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- Date: Tue, 28 Dec 1993 10:59:28 +0000
- From: "Dr R.H.Hammersley" <gpwa04@UDCF.GLA.AC.UK>
- Subject: Drug use and personal growth (Re:Values)
- Sender: Drug Abuse Education Information and Research <DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01H704J726KY935F6T@YMIR.Claremont.Edu>
-
- I'm interested that no-one has provided an arguement that personal
- growth is a GOOD THING. If it is self-evident then it may be one of the
- cornerstones of our culture(s). As substance use seems to be another,
- perhaps there are connections? Taking personal growth for granted, I
- agree that substance use delays this for many people, especially those
- who become severely dependent. But I think that drugs can sometimes
- enhance personal growth. This is not often researched, but here's some
- evidence of various kinds.
- (1) When I did interviews in jail, several criminals said that cannabis
- had led them to modify their behaviour. Previously, on alcohol or
- heroin, they had been violent, impulsive and inconsiderate. Having
- discovered cannabis (sometimes, for drinkers, in jail) they had calmed
- down.
- (2) Many hallucinogen users report occasional experiences which
- enlighten them, give them insight into themselves, or change their
- lives. If this happens in Church, an AA meeting, or naked on a
- mountaintop, then its a GOOD THING, so why not when tripping? Before I
- am berated for this, I admit that one of the sad discoveries of the '60s
- was that an idiot who takes drugs often becomes a stoned idiot.
- (3) In our research on Scottish Cocaine users (references on request)
- we found, as have other studies, that many 'instrumental' non-dependent
- cocaine users used it to make them more creative, outgoing and
- talkative. This was particularly common amongst Scottish women users. Is
- drug-induced assertiveness bad? Or, perhaps the skills acquired high on
- cocaine can be transferred to non-intoxicated situations?
- (4) Baumrind (in NIDA monograph 56, 1985) found that some early teen
- experimenters with cannabis were mature and high-functioning youth, who
- were curious and able to manage their experimentation, rather than
- inadequate, inappropriately precocious or otherwise problematic.
- (5) Preble and Casey's classic points about the "junkie" being a
- high-functioning and skillful individual in a ghetto context remain
- valid. How many crack dealers make a nest egg then quietly move on to
- become respectable business people? I know of several cannabis dealers
- from the '70s in Scotland who are now highly respected and successful
- legitimate business people, having acquired their start-up capital from
- drugs.
- (6) We have evidence (Forsyth, Hammersley & Lavelle, Br J. Criminology,
- 1992) that drug dealing tends to occur in Glasgow's most deprived areas,
- attracting buyers from all over the rest of the city. These buyers make
- the deprived areas' "drugs problem" very visible -- in fact they
- exaggerate it or downplay the problem elsewhere -- but buyers also bring
- large amounts of cash into those deprived areas, which would not
- otherwise flow in. This must stimulate the local economy, if in a
- distorted and amoral fashion. Pull out drug dealing and what is left? At
- least in some areas of Glasgow, there would be no economy left except
- welfare.
- To finish, as a psychologist I note that theories of drug use as
- dysfunctional have not greatly helped our understanding of it. Perhaps
- drug use is often functional in unacknowledged ways?
- --
- Richard Hammersley
- Senior Lecturer, Behavioural Sciences Group
- University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, UK
- GPWA04@uk.ac.gla.udcf --- Please note change of address
-
- Phone (041) 339 8855 x 4041 or 330 5016. FAX 330 5074
-