The cachet of crystal
VANCOUVER / One man's gradual slide from West End comfort to the street
Craig W Barron / Vancouver / Thursday, January 07, 2010
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(Chris Howey photo. Aedan Saint model.)
The Fortune Apartments


You could reach out of David’s huge front window and touch pine needles; immense ponderosa pines loomed as high as the sixth floor.
 
Downtown Vancouver in the mid-1990s may have seemed a forest of building cranes, but the Fortune Apartments, an older building in the centre of the West End, was a tranquil corner snugly protected by trees. David and his partner rarely pulled the blinds down — why obscure the view of English Bay and Point Grey? 
 
A large raccoon sometimes perched on one of the tree branches, intrigued by the activities in the apartment: David baking chocolate biscotti or cutting vegetables for a stew; his partner noisily unloading the dishwasher.
 
Occasionally some unkind words passed between them; a casual remark about a dirty dish might lead to a discussion of responsibilities and sharing. Then his partner would retire for a nap and David would retreat to his den, the heavy smell of marijuana floating from the partly open door.
 
Sitting pie-eyed in his Archie Bunker chair, David was surrounded by things that he loved: shelves full of books, a collection of Japanese teacups, pottery, photos, a tiny silver rabbit. A blue wall covered with art: his partner’s David Hockney and Joe Average prints, David’s small Tony Onley and Bill Reid originals.
 
On another wall, some of his Japanese teacups were displayed in a framed poster from an exhibition he curated at the University of British Columbia in the first of his careers. One of the draws to the museum profession was, he said, “to be surrounded by beautiful things.” 
 
***
The Murray Hotel
 
The Murray Hotel is one of Vancouver’s better single-room-occupancy hotels. Attractive wide palladium windows top the stone and brick facade offering a visual variety to the nearby towers — the blue glass-sided Wall Centre has taken over the entire neighbouring block.
 
The Murray’s wood-panelled lobby is cottagelike: many overgrown plants, shelves of books, a white cat that lounges on the iron radiator. The residents inhabit a warren of cubicles each furnished with a single bed, wardrobe, small table and sink. 
 
David still pays great attention to his décor; it’s 10 years later and he possesses one of the Murray’s most adorned rooms. A saw-toothed rotary saw blade hangs in the centre of a wall; he’s fashioned a curtain rod from a broken aluminum crutch and it holds a beautiful piece of torn blue fabric. The wooden knob on the table drawer is carefully painted silver.
 
On the floor there is an open suitcase full of silver: metal bits, memory boards, chains — whatever caught the light on one of David’s dumpster dives.
 
Dirty clothes and boxes are piled in the corners. Under the sink there is a collection of rubble, bits of wood, metal rods and refrigerator grates — my friend mentions a future building project, some shelves above the sink. The floor is filthy with sand, broken glass, a squashed banana, ashes. 
 
David finds his propane torch with little trouble and lights it effortlessly. He carries it casually about the small darkened space, the long fierce flame almost touching objects, fabrics, skin. He turns the silver valve and the fire diminishes, comes to rest against the small glass pipe that he has picked up from the table. The smoke smells like talcum and cleanser. He inhales.
 
***
Numbers
 
“What if we could taste the virus, would we spit those lovers away?” David loved to juggle expansive concepts in his chatty way.
 
Late night at Numbers, the Davie St gay bar, getting to know him. At the same time I was slightly put out because all eyes were on him, the blond muscled golden boy. We took turns going for beer, and occasionally David disappeared into the alley to smoke pot. 
 
We were both working in the education department at AIDS Vancouver. David was my supervisor, his second career. Those were the days measured in T-cell counts.
 
Once, for one of our brochures, I created a graphic of the AIDS continuum: an ugly narrow tombstone, a tide line near the bottom marking the point of HIV infection and darkening grey bricks suggesting opportunistic infections along the way, then “full-blown” AIDS, and finally a small bit of black — just a little, not to be too scary.
 
At the side a suggested timeline measured in months; fortunately, within a couple of years it would become thoroughly inaccurate. 
 
