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CRYSTAL METH: IS IT OUR PROBLEM OR THE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT'S?

During the morning broadcast on May 10, CBC radio host, Sheila Coles, read a letter from a mother in Saskatchewan.  Crystal methamphetamine was destroying her son and she felt compelled to write in. 

The mother, whose name was not announced, made the following points in her letter:

* That crystal meth had transformed her sweet little boy into a monster. 

* That the Saskatchewan government must do more about the crystal meth problem

When Coles finished reading the letter, I turned off the radio and thought back to my life in Winnipeg. 

Before I became a full time journalist, I worked for The Salvation Army at a mental health centre in the north end of Winnipeg; an urban area with drug problems comparable to the east end of Vancouver, except colder. 

I worked as a crisis counselor for five years and met more than 500 addicts - - men and women addicted to alcohol, crack cocaine and crystal meth. 

In my second year at the crisis centre, I met Michelle ( not her real name ).  She was on welfare, lived at the Salvation Army and had abused crack cocaine for eight years. 

Michelle, 28, had gone through five treatment programs but was stuck in a rut.  At the end of the month, she would get her welfare cheque on a Wednesday and the money would be gone by Friday.  Three hundred more dollars wasted on crack. 

Staff encouraged her to utilize counseling services or try treatment again.  She did give some of the programs a chance, but usually quit after a few days. 

One day I came to work and found that Michelle was no longer living at the Sally Ann.  She had moved into an apartment with a friend.  Ten months later, I saw her on a city bus. 

She had joined a support group for women and had not used crack for two months.  She was cheerful and talked of getting a job cleaning hotel rooms. 

She hopped off the bus, gave me a wave and I had a moment of enlightenment. 

I realized that if the Manitoba government spent $5 Billion on addiction treatment and if every staff member at the Salvation Army had a Ph.D.  in counseling, we still couldn't have convinced Michelle to give up crack.  She had to make the choice on her own. 

Perhaps the mother who wrote to the CBC needs a reminder. 

The government didn't force your son to take crystal meth and they can't force him to stop. 

Your son has two options.  He can continue to make the stupid choice, or he can choose to grow up.