Being a Minority
- March 25th, 2010
- Posted in life . medication
- By Eric Will
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Today, I commented on an old friend’s Wall post on Facebook. This friend was from grade school in a tiny (pop. 1,800) farming town that I spent a good portion of my childhood in. It was about the recent healthcare bill and he was saying inaccurate things about it, so I tried to correct him. Unfortunately, he wouldn’t have any of it. I’m not going to start a Democrats vs. Republicans debate, because both sides are pretty stupid, but during the raging comment thread that followed, a ton of his friends (and people that used to know me from childhood) started commenting on me being a “drug user,” because I have information about my chronic pain condition on my Facebook profile. The thread is long and filled with ignorance, so I’ll do my best to summarize while still making this a worthwhile story to tell.
These people are from a secluded farming town in rural Illinois, near the St. Louis Metro East area. They don’t know anything about anything remotely medical. If their back hurts, they take Benedryl and go to sleep (or become alcoholics). These people only see narcotic analgesics when someone’s passing around some Vicodin along with the joint of marijuana. It only exists for people to take and feel good on. As far as these people are concerned, it might as well be beer for all they care. The first couple of guys told me “we all have aches and pains” and another mocked my “poor little back pain.” I gave them the benefit of the doubt and carefully explained what degenerative facet disease (or “facet syndrome”) is and what it does to you, and what foraminal narrowing (or “foraminal stenosis”) is and what it does to you. I explained it to them calmly, and with no anger. What do you suppose I received in response?
You need to see a doctor. You need help. It’s okay to admit you have a drug problem. Someone will help you. The pain can’t be that bad! The pain is from the withdrawal!
That was a summary of a couple of them… well, the nicer ones, and;
You’re just a junkie that doesn’t want to admit it. No pain can be that bad that you have to go and trick these doctors into giving you drugs all the time. You’re probably crushing them and snorting them or shooting them up. Show us some pictures of your arms, you dirty junkie.
that’s a summary of the vast majority of them. Why is this? Why are people more likely to believe you have a massive drug problem than a simple medical condition? In the world of the chronic pain patients we are used to being looked at with suspicion because of the narcotic analgesics we use every day to control our pain. Most of us are used to this prejudice; however, today I discovered another prejudice that I realized I’ve often been the victim of: not believing the intensity of the pain. I mean, it’s a no-brainer, it happens all the time–sometimes almost every day–but you explain it’s a serious medical condition that employs an entire field of study for specialist physicians and other medical professionals and the seriousness of the matter can usually–at that point–be somewhat understood by the general population. However, there’s always that group of people out there that will never believe you. No matter what’s medically wrong with you, there’s no possible way on earth that you could ever have pain that you can’t just get used to, or grin and bear. Like I said: these are tough farm boys, after all. The only time they’ve seen opioids is when someone’s passing around some Vicodin along with the joint of marijuana. It only exists for people to take and feel good on. As far as these people are concerned, it might as well be beer for all they care. They have no idea that heroin–a drug that has been demonized as to be the worst possible thing anyone can take because they’ll end up on the streets as a junkie–is an opioid, just like that Vicodin they use to relax from time to time. In small rural farm towns like this the drugs of choice tend to be alcohol and tobacco. When it comes to illicit drugs things like cocaine and even (or sometimes especially) meth are soft drugs, go ahead and have fun with them. For the most part, these people would never consider doing heroin–despite the fact they’ve all had a narcotic at some time or another.
The only extremely sad part about this particular conversation is that I went to school with most of these people from ages five through fourteen. Some of us were close friends. These people should know me. These people should be able to be entrusted with the knowledge of my medical condition. A few years out of town, and you’re a dirty junkie. This is why we, as a minority group, tend to not tell most people about our medical problems. It’s not a big deal to tell someone you can’t eat that because you’re diabetic and have to shoot insulin after every meal, but it’s a big horrible thing to tell someone you can’t do something because your pain limits your abilities and you have to take narcotic analgesics after every activity. Suddenly it’s no longer just a medical condition, but you’re a drug addict that’s totally faking it. When no one’s watching, you run and dance and play and do backflips, but when someone’s watching you break out the cane just so people will feel sorry for you.
If only.
You forgot to add Meth to the drug problems in the Mid-West. At least from a manufacturing standpoint, the Mid-West is one of the leading producers of Meth.
I must agree with you about being disgusted with both parties, but the far right is by far the worst and most inclined to use violence when they don’t get their way. Some of the CNN talking heads were discussing what’s been happening with all the threats and vandalism and one was asked about the last time they remember things getting so bad. She responded with the protests after Waco, Ruby Ridge and when the Federal Laws were tightened to get tougher on crime which include gun control laws. Then the older guy said the he remembers the protests that happened when laws were passed against segregation. The common thread is that all of the protests came from the right.
Now in the interest of even reporting, I will admit that the protests against the Vietnam War got very heated and the responsible parties were certainly from the left. But over the last 50 yrs, when looking at the worst 6 periods of civil unrest, the right led 5 of the 6. The right have always been out of control, and they likely always will be.
I used licit drugs as an example to make a point. They kill far more people than illicit drugs (but yes, Missouri specifically has the highest meth lab rate of any state, though most street meth is produced overseas or in Mexico). Sure, people that have serious IV drug use problems need help (or education on how to properly use their drug of choice), but most illicit drug deaths are due to ignorance, not the drug itself. No one’s ever died from smoking marijuana. No one’s ever gone home and beat his wife into a coma from smoking marijuana. Meth is a Schedule II drug–just like my pain medications–because it has a “recognized medical use,” (according to the CSA) but marijuana is in Schedule I because it has “no recognized medical use,” except for the thousands and thousands of years of use in medicine. Only now are we, as a society, starting to accept that okay, yeah, it makes you feel funky, but it also stimulates appetite and causes analgesia; your body has an endocannabanoid system just like it has an endogenous opioid system. They’re there for a reason.
The right doesn’t like change. They like laying back and making more and more money without having to think about how to do it. Someone a long time ago already figured it out, and they’re not really smart enough to do it on their own, so they’d like to keep it just as it is thank you very much. If they have to stifle progress and innovation in the name of making a buck, then so be it. Who needs progress? I just need one more billion in order to live comfortably.
The Republicans will take care of your every need until you’re born, then you’re on your own and it’d be in your best interest to stay out of theirs.
No one likes change, but everyone needs change. If things didn’t change then life would be inconceivably boring.
I miss you, Jeff.