David and his partner both happened to be HIV-positive. David was fairly new on the AIDS continuum and so far without symptoms; his partner was in the dark grey with a life expectancy of 12-18 months.
 
Back at the Fortune Apartments, they managed to keep their separate collections of pills out of sight. With their reasonable incomes, there were regular trips, dinners with friends, movies, pub runs and afternoons spent at the pool or the gym. They concocted elaborate meals. But David’s partner continued to lose weight.
 
Eventually David was “let go” from his job and awarded a disability pension: the disability being depression. As David put it, “Life’s complicated, it’s hard. I’m not used to it yet.”
 
*** 
The Murray Hotel
 
The propane torch now sits on the table, the glass pipe wedged into a coffin-like chunk of Styrofoam. Before filling his pipe, David wasn’t shy to show me the powder in a tiny plastic bag. Jib is the word he prefers for crystal meth, though it has many current street names: Tina, tweak, glass, ice, krank.
 
Perhaps to him jib sounds cool, musical, playful; to me it sounds harsh and cutting — appropriate considering its possible manufactured contents include ephedrine from cold medicine, battery acid, ether, solvents, Drano. Probably cooked in the basement of a local home or at a cabin in the Gulf Islands; recipes are available on the internet.
 
David the gracious host serves me, or rather I am encouraged to serve myself coffee and muffins. The coffee machine is my recycled Christmas gift; the dubious muffins are likely from a food bank or possibly one of Vancouver’s downtown dumpsters.
 
He is eating sugar, his priority staple, eats it by the bagful — could explain the missing teeth, but more likely he lost them because crystal meth causes the blood vessels to the mouth to shrink. I think of the child or teenager who eats just the icing on the cake. But David is no youth, he is 42.
 
David puts his blue torch and the glass pipe into his knapsack, a bag of powder into a special pocket. His night awaits and he’s going on a voyage deeper into the city. I look out his grimy window, six feet across to a view of an identical but barren and starkly lit room.
 
***
Mrs Simpson’s
 
Early 1996, a weekend meeting in blizzard-bound Washington, DC. I was on staff at the XI International Conference on AIDS. The program for the upcoming summer conference in Vancouver was a blank chart and we were here to begin filling the squares.
 
Our team met up at Mrs Simpson’s, a pleasant restaurant close to our hotel. Inside, the conference coordinators expressed their agendas: This would be a good-news conference. Fear and pessimism had reigned so far during the course of the pandemic. Now news that drugs called protease inhibitors were working for some AIDS patients. In combination with other drugs, they reduced the amount of HIV in the blood.
 
***
Burning Man
 
David’s partner became a candidate for the new drug regimen: a lot of pills, at specific times of the day. The new drug cocktail worked, he put on 20 pounds; his T4 count went up. 
 
David tried new drugs too, out and about all the night, blond and buffed, the golden boy.
 
Some friends from Alberta visited. Nice guys. Great travellers. Vancouver was a layover, their calendars shaped by their status on the gay “A list” party circuit: Carnival, Rio; Mardi Gras, Sydney; Volcano, Honolulu; Bunnies on the Bayou, Houston; Freedom Party, NYC; Black & Blue, Montreal; Altitude 6, Whistler.
 
Thousands of gay men from around the globe attend these immense dance parties; they are usually fundraising events, giving up to 100 percent of profits to AIDS groups. 
 
The guests were in the dining room. David brought in a cookie tray covered with aluminum foil. Cut and divide. But David and the guys weren’t handling cookie dough. Colourful pills covered the silver surface of the tray. The friends were casual dealers for their circuit parties; all those plane tickets to pay.
 
David and his partner would soon join them on a trip to one of the closer events, the White Party in Palm Springs.
 
David’s partner compiled an album for each trip they took. The latest, a road trip to the Black Rock desert in Nevada: Burning Man, the ultimate community gathering, the annual Woodstock of the 1990s. Pictures of their new second-hand camper, the desert, the heat, dust storms, the crowds, the rain, clay-mud stuck to naked bodies. Art cars, bone towers, smut shacks, glitter camps, metal dragons, performance art, the towering fire. One photo showed a young man with big letters on his T-shirt, DRANO RULES.
 
