Author: The Fix

  • Growing Up Gay, Muslim, and Addicted to Sex (and Drugs)

    Growing Up Gay, Muslim, and Addicted to Sex (and Drugs)

    I craved love and attention, and as I started to rebel against my religion, porn and sex became a hobby that distracted from my loneliness; later it evolved into an obsession, and eventually, an addiction.

    You sit comfortably in the cinema with an extra-large bucket of popcorn on your lap and a diet coke in the cup holder while the movie characters on the screen are trying to survive their ordeal.

    You can cry with them, yell at their stupid decisions, smile when they finally get their happy ending (or feel sorry for them when they don’t). In the end, it’s just a movie and you’re safe in your seat.

    Then suddenly, your seat begins to shake. At first you think it’s just a 4D effect until you see white tentacles ensnare your body and lift you up, pulling you into the movie. You are no longer safely in your seat at the local cinema.*

    Growing up as a gay man In Indonesia, a country with the world’s largest Muslim population, the first LGBT story I read was published in Hidayah, a magazine aimed at conservative Muslims.

    The feature article was about a gay flight attendant who ended up contracting HIV and later became terminally ill due to AIDS complications.

    I shuddered when I read the portrayal of that poor gay man. It seemed that the writer could not hide his or her own repulsion toward the idea of two men falling for each other. The words “unnatural” and “sinful” were used. The AIDS complications that the man suffered were described in specific detail—it was horrifying.

    The message of the article was clear: If you choose to be gay, no happy endings will ever come to you.

    That story flashed through my mind when the doctor told me that my HIV test came back positive. I was no longer comfortably seated watching a movie. And I had just became a cliché: an HIV-positive gay man.

    How did I get here?

    I had watched quite a few gay-themed movies before that point and I knew the rules of safe sex. There was also a TV series that was funded by the government that touched on HIV/AIDS. And when I was a teenager, my boyfriend at the time invited me to attend a workshop on HIV and AIDS.

    I knew all the rules yet there was something in me that got me here, something that took me a while to come to terms with: my addiction to sex (and later, drugs).

    To say that growing up gay in Indonesia was difficult is an understatement.

    I was around four when my mother caught me using her lipstick. Of course, at that age, it was perhaps deemed adorable. My mother even took a picture of us together: me, a toddler, smiling from ear to ear with a face full of lipstick, while she looked amused.

    I was probably around 10 or 11 the second time I was caught. My father found me looking in the mirror and trying on my mother’s earrings. He rarely got angry with me but I’ll never forget his reaction that day. He pointed at me and yelled that what I did was an abomination and I should never, ever do it again.

    “No one is f***ot in this family, period!” he screamed.

    I was scared. For the first time, I didn’t feel safe under their roof. I realized there was something about me that my parents would never approve of.

    As I entered 7th grade, things didn’t get any better. While I was never physically assaulted for being gay—mostly because I tended to avoid any altercations—I got verbally abused a lot, like the time I was waiting to be picked up and a kid yelled at me “Hey, f***ot! You got nothing to do?” out the window as his father was driving him home.

    I never felt like I truly belonged.

    Around this time, a childhood friend introduced me to porn, and it quickly became a welcome escape. I will never forget the first scene that I watched. Porn created a space in my brain that I could always visit whenever life got too hard. I also began to masturbate.

    As a gay man, my focus was on the guys. With their muscles, their appearance, and cocksure attitude, they represented the ideal man. I convinced myself that in order to become “a real man,” I should be like the men in the videos I was watching.

    When I watched porn and masturbated, I was in my own time and space. Everything was good, for a while.

    Later, I started to look for guys online (the Internet was finally here) but it was really, really difficult to find gay men who I could befriend.

    Was it because gay men in Indonesia could not truly express themselves unless it was behind closed doors? Was it because, for gay men in a country with strict cultural and religious conventions against homosexuality, sex arguably became the only way to connect with other gay men?

    I craved love and attention, and as I started to rebel against my religion, porn and sex became a hobby that distracted from my loneliness; later it evolved into an obsession, and eventually, an addiction.

    I tried to become a good Muslim to make my parents happy—I attempted to denounce homosexuality and started to pray more. But it never lasted very long. In fact, I became more and more rebellious toward my religious teachings.

