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Breaking through addiction
stereotypes
"I'm an alcoholic."
The words struck me as odd. After all, they were
coming from a young man standing before me in a dorm hallway my freshman
year in college, and yet they flowed as smoothly and gingerly as a fish
gliding through water. It wasn't at all the image I had of an alcoholic.
The picture that suburban living had fostered in me for years was one of
a homeless, dirty, toothless person living in downtown alleys. Yet there
I was, a college freshman standing before a dormitory neighbor who had
graduated from high school with honors - and who had spent much of his
later teen years in a stupor.
The face of alcoholism and substance addiction, it
turns out, looks a lot different than one might think. According to the
2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: National Findings, more
than 36 percent of American 17-year-olds reported using alcohol. The
same survey also found that, among youth ages 12 to 20, more than 19
percent are binge or heavy alcohol drinkers. Just because teenagers grow
up does not mean that, as adults, they are any less vulnerable, either.
Research has shown that alcohol problems are very common among the
American workforce. More than 77 percent of adults with any alcohol or
drug use disorder are employed, and more than 60 percent of adults know
a person who has shown up to work under the influence. When it comes to
addiction, illicit drug use is highest among American Indians, Alaska
natives and people of mixed race (two or more races). The news is
getting better, at least among kids locally. The Coalition for a
Drug-Free Greater Cincinnati recently released a survey showing
declining rates of certain drugs among many kids. Yet many people, when
asked to describe "addiction," say it is the dirty homeless person
walking a dark downtown street who carries a crinkled, brown bag-clad
bottle.
September is National Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Recovery Month, a time to learn not only about the dangers of drinking
and other substance abuse but also about its many faces. In the process,
we might also learn that, despite the statistics and the stereotypes,
there is hope for recovery no matter the addicted person's color, age,
gender, political affiliation or religion. All it takes is one hand
reaching out to break through the old images and see a person anew.
John Cummings
8 September 2004
http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2004/09/03/editorial_john.html
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