David’s partner wasn’t sure what drugs David consumed on this trip.
 
*** 
The Murray Hotel
 
The last time I’d visited the Murray, David’s room was dark but the door stood open a crack. David was in bed, impervious to the hard knocks on his door. He was in his three-days-off mode — stupor, slumber, sleep — that inevitably followed the three-days-on spree of stoned, spaced, sleeplessness. 
 
But today he is brilliant, his words like fiery torches. Cultural anthropology remains his specialty, and he explains the significance of a glazed Chinese wooden bowl, a slightly damaged find from the city’s garbage.
 
Then his non-stop words torque to the subject of Marie Antoinette, her use of language and her oft-quoted response to protests that the masses had no bread to eat: Then let them eat cake.
 
He explains that this was actually not an illustration of ignorance or insincerity but of practicality: the word brioche that she used referred not to a sugared delicacy, but rather the remains stuck to the sides of bread pans that was usually discarded.
 
I always learn something from my friend.
 
*** 
The Fortune Apartments
 
Wax and ashes. Multi-coloured masses mixed with white, lumpy streams and puddles, wax drips from candleholders, dishes and ashtrays. Ashes everywhere.
 
The house of David. An ever-changing mix, furniture from the alleyways scattered here and there among what remained of his usual nice stuff.
 
Missing was the antique buffet, the massive pine coffee table, furniture of substance that his partner loaded one night into a van.
 
He moved to a small town in the mountains. With good genetics, a house, a dog, a garden, family and new gay friends: a new life. Faithful to a daily drug regimen and regular in his visits back to his doctor in Vancouver.
 
David’s ex-partner’s health was now monitored by viral load. It equals zero: This is excellent.
 
***
Haro St
 
David’s grand new six-sided saltwater tank cast a beautiful blue light, accenting its fairytale mountain of natural pink coral. There wasn’t much light in the Haro St alleyway apartment: all that David could find following his mid-December eviction from the Fortune Apartments. The aquarium was tall and narrow, a delicate affair to sustain: a question of surface area and oxygen.
 
He regularly maintained the huge Cadillac of a canister filter. But soon David would pull the aquarium apart — loving the siphoning ritual — rearranging, redecorating at least once a week. Certainly contrary to healthy aquarium stewardship, creating a stable self-sustaining environment for your fish. Considerable stress for the Yellow Tang, Blue Damsel, Clownfish and Coral Catfish: their frequent sojourns in a bucket.
 
But otherwise David had done all the research. Costly shrimp cubes in the freezer, the heater continually monitored.
 
The fish all died. A few days without electricity, no filter, heater, light: the apartment’s hydro bill long unpaid. Then there was the matter of the rent.
 
*** 
The Murray Hotel
 
His interesting life. David wants me to interview him. But he is high, another time, not today. He has plans to write a screenplay about his drug community. Marginalization sells, he assumes, and someday he will become rich and buy a condo.
 
A well-known artist is part of this community; David says he’s put some of his rare prints in the storage cube his faithful family maintains for the remains of his old life. Why people separate him into old and new, David says he doesn’t understand the difference.
 
Some days he is utter paranoia: a murder he has witnessed, assassins await, gangs are at his beck and call. People conspire against him and top of that list is family and former friends. International drug lords have his name, and he has theirs. All according to the vagaries of the dopamine control centre in his mind. 
 
Today is a calm day and David thinks I could use some anti-depressants. He opens a fruit box full of pills: Zoloft, Paxil, Effexor, Serzone and anti-psychotics. He’s had no trouble adding to his collection on visits to the doctors over the years.
 
He makes recommendations then asks me to choose, and I politely accept a sample. Too boring for his own consumption, these pretty pills, but something he thought I needed to get through the November rains. He believes in self-medication.
 