    On the one hand, this rebellion served a good purpose: eventually I became who I was born to be. But on the other hand, rebelling against my religion also meant that I didn’t have any moral or spiritual structure that could help save me from my troubles.

    On the outside, I was motivated and ambitious. I knew that in order to be accepted, I had to do everything I could to be successful. So I became a diligent student in college, and eventually got my first job as a newspaper journalist.

    I was very determined, even cutthroat; I basically did everything I could to become the star in my office. I believed that as a gay man, I could not fuck things up. I needed to double my efforts in order to get half the recognition of my peers.

    Inside, none of this was enough. In my head, the addiction was still there, hungry and needing to be fed. After spending most of my daytime hours working, at night I would cruise. I became a regular at a local gay bath house where I had plenty of anonymous sex in those dark rooms.

    I also became addicted to food and it became so out of control that I became overweight and thus I felt unattractive. Being a fat gay man was, as much as I tried to deny it, not an easy task. At one point I started to get involved with male escorts because I did not feel worthy of genuine connections.

    From time to time, I discarded condoms. All I could think about was how to fill the void in my soul. I didn’t care about myself or my health. I just wanted more of everything.

    That’s when I found out I was HIV+.

    In response, I began experimenting with drugs, starting with poppers and moving on to crystal meth. It was a full-blown addiction. That “safe” space in my head expanded and I found myself released from any inhibitions. When I was under the influence of drugs, I was no longer insecure.

    But altered states are temporary and once the effects wore off, everything felt worse and I just had to mess things up again with porn, sex, or drugs. It was a never-ending pain.

    Eventually, I lost my job, my dream job. Being a journalist was something that I aspired to but I messed it up. During my full-blown addiction, I made some fatal mistakes and the newspaper had no choice but to let me go.

    I lived in Shanghai, China for a while and started to attend 12-step meetings. But it wasn’t until I moved to Chiang Mai, Thailand that I started to see the wrongs that I’d done and began to take recovery seriously.

    There were a lot of anonymous meetings in this town and several treatment centers (including an LGBT drug rehab). There were many recovering drug addicts who I could relate to. I began to find my community: people in recovery.

    For the first time in my life, I started to believe that I was worth it. I knew that while my addictions did a number on me, they did not define me. I lost things due to my addiction, but I could gain other things—as long as I wanted to recover.

    I met my sponsor in this town as well as my current therapist. I began to realize that I needed to get out of my chaotic mind if I wanted to live. I needed to leave that “safe space” in my brain and open myself up to a new life.

    For many years, I sat in that cinema seat with my denial. When I was finally pulled into the movie, I was still in denial. It took a while but I eventually realized that I, an HIV-positive, recovering addict, gay man from a Muslim world, still had choices.

    And I chose life.

    *Thanks to my favorite writer Dee Lestari who came up with this analogy.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Gina Rodriguez Stepped Away From "Jane The Virgin" To Focus On Mental Health

    Gina Rodriguez Stepped Away From "Jane The Virgin" To Focus On Mental Health

    Rodriguez said she had to advocate for herself to protect her mental health.

    Actress Gina Rodriguez recently expanded on her experience with depression and anxiety, and how she was finally able to advocate for her own mental health by stepping away from filming Jane the Virgin.

    During a conversation with NBC News’s Kate Snow at The Kennedy Forum in Chicago, Rodriguez was prompted to speak about her personal battles when Snow’s husband Chris Bro shared his experience of losing his father to suicide.

    “I think I started dealing with depression around 16,” said Rodriguez. “I started dealing with the idea of—that same concept that I think your husband was talking about—(that) everything is going to be better when I’m gone. Life will be easier, all the woes will be away, all the problems. Then I wouldn’t have to fail or succeed, right? Then all this surmounting pressure would go away. It would just go away.”

    Snow remembered her father-in-law in a June 2018 essay on Today.com. “It’s been almost eight years now, but it’s still fresh. Not just for me, but my entire extended family.”

    Rodriguez said that after suffering a panic attack while filming the final season of Jane the Virgin, she had to take time away from set. She said it was the first time she was able to advocate for herself to protect her mental health. “There was a point where I couldn’t push through every single time anymore. It came to a point, this last season was the first season where I had to stop production. I just had a really tumultuous season and I was unafraid for the first time to be like, ‘I can’t.’”

