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The STOP AIDS Project -
San Francisco Frontiers Magazine, July 31, 1997
Often, when I'm asked to talk about crystal metham-phetamine,
I assume people expect a heartwarming story about recovery or a tragic
account of addiction. My take on crystal doesn't follow an easy-to-read
People magazine format. I'm concerned, angry and afraid about the impact
this drug has on my life and the lives of people around me. Before I moved
to San Francisco in July 1994, I knew nothing about it. To me, "going
on a run" meant jogging or a trip with a motorcycle club, not being
high for a few days.
Six months later, two friends and I put on a "speed
symposium" to help increase dialogue. Since then, I've organized
two more public forums on speed and worked to bring attention to the issue,
such as helping with the new "Crissy" advertising campaign put
out by the STOP AIDS Project.
I've tried to walk a narrow path between tolerance and activism. For the
record, I don't think everybody who uses regularly gets hooked. I have
friends who party with crystal and don't have dramas or big trouble. I'm
passionate about harm reduction, and I don't have an ax to grind about
how much is too much to use. Instead of listing the alarming statistics
and studies that show why I'm concerned (though I have a file two inches
thick), I'd like to share a little local and personal history.
Since amphetamines were invented in the 1930s, there have
been three major epidemics of addiction in the Bay Area. The first was
right after World War II, when amphetamines were prescribed for everything
from depression to weight loss, until a few too many people got too kooky.
After amphetamines became a controlled substance, underground entrepreneurs
maintained a stable supply in the Bay Area, though it was used by fewer
consumers for a decade or so.
According to many, 1967's Summer of Love went sour not
only because the world wasn't quite ready for the Age of Aquarius, but
also because too many hippies, such as Charles Manson, turned on to amphetamines.
Speed became associated with uncontrolled violence and insanity.
Cocaine and "designer" drugs, like Ecstasy and
Valium, had their days in the '70s and '80s. Nobody can say exactly why,
but crystal methamphetamine slowly became more popular again during the
past 10 years.
There are three main reasons I think crystal meth is "the
bomb" again in San Francisco. One is access. Cocaine is imported,
and designer drugs became tightly controlled or illegal. The inexpensive,
industrial chemicals used to make crystal are easily available here. It's
probably the easiest amphetamine to make, and there's a huge number of
crystal labs all around us. It's relatively cheap and plentiful.
Crystal's easy to use "socially" in lines like
cocaine or in chic little pills. You can do it at home, even shoot up,
then hit the streets or clubs for hours without having to recharge your
high. Often, the effects of uppers such as crystal are more easily denied
or less noticeable than those of downers or hallucinogens. One can seem
a bit more coherent--or at least convince oneself so. Even heavy crystal-users
don't necessarily use every day, so one can evade the question of addiction.
Above all, the best single reason I know for the popularity
of crystal meth in San Francisco is "it's the best antidepressant
in the world." Users and treatment experts alike frequently say this.
So, I wonder, what are we so depressed about?
AIDS is the most obvious answer. Some people are trying
to put grief behind them with a bump or a line, others are people living
with AIDS who can only step out of a wheelchair and feel a little bit
normal for a while after they slam some liquid crystal.
Some use crystal to "self-medicate" for unresolved,
internalized homophobia, low self-esteem or even as some means of coping
with the demands and frustrations of our competitive society. In the age
of health-care downsizing, it's harder to get any regular mental-health
help at all. It's a touchy point, but I think there's always a portion
of any community vulnerable to overindulgence in substances, whether we
choose to call it "novelty-seeking behavior" or the more judgmental
"self-destructive tendencies."
I get most angry at the complicity of those who muffle
all complaints and criticism about speed use. Of course, they will let
you speak if--and only if--you're currently in recovery. Supposedly, I'm
only allowed to care if I've been strung out myself.
How about being upset about my friend whose partner's
crystal use leads them to squabbles, then violence, police intervention
and their eventual breakup? As he tells me this and says how important
it is that I promote awareness of crystal problems, he asks me if I know
where he can score some. I am floored.
Another friend calls me in a panic to discuss oral sex.
I find out that some A-list professional friend of his with advanced degrees
was on a crystal binge and, six hours into having oral sex with a trick,
tasted blood in his mouth, which led later to testing positive. I am amazed
and disturbed.
How about my ex-boyfriend who demands help four days into
self-guided detox, two months since I've last seen him? Instead of a quiet
Sunday, I get to run a residential treatment center for one and hear how
he thinks he lost his job by not showing up for three days, his roommates
want him to leave, and his new boyfriend is upset with him.
I sail down Castro Street recently, only to be stopped
by another friend, whom I know is often behind in the rent because of
his crystal habit. He compliments me on my work in HIV prevention, but
chides me for "getting caught up with those anti-drug people."
Of course, he's never asked me what I think or how I feel about it.
These are just four examples. I purposely picked ones
from my private life, not including the dozens of messy lives I know about
from my professional and volunteer work at the Marin AIDS Project and
the STOP AIDS Project.
So what to do? I think we can be honest and provide useful information
to people about crystal methamphetamine. I'm glad to support some excellent
resources here, including the www.tweaker.org website in the works. Beyond
information, I believe we can learn to speak out more, not just for our
loved ones who use crystal, but to challenge community silence.
Can we make the world a place where people may take drugs,
but don't need them to get through each day? I'm a romantic fool who dreams
of queer youth born in a new millennium asking an ancient queen like me,
"Why were so many people using so much crystal way back in the '90s?"
I'll hope to say, "That was before we changed a lot of things for
the better."
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