The subject of addiction is not a taboo subject for my friend, but David says he is not an addict, he can stop any time; addict is just a label imposed on him. Rather he says he is cutting edge, an adventurer in a new world. Jib has romance. He pauses, professorially pleased, carefully chooses his words. “The cachet of crystal.” 
 
The question of intelligence. I doubt it has anything to do with whether you become addicted or not. On the contrary, a surplus of smarts allows invention and eloquent subterfuge. All tenants of the imagination can help maintain an addiction. Yes, at some level drugs work well for my friend. 
 
The next time I visit, I discover David has been thrown out of the Murray Hotel.
 
*** 
Bute St
 
Windows of the weary gay and lesbian community centre overlook the corner of Bute and Davie streets. This corner became crystal central in the drug’s heyday, and everyone seemed to know. But today musicians play and people are dancing in the street. It is Davie Village day; our progressive city council is encouraging community building in the West End.
 
A white tent replaces the makeshift stalls where the binners normally sell their scavenged wealth. Some street people watch. Beside me a hooded figure in black moves away. He has David’s hands. A phantom of the West End, he heads off down the alleyway. A glint of the sun reflects from his knapsack; it’s of a transparent plastic, a little child’s carrier case, full of colourful and carefully curated stuff.


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Reader Comments


 
Tried
Crystal once many years ago with my boyfriend at the time. It was great while dancing at the club, then came 3 days of being wide awake and missing work. Not what I had imagined it to be and never, ever touched that shit again. Addictions IS a horrible disease!
Marc, Van BC
12/31/09 8:59 AM EST
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Drugs are a CHOICE that's made
Addiction is NOT a disease. Addiction is the result of poor decisions - NOT a medical issue. Over the years, I have been in situations where a choice was on the table. The choice I made was to walk away. Same can be said for many. many other people I've known over the years. I've personally NEVER seen anyone held down, tied up, and MADE to do a drug. I wish people would see drug addiction for what it is - a choice. Don't want to suffer ? then DON'T decide to try a drug - it's your CHOICE.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
12/31/09 5:24 PM EST
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Wow Jeff!
Your last line speaks volumes! Alot of youth "try" drugs NOT KNOWING that they are going to get hooked you know? ALSO, not everyone is like YOU, did you know that? WOW! I know....Amazing eh? Once your life becomes unmanageable, you are addicted and NO LONGER MAKING A CHOICE. Geez, there's something to swallow you idiot!
Michael, Vancouver BC
01/04/10 10:39 PM EST
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Excellent Article
Excellent article. There should be one now on GHB and how it has become rampant in the community. People say we live in "the best place on earth" yet for some reason so many people are doing drugs.
TB, Vancouver BC
01/06/10 6:26 PM EST
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METH CAN KILL YOU!!
This article should serve us as a dire warning against the consequences of using meth. Meth is a cancer in the gay community: it's killing us, it's destroying the fabric of our social network. I would regard meth use as a worse threat to our people than any fundamentalist, republican or tory. We should all stand together as a proud community and get this garbage off the streets and the dealers and thugs who purvey it locked up. 'Nuff said.
Kieran Earles, Mount Pearl Newfoundland
01/07/10 2:15 PM EST
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choice
@jeff there is a choice and then there is a choice. Meth is especially hard to combat because if you make a choice to try it once, i am told you are immediately addicted. By saying that people make a choice not to stop drug use, you are putting the onus on the individual to surmount something that is so physically addictive people have lost their families, jobs and lives for it. This point you make, is simply ill-informed. I hope you never lose someone close to you to this disease. And if you do, I wish you compassion.
lina harper, montreal qc
01/08/10 12:16 AM EST
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sometimes only way for some to cope
Addiction truly is an awful problem, condition, disease, or whatever you want to call it its all the same. Some people have excellent coping mechanisms and easily avoid drug use, other people don't have very good coping abilities and sometimes use drugs to help them cope with whatever in their life that they're having a hard time dealing with, some folks, myself included, just couldn't cope without the aid of some chemical, I've never used crystal and have been clean going on two years now, but there was a time when I started using my drug of choice, opiate pain killers, that my choice was between suicide and the numbness granted me by drug use. At the time I didn't have the ability to cope with my life as a gay teenager in a homophobic society, for other people its different I'm sure but a lot of it comes down to a lack of coping skills and homophobia both external and internalized. I've been clean going on two years now but its taken me 10 years of trying and finally methadone to get to this point. Crystal is a particularly bad problem for any gay community since its so tied up with sex and sexuality for many, thankfully Toronto and Vancouver now have treatment programs dedicated to the needs of the LGBT community, without such specific help I probably wouldn't have made it and I'm sure the same applies to the many other LGBT folk who've been through queer focused treatment.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/08/10 12:12 PM EST