    Growing up like many of us do, with no outlet to express our feelings or struggles, Rodriguez said she is now learning how to express herself in this way, and says she is hoping to pass on this important lesson to young people through speaking up about it herself. “It has to be a part of the conversation I have with these young girls,” she said. “I can’t just tell them to go out and make their dreams come true and then to ignore everything else.”

    The actress—who is the voice of Carmen Sandiego in the new Netflix animated series—revealed in 2017 that she is struggling just like anybody else with depression and anxiety.

    As part of artist Anton Soggiu’s #TenSecondPortraits project, Rodriguez posed for the camera for a 10-second shot. She wrote in the caption, “I suffer from anxiety. And watching this clip I could see how anxious I was, but I empathize with myself. I wanted to protect her and tell her it’s okay to be anxious, there is nothing different or strange about having anxiety and I will prevail.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • San Francisco May Become First US City To Ban E-Cigarettes

    San Francisco May Become First US City To Ban E-Cigarettes

    San Francisco is one vote away from officially putting a “moratorium” on e-cig sales.

    San Francisco is on track to becoming the first city in the United States to effectively ban e-cigarettes—amid rising concern that youth vaping has reached “epidemic” levels.

    The city’s Board of Supervisors approved a measure that would prohibit sales of electronic cigarettes by a unanimous vote, and will need a second vote to make it official.

    “We spent the ‘90s battling Big Tobacco, and now we see its new form in e-cigarettes,” said supervisor Shamann Walton, who voiced concern over the role of e-cigarettes in increasing “nicotine addiction for middle school children [and] high school students.”

    City officials prefer to call it a “moratorium” on sales instead of a ban—put in place until there is approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), according to local reporter Ali Wolf.

    Though the FDA has been very vocal about the concerning rise of vaping among youth, City Attorney Dennis Herrera said that until the agency acts, “it’s unfortunately falling to states and localities to step into the breach.” Herrera said that young people “have almost indiscriminate access to a product that shouldn’t even be on the market.”

    Youth vaping has reached “epidemic” levels, said former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb.

    “We didn’t predict what I now believe is an epidemic of e-cigarette use among teenagers,” said Gottlieb in a September 2018 statement. “I use the word epidemic with great care. E-cigs have become an almost ubiquitous—and dangerous—trend among teens. The disturbing and accelerating trajectory of use we’re seeing in youth, and the resulting path to addiction, must end.”

    He continued, “The FDA won’t tolerate a whole generation of young people becoming addicted to nicotine as a tradeoff for enabling adults to have unfettered access to these same products.”

    Another proposal endorsed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors would ban the manufacturing of e-cigarettes on city property.

    One Nebraska school district is taking on this “epidemic” by implementing random nicotine testing on some students this fall.

    “The skyrocketing growth of young people’s e-cigarette use over the past year threatens to erase progress made in reducing youth tobacco use,” said CDC Director Robert R. Redfield. “It’s putting a new generation at risk for nicotine addiction.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Feds Nab $1 Billion in Cocaine at Philadelphia Port

    Feds Nab $1 Billion in Cocaine at Philadelphia Port

    Federal agents seized more than 30,000 pounds of cocaine on the ship.

    Federal agents boarded a cargo vessel docked at Philadelphia’s Packer Marine Terminal on June 18 and seized more than 30,000 pounds, or 16.5 tons of cocaine, which authorities described as one of the largest drug seizures in United States history.

    Two members of the ship’s crew, including the second mate, were arrested and face federal charges of conspiracy to possess cocaine aboard a ship. The seizure and arrests come on the heels of a similar bust in March 2019, where an approximate 3,200 pounds of cocaine were discovered in a shipping container at the Port of New York/Newark. Customs and Border Protection described that apprehension as the second largest cocaine seizure at that port and the largest in 25 years.

    An affidavit obtained by the Associated Press noted that the cargo ship, the MSC Gayane, sails under the flag of Liberia and originated from Chile before traveling through Panama, the Bahamas, Peru and Colombia prior to its arrival in Philadelphia. The document alleged that crew members told government agents that they assisted in loading the cocaine while at sea off the west coast of South America. The crew members also alleged that several ship employees helped to transfer bales of cocaine from 14 boats on two separate occasions.

