skip to content

Helping Drug Dependents

Helping Drug Dependents
Fr. Shay Cullen
25 August 2016

Working for over twenty years helping drug dependents recover from abuse and addiction in a rehabilitation sanctuary for young people using chemical substances, I learned a few important things. First is that they are not criminals but in need of medical help and intervention. Drug abuse is a health issue. The most common answer given by the youth when asked why they began substance abuse is “To forget my problems.” But behind those answers, I learned about the causes and the nature of those problems they try to forget by substance use.

Substance abuse is trying to change bad feelings with chemicals. Millions of adults and young people are using alcohol, a legal drug to “forget their problems.” We need to be compassionate and caring of the substance user, not take a punitive approach of condemnation and punishment.

They are people suffering, hurting and with a troubled life. So the use and abuse of chemical substances is a form of self-medication for some. The use of substances ought not to be a criminal offense but a medical health issue. Those who use chemical substances need and deserve treatment, care and rehabilitation- not the death penalty.

Most of these dependents suffer from emotional relationship problems- some are childhood problems- that cause pain that cannot be buried inside and “forgotten.” They will always be there until human compassion, help, understanding and therapy is found.
The suppliers, dealers and traffickers of the illegal drugs are the people who need investigation and legal action under the rule of law. They provide a quick, pain killer “solution” for youth encouraging them to turn to chemical solutions to solve emotional and personal problems rather than seeking human help, understanding, care and support.

The most important thing that we have to understand is that substance abuse is not just about illegal drugs. It is also about legal prescription drugs, alcohol and tobacco addiction- all of which can and do kill. There is nothing more painful or saddening than a cigarette smoker with lung cancer or someone dying of an overdose as happens at concerts and parties.

Some people abuse drugs and substance abuse for recreational purposes as if the absorption of dangerous chemicals into the human body was not harmful but helpful and joyous. So the economic forces that are campaigning to make some drugs such as cannabis legal are promoting it as harmless and playing down the dangerous health risk and ignoring that fact.

One day, the adverse effect of drug use- like that of alcohol, cigarettes and tobacco- kicks in and kills people after years of use. Cannabis is a starter drug and many youth begin to experiment but they get hooked and peer group pressure to use is overwhelming and is a more powerful influence than that of parents and family. They develop tolerance to a substance and in time the “high” they get becomes a “low” and they look for something stronger.

The causes of youth turning to chemical remedies to “forget problems” can be dysfunctional family, the alcoholic abusive father, the uncaring mother, sexual abuse in childhood, the separation of parents, drop out of school, the loss of dignity and status, abandonment, abuse in an orphanage, unbearable poverty and misery in a slum, or the painful breakup of a boy-girl relationship. The street youth and children are usually abusing cheap chemical inhalers like industrial glue.

For other young people the problem is a misunderstanding and arguments with unloving, busy neglectful parents who do not give good example and don’t inspire and encourage their children. These are all causes that lead the young people to suffer depression, causing them to leave home and finding a substitute “family” on the street or a peer group “gang.”

What can be done to help these young people deal with the problems and not resort to chemicals to forget their problems or to get high to overcome depression? The first step is to find a caring and understanding adult who has experience in counseling and listening to the young persons and enable them to bring out and express all their problems. Counseling and recovery centers are needed.

The young troubled-youth need “a friendly trusting shoulder to cry on.” It is the holding in of their problems and having no one to listen with understanding that causes so much stress and anxiety for youth and adults too. It drives them to drugs, alcohol or other escapist addictions.

In a therapy and recovery center, the youth can overcome drug dependence and find themselves and be empowered to have self-control and find a meaning to life. This can be accelerated and achieved through emotional release therapy where the young person has the professional help to express everything openly and fully in a therapy room. Family reconciliation is the next most important step and a return to a normal life. Whatever, the drug dependent can and must be helped and saved.

[email protected]

Facebook
WhatsApp
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Picture of Fr. Shay Cullen
Fr. Shay Cullen

Read more articles written by Fr. Shay Cullen

View All Posts >
About the Founder
Profile photo of Fr Shay Cullen
Fr. Shay Cullen

Shay Cullen is a Missionary priest from Ireland, a member of the Missionary Society of St. Columban and Founder and President of Preda Foundation since 1975.

Share this post
Facebook
Pinterest
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
Twitter