you saying this simply means that you don't understand MDMA. It
- > > may be many things, but almost nobody makes the claim that it's
- > > addictive, physically *or* psychologically.
- >
- > Anything is addictive psychologically -- I understand more
- > of this than you do, trust me...
-
- If *anything* is addictive psychologically (as I believe it is) then
- doesn't that mean that the term 'psychologically addictive' is really
- devoid of meaning (kind of like 'being'). Sorry, more semantics...
-
- > >
- > > For the alcoholic, alcohol is a very powerful drug, almost an
- > > opiate. Some people don't understand that alcohol affects the
- > > alcoholic differently than it does a 'normal' person (any
- > > doctors to back me up on this?). Using LSD or MDMA is not
- > > 'merely' replacing one drug with another. For an alcoholic who
- > > has been partaking of a powerful drug for all of his adult life,
- > > the high is very much an intergral part of life. It's got to
- > > be replaced somehow (there is a natural human need for feeling
- > > high, whether through religion, drugs, exercise, whatever). If
- > > the highly debilitating drug alcohol can be replaced with a
- > > drug that everyone agrees is way WAY safer, then that is a
- > > great accomplishment in itself. And if it is a drug such as
- > > MDMA which generally tends to be self-moderating, even better.
- > > And as the alcoholic awakens from the 'other'-oriented
- > > alcoholic high to the 'self'-oriented MDMA high s/he may
- > > discover a whole new world which allows them to leave
- > > behind the alcohol.
- >
- > What about the alcoholics who drink two beers a day? I hear that MDMA
- > is neurotoxic; alcohol is as well, but at that level to a lesser degree. For
- > one thing, I think you're talking hardcore alcoholic, in whose cases I doubt
- > your positive experience theory applies at all, and I doubt are treatable with
- > any drugs...MDMA or LSD might mmake them feel more alive, but they are still
- > going to need alcohol. This is truth, something you've stated above -- I'm
- > saying that your treatment is bullshit, and that applying it makes as much
- > sense as applying leaches. AM I coming through yet?
-
- Two beers a day is no less neurotoxic than an equivalent dosage of
- MDMA. As for the two beer a day alcoholic, as long as they're not
- blacking out (which is entirely possible) and they're functioning
- satisfactorily (to them) why mess with things? We're talking here
- about recovery, which implies a desire for recovery. I
- certainly don't advocate ANY method of 'curing' alcoholics who
- are happy just the way they are.
-
- > >
- > > At the very least, there should be further research into the
- > > use of LSD and MDMA to treat alcoholism. Nothing else we've
- > > tried seems to work particularly well, any new approach
- > > should at least be studied, rather than pushed into a closet
- > > without giving it a chance. Personally I just think the
- > > government would rather have an alcoholic citizenry than
- > > an awakened psychedelic citizenry. Call me paranoid.
- >
- > Your stance is that of an absolute -- hallucinogens are good, alcohol
- > is bad. Some people will always be alcoholics, and some will recover. The
- > reason nothing has worked so far is that it's mostly tied up with that halfwit
- > bastard gOD, who has nothing to do with chemicals and is merely another useless
- > addiction -- I have yet to see a program I'd trust an alcoholic in.
- > And some should stay alcoholic.
-
- No. Hallucinogens (and empathogens) are what they are, alcohol is
- what it is. The premise of this whole discussion is treatment for
- alcoholics. Of course some people live happily as aloholics, maybe
- some even should stay alcoholic. But the starting point for all
- of this discussion was the idea of treatment: an alcoholic who wants
- to stop taking alcohol.
-
- Hallucinogens, empathogens, and alcohol all have their place. In
- my opinion everyone should try all of them at least once,
- preferably more, just to understand what they're about.
-
- __________________________________________________________________________
- Jim Petersen petersen@casbah.acns.nwu.edu jp@darkstar.com
-
- If mercy's in business I wish it for you-
- More than just ashes when your dreams come true.
-