    As People noted, federal agents began the bust on Monday (June 17), shortly after the MSC Gayane had arrived in Philadelphia, but the actual search of the vessel began on the following day. The 16.5 tons of cocaine were transported to an undisclosed federal facility for further investigation. All media reports noted that additional drug seizures and arrests may be forthcoming.

    The ship’s parent company, MSC Mediterranean Shipping Co., issued a statement in regard to the incident, which noted that it “took the matter seriously and is grateful to the authorities for identifying any suspected abuse of its services,” as well as its “longstanding history of cooperating with U.S. federal law enforcement agencies to help disrupt illegal narcotics trafficking,” including U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

    William M. McSwain, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, praised the law enforcement agencies’ actions in a Twitter post.

    “While the investigation is ongoing, I want to thank all our federal, state and local partners for your incredible work so far in this investigation,” he wrote. “This amount of cocaine could kill millions—MILLIONS—of people. My office is committed to keeping our borders secure and streets safe from deadly narcotics.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Thousands Of Cases Under Review After Judge Accused Of "Severe Alcoholism"

    Thousands Of Cases Under Review After Judge Accused Of "Severe Alcoholism"

    More than 2,700 cases may be affected by this turn of events.

    A guardianship petition filed by a retired judge’s daughter and mother alleges that said judge was addicted to alcohol and worked while under the influence on multiple occasions, throwing as many as 2,700 court cases into question.

    According to the American Bar Association Journal, Ohio’s public defender is planning to review many of the cases overseen by former Judge William Marshall of Scioto County, particularly those that resulted in prison time or court supervision.

    Marshall was on the bench in Ohio for 15 years and was first hospitalized for his addiction disorder in 2013. He retired in 2018 just before he was given a six-month suspension by the Ohio Supreme Court’s Board of Professional Conduct after they found he had improperly inserted himself into a speeding ticket case involving his own daughter.

    Earlier this year, both Marshall’s daughter and mother filed for guardianship over the former judge, claiming that advanced alcoholism had left him unable to care for himself. Ohio Public Defender Tim Young will be among those reviewing his cases to determine if any decisions should be reversed due to Marshall possibly being under the influence during the trial.

    “If you’re a severe alcoholic, you’re going to work under the influence… and that means you are ruling on people’s cases,” said Young according to The Cincinnati Enquirer. “It also makes you open to manipulation to those who know and perhaps your cases aren’t being handled fairly because of the fear of being outed. A fair justice system relies on so many things, but nothing more important than a fair arbitrator—the judge.”

    Marshall was the subject of another investigation by The Enquirer which lasted for over a year, the results of which were posted in early 2019. In the report, Marshall was linked to an alleged Ohio sex-trafficking ring that is currently being investigated by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation. Marshall denied all allegations, but three women named him as the judge who was associated with the lawyer responsible for the operation.

    Reviewing so many cases is going to be a huge undertaking for the public defender’s office, which will be doing so with the help of a Case Western University professor and his students. However, Scioto County Prosecutor Shane Tieman believes that few of Marshall’s cases will be found to be problematic.

    “But they are going to be sorely disappointed with this expense of resources,” Tieman said. “I don’t think there are going to be that many if any cases that have problems. Everything is written down, recorded on video and on audio.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Seabrook

    Seabrook

    Nothing about the exterior of this facility resembles what one pictures when they think of the word “rehab.” The campus has sections that look like a state park, with walking trails, wooded areas and carefully placed benches.

    Introduction and Basic Services

    Seabrook is a New Jersey based drug and alcohol rehab that has been around since 1974. The original founders, Jerry and Peg Diehl, opened Seabrook after many years of Jerry struggling with addiction and finally finding peace in recovery through Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). The Diehls became aware that addicts who were experiencing relapses needed a safe environment to be clean long enough for it to stick. That idea eventually led the family to the vacant estate of Charles F. Seabrook, a former pioneer in the frozen food industry. Ultimately this became the main campus of Seabrook.

    Today, Seabrook has a multitude of treatment services, including detox, residential, outpatient and a long term extended care program. The Seabrook Model is solidly based in the 12 steps of AA, and offers a number of complementary holistic approaches, education, wellness programs and recreation. In addition to traditional treatment programs for addicts, there are also specialty tracks for young adults, nurses and those who are in need of Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT).

