In the last twenty years, figures for methamphetamine consumption and addiction have skyrocketed. One young man’s story of his life will illustrate how addiction can spread and destroy one’s life, and how it can be resolved.
You might say that methamphetamine production and trafficking has
been a growth industry for the last couple of decades. In the early 90s,
methamphetamine was largely restricted to the West Coast and Central Valley of
California. Now, methamphetamine can be found across the United States. Methamphetamine
is now second only to alcohol and marijuana as the drug used most frequently in
many Western and Midwestern states.
Meth users
tend to use the drug in a “binge and crash” pattern, meaning that they will
maintain a continual high as long as they can, staying awake for days, and then
crash, sleeping for days until they recover. Long-term meth use creates such
symptoms as anxiety, confusion, mood disturbances, violent
behavior, paranoia, hallucinations, and delusion. Earlier this decade, state
and federal laws began to make it harder to purchase the chemicals needed to
manufacture the drug, which reduced the number of small domestic labs but
opened the door to the importation of more drugs from Mexico.
But
these patterns do little to describe the descent into addiction experienced by
those who use the drug.
Barry is a handsome young man in Oklahoma who started out as a 4.0 student and
athlete. When he started running with an older crowd, he started getting high
with them. He found he could make a profit selling drugs and he built himself a
network of suppliers and across the state. He said, “I was selling to people
that ran car dealerships and restaurants, who worked at fast food places. I
sold at fraternity houses and to moms in the suburbs. Meth would let me stay up
for days, let me work harder, make a bunch of money, crash out for a few days
and then do it again.”
“Finally, I started to lose control of the whole network I had
built,” he explained. “I was paranoid and hallucinating. One day I just lost it
when I thought someone had been following me around and I ended up getting
arrested for trafficking.” Barry found recovery from methamphetamine addiction
at Narconon Arrowhead in Oklahoma, one of the
country’s leading drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers, located in Canadian,
Oklahoma.
“Narconon Arrowhead has an excellent success rate with those
suffering from meth addiction,” said Derry Hallmark, Director of Admissions and
Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor at Narconon Arrowhead. “Within three to
six months, a person going through our program fully addresses the three
barriers to addiction recovery – cravings, guilt and depression – that are
experienced by every addict. With a long-term drug-free program like this one,
a person has a chance to build a new life in place of the one that was
destroyed by drugs and rebuild their relationships.”
Call Narconon Arrowhead at 1-800-468-6933 for a free addiction assessment
and referral to a location anywhere in the country. Or visit their website at www.stopaddiction.com. The
Narconon program was founded in 1966 by William Benitez in Arizona State
prison, and is based on the humanitarian works of L. Ron Hubbard. In more than
120 centers around the world, Narconon programs restore drug and alcohol
abusers and addicts to a clean and sober lifestyle.
<p>If you know anyone who needs help to overcome a meth
addiction, please contact
<a href="http://www.stopaddiction.com">
Narconon Arrowhead</a>
</p>
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