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A Reply
Dear Lina Harper, so to quote you, 'there is a choice, then there is a choice'. You, yourself also typed, quote 'if you make a choice to try it once'. Here's a news flash for you, you're saying exactly what I'm saying ! How can you call my comments ill-informed when you are saying the same thing as I am - just using different wording ? Drug addiction starts off as A CHOICE. It isn't a choice once a person is hooked. As for Michael's comments to mine, I can only say, that once you decide to try drugs and your life becomes 'unmanageable' you'd probably really regret that choice you made in the first place.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
01/08/10 1:49 PM EST
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rarely a choice
Jeff for most serious addicts as opposed to recreational drug users it isn't a choice, or rather the choice is limited to what drug to become addicted to and even then it depends mostly on what's available to the person so that's more of a false choice isn't it. There is a huge difference between people who use a drug recreationally and people who are addicted to drugs, recreational users may become addicts in time but even then quitting for this type of user is usually pretty easy, I have yet to know a serious addict who really had much of a choice about becoming an addict and I've known many on a wide variety of drugs or alcohol, pretty much everyone I've known who was/is addicted to some drug/booze felt destined to become addicts when they reflected on their life and how they got where they are now or upon trying some drug or booze felt finally complete and whole as a human being, that's not much of a choice though you are right they could've said no and continued suffering without the drugs, I could have killed myself instead of using, that was the choice I faced, so yes I made the choice to use instead of killing myself but its not much of a choice is it. Its easy for people who haven't lived my life to say I should have done this or that instead to avoid suicide and not have become an addict but you weren't there, you aren't me, you don't know what options were available to me at the time, so fuck off you preachy motherfuckers! Instead of being solely focused on blaming people for their troubles and problems Jeff I think you should try a little compassion and understanding instead, it won't cost you a dime and might do yourself some good.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/08/10 2:42 PM EST
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crystal can rewire the brain
on the first try
Raymond Helkio, Toronto Ontario
01/08/10 4:50 PM EST
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Dear Rich,
Rich, first let me point out something to you regarding your comments. Anger is a destructive thing and it seldom ever solves problems. In fact, anger more often than not causes more problems. Also, even though I swear myself, the place and timing that you made the choice to use it really does take away from your posting/comments. Sad. The last time I did any research on drugs, they were illegal and not all that good for you. Seems (by reading your comment(s)) you have a theory about the differences between recreational drug use and addicted drug use. It seems to me also, that you think there is differences between drugs and how they effect people. Although that may be true, an illegal drug is an illegal drug. If drugs are ruining your life or the life of someone you know, I really don't think it matters which or what drug it is. Do you ? Personally I've seen booze ruins people's lives, just as I've seen coke ruins lives and pot ruins lives. As an addict, you must by now realize that turning to a drug (of any kind) was/is a very poor choice that you made back when you were dealing with your personal problems. I hope you now have the tools and education to better deal with issues that you obviously have/had in your life.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
01/09/10 11:54 AM EST
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Dusting the chandelier
Moralistic, patronizing, simplistic, self-righteous arguments provided by such individuals as Jeff Taylor contribute nothing to the debate about a complex issue. (He pops up often in online forums--always predictably passive-aggressive in vocabulary and sentence structure.) I have visions of Nancy Reagan dusting her chandelier. May many more words from "addicts" such as Rich be heard and supported.
Stephen Quatrefoil, Dorval Quebec
01/09/10 1:40 PM EST
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my point being...