    Facility and Meals

    The stunning estate that houses the main treatment facility and residences for clients sits on just over 40 acres in the sleepy town of Bridgeton. Nothing about the exterior of this facility resembles what one pictures when they think of the word “rehab.” The campus has sections that look like a state park, with walking trails, wooded areas and carefully placed benches. The grounds leading up to the main house are carefully manicured with bright flowers and towering trees. The walkway that clients pass as they approach the front door has a multi-tiered stone water fountain, and a charming gazebo.

    There are 146 beds in total at Seabrook, with about 51 of them dedicated to detox. Clients stay in quaint, colonial style homes spread out on the property. Clients generally share bedrooms, which are huge, with one or two other people. However, there are suites and private, en suite bedrooms available for an added fee. The decor feels like a Norman Rockwell painting—very New England, tidy and upscale. The facilities are very comfortable, and clients are provided with dressers and closet space.

    The communal lounge is used during down times in between groups or activities. It has a big screen mounted TV, couches and a pinball machine.

    Clients eat together in the shared dining room for all three meals. Seabrook has a chef who prepares gourmet meals with a couple of different options for lunch and dinner. A well stocked salad bar is open during the afternoon and evening meals. The menus usually include a combination of chicken, pasta, steak or fish. Clients with dietary restrictions are accommodated, as are those who are vegan or vegetarian.

    Healthy snacks are readily available throughout the day. Caffeine is a no-go at Seabrook however, though they do serve decaf.

    Treatment Protocol and Team

    For most the first stop at Seabrook is the detox facilities for withdrawal management. While this is usually a very unpleasant experience, clients are monitored around the clock by medical professionals who supply the correct combination of medications to ease the individual through the roughest parts of withdrawal. During this stage of treatment as clients begin to feel better and stabilize, there are group sessions they can attend along with relapse prevention and psychoeducation.

    The next phase of treatment, which typically lasts between 30 and 35 days on average, entails a combination of group and individual therapy, 12-step support, wellness programs, education, and holistic therapies. The Seabrook Model is comprised of a four tier system, starting with detox and ending in the maintenance, extended care phase. While the standard program length is a little over a month, clients commonly stay in treatment between six and seven weeks.

    The transitional phase is folded into the outpatient program at Seabrook. There are outpatient facilities associated with this facility throughout New Jersey and one in Pennsylvania. Outpatient treatment offers a Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) and an Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP). While in outpatient clients attend individual and group therapy, and are access to MAT.

    Once the initial phase of treatment is complete, there is an option to move onto the aftercare, or extended care program. This is a long term sober living situation of around 35 weeks to a year. Clients focus on healthy living and getting used to being sober in a supportive environment. They attend regular AA meetings and have a sponsor.

    Seabrook actively encourages clients to continue on with some sort of counseling, whether it’s in a group setting, one on one or with family members. The outpatient program is also an option when clients don’t want to live at home in the early stages of recovery.

    During extended care clients live in a five bedroom, three bathroom home with private and semi private accomodations, and a three bedroom cottage. These facilities are really spacious and provide access to a private, state of the art gym, personal trainer, game room, lounge, cable TV and internet. As clients are learning how to live in acclimate to society they can bring their cell phones and personal devices.

    Seabrook employs a huge staff of clinicians, techs, house managers, assistants and educators. Staff are comprised of LCADCs, LPCs, CADCs, LCSWs, MSWs, APNs, DOs, physicians, psychologists and psychiatrists.

    Bonus Amenities

    Clients work out in the gym on campus, which has a combination of machines and free weights. If running on a treadmill doesn’t sound appealing, there is also a room dedicated to yoga.

    The main campus has several recreational and social activities for clients in the extended care program. This includes beach trips, kayaking, going to the theater or ballet, movie nights, bowling, crafting, and volunteering twice a month. In addition clients get massages, and experience equine therapy, music therapy and a ropes course.

    Summary

    Seabrook was founded with the one goal in mind; to give addicts a safe place to learn how to get and stay sober. The grounds are lovely and programming renowned. Clients also have the option to move forward in their treatment with continued support, live in a facility that continues with the programming ideals, and get a great head start in recovery.

    Seabrook Location

    133 Polk Lane PO Box 5055

    Seabrook, New Jersey (NJ)

    (856) 455-7575

    Seabrook Cost

    $27,500 (90 day program)

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  • On the Job and on Drugs: Police Officers Who Struggle with Addiction

    On the Job and on Drugs: Police Officers Who Struggle with Addiction

    A police officer who is using opioids illegally is breaking the very laws that he or she has sworn to uphold. This makes it even more difficult to reach out and get help for an addiction that may be spinning out of control.

    No one ever said being a police officer was easy. The job alternates between crushing boredom, bizarre situations, and unimaginable danger. When you’re a cop, much of the population that you’re paid to protect is afraid of you. You’re always being judged, whether it’s in the media or when you go to the corner store. Your hours are usually pretty awful, which means you don’t get to spend as much time with loved ones as you want to. You see things, horrible things, that mess up your head. If you talk to your peers about how traumatized you are, you’re seen as weak. The pressure can be intense.

    Police officers are human, so they seek ways to cope with the stress. Sometimes they find relief in opioids. And sometimes they become addicted.

    Two recent deaths of police officers due to drug overdose are stark reminders that no one is immune to addiction. In fact, police officers may be more at risk than others.

    Under Pressure and Self-Medicating

    Dr. Michael Genovese, a clinical psychiatrist and chief medical officer at Acadia Healthcare, told The Fix, “Not only are law enforcement officers not immune to addiction, but they are also more susceptible to addiction because the stress of their jobs renders them so. Police officers to whom I have spoken, who suffer from addiction, are not generally using drugs to get high or have fun; they are using them to numb emotions they find painful. Every day, police officers witness things that are outside the scope of normal human experience, and the frequency and intensity of traumatic events are overwhelming to the officer’s brain, even if he or she thinks they’re not.”

    While outsiders don’t think of Lewiston, Maine, as a hotbed of crime and drug use, locals know the old mill town has long been a place where heroin and crack are bought and sold. Officer Nicholas Meserve was attempting to stop the flow of drugs into this small Maine city, until he died of an accidental overdose.

    When announcing Meserve’s death by fentanyl overdose, Lewiston’s police chief Brian O’Malley said,“I hope it’s a reminder that the opioid epidemic touches the lives of many in the community, regardless of their wealth, race, religion or profession.”

    In Baltimore, Officer Joseph Banks Jr. died at a local motel after overdosing on heroin. His girlfriend, who was with him when he died, told police the two had been hanging out at the motel, using drugs throughout the day. Banks was suspended from the police force at his time of death. A police spokesman refused to state the reason for his suspension.

    Vernon Herron, who runs safety and wellness programs for the Baltimore Police Department, said, “Like a lot of police officers, sometimes we are so hyper-vigilant that we medicate ourselves. I’m not talking specifically about him [Banks], but I see officers over-medicate themselves to deal with the stresses of police work.”

    Michael Koch was a police officer for 15 years, 10 of them as an undercover narcotics detective. Over time, he started using heroin and became addicted, eventually to such a degree that he was arrested after taking heroin from an evidence room.

    Finding Relief in Opioids

    Koch told The Fix, “Drinking was always a part of my life. It was an unhealthy coping mechanism, but it’s what I did. At one point, I hurt my knee badly and I got a scrip for Vicodin. As soon as I took that drug the reaction in my body was amazing, like it was sent from heaven. So then my drinking dropped off and I got more into the pills. I was part of the SWAT team and evidence team, and kept getting injured at work and when I did I would go to the doctor and get more pills. So then I started using it recreationally; instead of drinking, I took pills.”

    Koch’s addiction continued to progress. As he told me, “I was dealing with immense pressure at work. We would see things the average person wouldn’t see. Bodies cut open, heads on the ground, all of that stuff just stacks up. I might have looked like I had it together at some of these scenes but inside I was dying. So I started using more and more pills and became dependent on them.”

    Koch kept sinking deeper into his addiction and he felt like he had no place to turn. Letting your fellow officers know that you might have a problem is just not how it’s done. A police officer never wants to appear weak amongst his or her peers.

    It got worse. As Koch relates, “In 2010 a lot of heroin was on the streets and we were doing a lot of busts where we confiscated heroin, and also things like Oxys. I crossed the line and started taking things out of evidence for my personal use. I justified it by saying it was going to be thrown out anyway, but by that time I’m an addict and living a double life as a well-respected undercover cop and also as someone that was smoking a ton of heroin. Eventually, I got caught taking drugs out of evidence.”