Jeff my point was that many people due to a wide variety of circumstances and reasons simply do not "have the tools and education to better deal with issues". There is real and terrible suffering in people's lives that they simply can't cope with but then they find out, often unintentionally, that some drug makes their lives more tolerable in the short term at least, for many drug use is the only way of coping that they have, to cope or not to cope that is the choice they have to make. My point is that simply saying drug abuse is a choice people makes over looks the lack of choice many people have in their lives, not being able to cope with life is a horrible existence so if something out there makes life bearable right now it can't be expected that people won't take it and it can't be considered a real choice. Of course it leads to massive new problems for the person down the road but in the now its only human nature to seek an end to personal suffering. Lots could be done in our society to prevent drug abuse in the first place and that's a much better place to focus on than blaming people for coping the best they can with drugs or alcohol. Changing societal attitudes towards minorities, removing the stigma of mental illness, preventing abuse whether physical, sexual or emotional, teaching children where to turn for help when they need it, lowering the poverty rate, increasing educational opportunities for all, and anything that puts social and emotional health in the same class as physical and mental health all would go a long way to preventing drug abuse and that doesn't even begin to address what needs to be done to stop the drug abuse already rampant in the gay community. For that we need a lot more treatment programs focused on LGBT clients, laws that treat drug abuse as social health but not criminal problem, poverty reduction strategies, removal of the stigma associated with being addicted to drugs/alcohol and much more public education on the whol
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/09/10 4:25 PM EST
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swapping one thing for another
Jeff needs prescription drugs. No seriously. Get that mental passive/aggressive thing in order. And quick. From reading back on all your posts on this site and others Jeff it sounds like you were running from something in Vancouver so you had to move to Toronto. Burn too many bridges?
Carl Gorges, Vancouver BC
01/09/10 7:41 PM EST
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Thanks
Hi Rich, thanks for your response to my last comments. Although I don't agree with much of what you say, I thought you made your points well. There's a blog site that you might find interesting. It's a blog written by a guy by the name of David Berner. He was a drug rehabilitation executive for a number of years here in Canada. In a nutshell, Berner ran group homes with a stunning rehabilitation success rate. His main points in the fight against drug addiction is that cities like Vancouver are actually harming addicts and standing in their way of recovering from their addictions due to the various 'programs' that have been put in place to so called 'help' addicted people. On his site, he has posted some YouTube videos showing various talks he has given on the topic. His site(s) have a lot of content so you may have to dig a little to find those videos. Also, he has numerous written blogs about addiction. His site is : DavidBerner.com Cheers.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
01/10/10 11:28 AM EST
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harm reduction saves lives
Jeff, I assume you're referring to harm reduction programs, at least that's what it sounds like, I don't have time at the moment to check the site you mentioned but I am well aware of different harm reduction models. In a nutshell harm reduction strategies save lives, the most successful of which, methadone maintainence therapy, has saved many thousands of lives in Canada including my own. Other harm reduction programs that teach healthier drug use techniques have also had a huge impact in reducing illnesses such as HIV and lowering overall drug/alcohol use. The argument against harm reduction strategies is that they enable the drug user to continue using, however even with professional help many addicted people simply aren't at a place in their lives where they're capable of quitting, no one wants to be an addict, if they could stop with help they would and even when they do seek help it can take many years for them to be successful, in the meantime allowing them to die or have their health further deteriorate for the sake of not being seen to enable them is a cruel option. Treatment programs that insist on abstinence only in order to remain in the program have massive drop out rates since its an unrealistic goal they set for their clients. The dead do not recover, harm reduction keeps people alive until they can quit for good and its so much better to keep drug addicts in contact with helping agencies than to refuse them any help at all if they can't quit completely, plus it saves much money for our health system. Organizations that have carefully studied the issues all use the harm reduction model because empirical evidence shows it works, without harm reduction I would likely be dead by now. You may not agree with me Jeff but I guarantee you I know far more about this topic than you do, from my own experience, talking to hundreds of others in similar boats and all I've learned from therapists working in the field over the last decade or so.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/10/10 1:31 PM EST