    He was charged with second-degree burglary, which was pled down to a misdemeanor and he was placed on probation. He now works as an addiction counselor at True North Recovery Services and has been clean and sober for years. He also has a podcast where he and guests discuss issues of addiction and mental health that affect first responders.

    He told The Fix, “It was devastating being found out but I was relieved that this secret hell was done. In the first six months of sobriety I went to rehab, lost my career, went through criminal charges, got divorced, went through bankruptcy, lost my reputation and friends and stayed sober. I have five and a half years of sobriety thanks to the support of 12-step recovery.”

    Other officers were not as lucky as Koch. They lost their lives to addiction before they could get clean.

    Overcoming Stigma and Acknowledging Vulnerability 

    Police officers are often thought of as brave protectors who work tirelessly to keep us safe, putting themselves at risk in the process. While true, police officers are also regular people who have the same amount of everyday stress in their lives as the rest of us, who at the same time are experiencing and processing traumatic experiences that most people couldn’t dream of. For some, death and violence are part of a day’s work. They spend less time with their loved ones and in other traditional support systems because they often work irregular hours, leaving them even more isolated.

    And then, of course, there is the issue of the drugs being illegal. A police officer who is using opioids illegally is breaking the very laws that he or she has sworn to uphold. This makes it even more difficult to reach out and get help for an addiction that may be spinning out of control.

    Even legally, police officers have fewer barriers to drug use. Mark Restivo was an NYPD officer who was forced to retire because of a severe injury to his knee after he was thrown down a flight of stairs and badly beaten while attempting to stop a thief from stealing a woman’s purse. He quickly became addicted to opioids. He told The Fix, “There is a sense of inherent trust in officers; while dealing with my injuries, I firmly believe that I was prescribed so many prescription painkillers because of my status as former NYPD officer.” After a stint in a First Responder rehab, Restivo has been sober for almost six years. He credits his sobriety to 12-step programs and Vivitrol.

    Police officers might sometimes seem intimidating, and like they always have a situation well under control. But addiction affects everyone, sometimes with tragic results.

    Changes are on the horizon. There are numerous treatment centers and recovery programs focused on helping police officers, whether they’re a first responder or not, and many police organizations are working to develop programs to locate and help cops who might be struggling with addiction.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Focus On Opioids Leaves States Struggling To Find Money To Treat Other Addictions

    Focus On Opioids Leaves States Struggling To Find Money To Treat Other Addictions

    Restricting funds to covering opioid-related treatments mean that some treatments will become more easily accessible while others remain hard to come by.

    Although the phrase “opioid epidemic” has become mainstream, experts on substance use disorder say that the country’s drug problem is about more than just opioids, and states are struggling to adequately address that with federal funds that have been earmarked specifically for opioid-related interventions. 

    “Even just the moniker — ‘the opioid epidemic’ — out of the gate, is problematic and incorrect,” Northeastern University professor Leo Beletsky, who teaches law and health sciences, told NPR. “This was never just about opioids.”

    Still, much of the $2.4 billion that the federal government has sent to states since 2017 has come in the form of grants that require states specifically address opioid use. Even the names of the federal grant programs make show their focus on opioids: the State Targeted Response to the Opioid Crisis and State Opioid Response are two major sources of funding. 

    That has left people like David Crowe looking for other options for funding to do more comprehensive drug use prevention. Crowe is the executive director of Crawford County Drug and Alcohol Executive Commission in Crawford County, Pennsylvania. He says that opioids are a major factor there, but so is methamphetamine, and he needs funds to address that as well. 

    “Now I’m looking for something different. I don’t need more opiate money. I need money that will not be used exclusively for opioids,” he said. 

    Opioids remain a prevalent problem, but in 11 states that class of drugs were responsible for less than half of opioid overdose deaths, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

    Restricting funds to covering opioid-related treatments mean that some treatments will become more easily accessible — like medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder. Yet, interventions for other drugs, like methamphetamines, might continue to be hard to come by. 

    This is especially concerning since use of specific drugs tends to come and go, while pervasive drug use continues nationally, said Bertha Madras, a professor at Harvard Medical School and former member of the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis.

    “I think we have to really begin to self-examine why this country has so much substance use to begin with,” she said. 

    Still, proponents of the programs say that even opioid-targeted funds can help address gaps in the treatment of mental illness and addiction. Those gaps contribute to the use of all drugs, including opioids, according to Marlies Perez, a division chief at the California Department of Health Care Services. 

    “This funding is dedicated to opioids, but we’re not blindly just building a system dedicated just to opioids,” Perez said. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dad Details Personal Struggle With Postpartum Depression

    Dad Details Personal Struggle With Postpartum Depression

    Paternal post-natal depression affects around 10% of fathers. 

    Postpartum depression is commonly thought of as a women’s issue but a number of scientific studies have revealed that men can also be affected by the disorder. On recent episode of Today, one parent has come forward about his struggles with postpartum depression after his wife gave birth to their son.

    As Zavo Gabriel told Today, his wife Annie went through a difficult birth of their child. She was in labor for 36-hours, and the doctor had to use the forceps in the delivery.

    “It was really difficult for me seeing the look on her face when she was pushing the hardest,” he explains. “She was screaming and making these noises, which sounded like someone pushing for her life.”

    Once Gabriel’s son was born, he started having “multiple panic attacks a day,” and he had to distance himself from the family for some time.

    “I was a total wreck,” he confessed. “Annie’s mom had to step in and be the co-parent for those first few weeks.”

    According to research, about 10% of fathers can suffer from postpartum depression. As a source at Northwestern University explains, “The estimate is higher than depression in the normal population. A father’s depression has a direct link to the child. It definitely impacts the whole family’s health.”

    And the same factors that can cause postpartum depression in women can affect men as well, whether it’s a history of mental illness, more stress in your personal life, sleep deprivation, or changes in your hormonal chemistry. Men can experience a drop in their testosterone levels, which can lead to depression once they become fathers.

    As one source told Today, postpartum depression in men “shouldn’t be belittled. We need to change the culture of what masculinity is and be more inclusive about why fathers’ experiences matter.” Dads don’t get screened for postpartum depression as much as women, and they’re often afraid of the stigma surrounding the condition, which often prevents them from getting the help they need.

    Gabriel did finally seek help, completing six weeks of outpatient therapy, and he’s still attending therapy while raising his son. “All I wanted was to get back to Annie and start this life as a family,” he says.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • China Sees US Pot Legalization As A Threat

    China Sees US Pot Legalization As A Threat

    A Chinese drug official says there has been an increase in marijuana trafficking from North America to China over the past two years. 

    The United States says that China is one of the biggest manufacturers of the deadly synthetic opioid fentanyl, but now Beijing has turned the tables, saying that increasingly-lax laws about marijuana in the US is leading to an uptick in cannabis seizures in China. 

    Deputy director of the China National Narcotics Control Commission, Liu Yuejin, said that the number of cannabis users has grown 25% in 2018 alone. He estimated that there were 24,000 people out of the 3.4 billion in China. By comparison, more than 22 million Americans have used cannabis in the past month

    Liu did concede that there are “few cannabis abusers in China,” according to CNN.

    However, he said “in two years, we have found increasing cannabis trafficked from North America to China.” Most of the shipments have been found in the belongings of Chinese students returning from study abroad or work abroad experiences, he added. 

    Overall, China seized more than 55 kilos of marijuana in 2018, Liu said. The U.S. Postal service, on the other hand, intercepted more than 43,000 kilos of marijuana in 2018

    Marijuana use remains relatively rare in China — at least according to officials — at least in part because of very strict laws regarding the drug. As little as 50 grams of cannabis can trigger the death penalty. More recently, the government has been doing drug tests in bars and nightclubs to further crack down on cannabis use, particularly in places frequented by Westerners. 

    Despite that, last week scientists said that cannabis use in China may have a long history. A study of burial artifacts in a Chinese tomb showed evidence of THC. This find, from about 500 B.C., is the earliest evidence of marijuana being smoked for mind-altering affects. 

    “We can start to piece together an image of funerary rites that included flames, rhythmic music and hallucinogen smoke, all intended to guide people into an altered state of mind,” study authors wrote.  

    “We believe that the plants were burned to induce some level of psychoactive effect, although these plants would not have been as potent as many modern cultivated varieties,” Robert Spengler, director of Germany’s Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History’s Paleoethnobotanical Laboratories told RTE. “I think it should come as no surprise that humans have had a long, intimate history with cannabis, as they have had with all of the plants that eventually became domesticated.”

    View the original article at thefix.com