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Thanks Rich
for sharing your story. Swearing doesn't hurt my fweelings, so go ahead and rant. I feel right there with you and am supportive of your efforts to remain clean. ...swearing and angry or not.
Michael, Vancouver BC
01/10/10 3:10 PM EST
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Next...please?
Can we have a scary story on alcohol? That drug has slain more people and ruined more families than all other psycho-active drugs combined. Yet we continue to take the harm reduction approach to alcohol because other state interventions don't work. Prohibition lowered the quality and made gangster rich and many died in the wars for control of the trade. Still, millions struggle to get out of its deadly grip. I'm just asking for some perspective. We get enough fright-media from the mainstream.
Alex MacLean, Toronto ON
01/10/10 3:47 PM EST
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My Final Comments ....
Hey Rich, after I finished reading your comments, I couldn't help thinking to myself how many times over the last 20 plus years I've read and listened to the very same points of view and arguments that you posted. Your assumption that you know 'far more than I do' about this topic, is short-sighted, and extremely assuming on your part. However, I can fully understand your passion regarding the issue of addiction, even though I don't agree with you on many of your views. Not to open up more cans of worms, but I know that if you did a little research on 'harm reduction' in Europe, you'll find that several counties are having a very serious 'second look' at their programs. I know of what I speak of because of friends and family I have that live in some European cities. Also, in Holland for example, 'soft drug laws' are currently under review, with some of them being tightened up. I know this first hand because I have family living there. In closing, I'd highly recommend that you watch the videos on DavidBerner.com on the topic of addiction.
Jeff Taylor, Toronto Ontario
01/10/10 11:53 PM EST
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best practices
Jeff I didn't expect to change your mind since you're dead set in your opinions and challenging them only made you defensive, I can understand that. I do find it just as obnoxious when straight guys, usually anti-gay bigots, pretend to be experts on all things LGBT as when people who clearly have no experience in drug treatment or addiction think they know more than those who do. Just remember that people who are addicted to drugs/alcohol are real people too in need of understanding and help not judgement and condemnation. No one chooses to become addicted to drugs/alcohol, the vast majority of opiate addicts, something like 80-90% I forget the exact number, are victims of abuse which lead directly to their drug usage. For users of other drugs the rate of past abuse is also very high, most people who become addicted did not have the clear cut choice to use or not to use that Jeff talks about, its been recently found that many folks have a genetic predisposition towards drug/alcohol abuse, the families we grow up in have a huge impact on our drug/alcohol consumption styles. My point being is that you can't so easily point the finger of blame at people for their troubles in life. Blaming people for their addictions might make you feel better about yourself as if you're better than addicted folks instead just more fortunate than them but it does no one else any good and is obnoxious to listen to and far from the truth of the matter. You can never go wrong treating all people with compassion and respect regardless of their problems in life. No one should be judged and condemned for their problems especially when you have no idea what they have been through in their lives.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/11/10 10:01 AM EST
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Wow Rich !
It's interesting how this Rich guy can point his finger at others saying that they are wrong all the while saying and thinking that they are right ! Rich, have you thought that maybe, just maybe you're wrong ? Reading all you comments that you've posted, you are the only one that has shown angry, defensive attitudinal issues. Also, what's with the attack on 'straight guys' ? That's sure NOT showing the compassion you keep preaching over & over. You've accused this Jeff guy of several things, yet it's you that seems to have an unhealthy amount of issues. Take a truthful inventory of yourself before you sling mud on others.
Kevin H., North York Ontario
01/11/10 11:29 AM EST
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Kevin
Kevin reread my posts and apply some reading comprehension this time around, you have misunderstood what I was trying to say, especially in regards to hetero guys, rereading might also help you understand why I would be angry and defensive in my replies to Jeff. I'm not getting into a new debate on this topic, I've said all I have to say and am moving on much like Jeff has.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
01/11/10 1:15 PM EST
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The cachet of crystal
I am not here to debate the subject but to say that I found the article a must read. After doing some research on Google, I realized that I have met David when he was working on Seymour St. and seeing him on the scene afterwards. I too stayed at the Murray when I first moved to Vancouver in the mid 70's. So, there were points I could relate to. I was very saddened by his descent into the addiction by his passing. A terrible loss.
Andre Tardif, Montreal/Toronto Qc/ON
01/11/10 11:29 PM EST
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Issue
I know of Jeff from when he was in Vancouver. He went out with my ex-roommate once and because my ex-roommate just wasn't feeling they clicked and (kindly) turned Jeff down. Jeff would have nothing of this and harassed him with phone calls and emails for close to a year. I also understand Jeff has been let go from most every job he has ever had due to his anger management issues so maybe thats why he choose to move to Toronto.? Another time I was out with friends at a popular bar on Davie Street in which Jeff got kicked out for arguing/fighting with patrons. I assume this was also because of his anger issues. So Jeff, you may not have drug or booze addictions, but you are human like everyone else and you do still have an issue that has been felt by others. Its your anger. You taunt people, you scare people, you yell at people, you never let things go, especially those that might not agree with you or with the way you do things. Please recognize this and get some help. I hope your move to Toronto is bringing you some peace in your life. But back to the subject. As humans, we like to try and test our own boundaries...experiment. We like to see what is out there like a curious child. Some things may feel good at first, start off small and then go off to degrees we never would've imagined for ourselves. Some people fall through the cracks and some people can take things and leave it. Who are we to judge but to try and help one another to be the best person they can be.
Len, Vancouver - Westend BC
01/12/10 7:59 PM EST
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My heart is heavy
I just read this article...one that I had no intention of reading, as I have become very jaded with this subject. I have family that continue to battle this. AIDS has and continues to devestate our community...alot of my friends are gone, and David sounds like alot of them. My heart is heavy...and I have nothing 'witty' or even 'profound' to say. Thank you for having the courage to write this article..
Amanda Luv, Burnaby BC
01/13/10 2:43 PM EST
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Ignorance ISN'T bliss
Excellent article that once again tries to bridge the gap between addicts and the rest of the poulation. Addiction can take hold of just about anyone, given the right set of circumstances. Addiction IS a disease, and a ravaging one at that. Comments such as those from 'Jeff' are extremely disheartening to read given the (extremely visible) affects of addiction in both our and other communities. The greatest weapon in the fight against any disease - addiction, AIDS et al - is human insight.
John Britton, Vancouver BC
01/13/10 3:29 PM EST
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I'm
living proof that you can overcome your disease and addiction to drugs. Been clean since '96 and never looked back. The mere sight of drugs makes me sick to my stomach. Thank god for good rehab, supportive family and friends and the willingness to try to overcome. It worked!
Marc, Van BC
01/13/10 8:00 PM EST
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LOL ... It doesn't get any better !
Hey Len, the Jeff Taylor I know (and have known for years now) has never had someone break up with him. It's always been the other way around as far as I've ever known. Also, the Jeff Taylor I know, would NEVER call or email someone to the point of stalking them. However, he did once tell me that he was going to punch the lights out of a 'certain' East-Side bathhouse wanna-be ! LOL.
Kenny G !, Vancity Beautiful British Columbia
01/15/10 2:11 PM EST
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Knew him
David Richardson was my uncle, and I would like to make it clear that before he got caught in the awful cycle of addiction he was not only the most amazing uncle a girl could ask for, but also an avid gay rights and HIV activist. He did not die from crystal meth, he died of cancer after putting himself through rehab and getting clean.
cait, calgary ab
03/08/10 12:44 AM EST
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Words
Cait’s 65 words are certainly worth more than my many hundreds in representing David’s life. I left David where I last saw him several years ago: isolated, stigmatized and silent. I imagine someone else could write a book about his final days, and yet another book about his early life—ideally it would have been him. I wanted to show that addiction is complex, that the brightest among us can be affected, in other words to educate—that is how I first came to know David, as a fellow educator.
Craig W Barron, Montreal Quebec
03/09/10 12:44 AM EST
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