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When speed slows you down
by
Donna Williams
There
are many ways people slow down and the chronic use of speed is one of
them.
People slow down when they can’t sleep anymore, one of the first
side-effects of chronic use of speed, along with increased
irritability, emotional instability, a delusional feeling of
invincibility and equally the flat emotional ‘deadness’ of dysphoria,
panic attacks and eventually paranoia.
After the sleep deprivation associated with chronic amphetamine use,
the user can’t think straight, can’t regulate their emotions, their
work becomes rushed, shabby, they can’t think in depth when their mind
is racing, then fragmented from lack of sleep.
OK, so they’re taking it to stay in work, to get out of bed, to make
that money, to buy those things to win the loyalty of materialistic
children; whatever, but in the process, their children lose
progressively them and they don’t even notice because they now feel
‘they’re achieving so much’.
That’s the delusion speed gives but the facts are its a shortcut to
application, motivation, getting real help, a workable plan, reasonable
and achievable self expectations and building some real self love.
Snappy, irritable, delusional people can start to lose their connection
not just to reality and selfhood but ultimately anyone outside of their
progressively narrow scene; their dealers. Having wild flighty ideals
isn’t the same as ‘just being yourself’.
Before long its been a long time since they’ve been there in the
company of their real self and not long before they completely forget
who that ever was. Then all the ‘I’m doing it for you’, ‘I’m doing this
for us’ doesn’t matter a damn.
There
is no ‘us’ when one side of that ‘us’ left themselves by the side of
the road miles back. Everyone else notices they’ve changed and misses
them even if they can’t remember anymore who that person was.
As the chronic use of speed fries the receptors of messages in the
brain it increases racing thinking but cohesive processing becomes
progressively shot.
So
whilst it may keep you awake and make you work faster, intellectually,
you’re slowly burning your chances of having the mental equipment to
think coherently enough to dig yourself out of a hole, when and if you
realise or accept you’re even in one (and the false confidence speed
provides means you’re not likely to think you’re failing except when
you’re ‘coming down’ until the next deal.
So with speed so widely used in its many forms, it may be time to slow
down before speed itself slows you down.
The
psychiatric hospitals are full of people there from speed-induced
psychosis because some people feel one can never get too much of a good
thing. As a Taoist, I believe in balance and any Taoist knows, too much
of any good thing leads to imbalance.
I’m wildly driven. I have wild mood swings of the kind seen in Rapid
Cycling Bipolar. Unlike many who have depression, I have extreme sudden
but short-lived depressive troughs but mostly I manage and baby-sit
daily Hypomania, a pretty chronic distractibility and impulsiveness and
occassional full blown manic states with a tiny amount of mood
levellers.
So
maybe I’m lucky. Seems I have built in amphetamines. That works for me
as an artist but I’m lucky I don’t need to by drugs for it, I need
prescription drugs to slow it down, level it out.
But some people have far more depression, unable to get up in the
morning or sleep till late, struggling to motivate themselves to brush
their teeth let alone get to work and live with feelings so flat they
wonder why they’re even alive.
Some
have such fragile emotions that the death of a goldfish sends them
suicidal. I can understand the appeal of something like speed, a desire
to get that motivation, fixation, euphoria of hypomania or the
creativity which can come of it.
Correctly prescribed, preferably low doses of appropriate prescription
medication may address emotional flatness and perk people up without
the need for amphetamines.
It may
level out wild people without the need for alcohol, heroin or dope. It
may help innattentive, distracted, impulsive people slow down till they
can think, focus and achieve.
But if
we need labels (which set ourselves apart from the group, lowers
ourselves on the social ladder) to get access to those things then its
no wonder so many undiagnosed people have to half kill themselves and
mess up their lives self-medicating with street drugs before they
finally get help at the end of the road when they hit rock bottom or
get buried trying.
Labels are becoming cooler. Maybe that’s a good thing. Maybe then the
users will be clearly distinguished from the potential addicts without
pressure or judgement to hide their addictions.
The
makeup of addicts is different to users and the same rules don’t apply
to both groups yet the users get tetchy if anyone suggest their drug is
also addictive. ‘They can handle it’, ‘they’re not an addict’ so
therefore apparently all users are the same. But I’ve watched the users
who became addicts.
Its time to sort the wheat from the barley, without judgement, threat
or social exclusion. The game of ‘fitting in’, or self-medicating and
hiding one’s real underlying challenges isn’t worth playing.
Eventually
it ends badly.
Those
born to alcoholics and addicts and brought up with denial,
co-dependency and excuse making may be already primed for addiction
both chemically and psychologically.
Those
self-medicating with street drugs who have undiagnosed mood disorders,
anxiety disorders, autism spectrum conditions, learning differences and
attention deficits need to come out of the closet, with or without the
labels and stop hiding in the flock, pretending drug use is only use
until, for many of them, it is inevitably addiction.
Sometimes, the only way to win is not to play the game. They may never
be ‘like most people’. Hopefully they’ll realise they are splendidly
wonderful just the way they are. It’s those without these issues who
take street drugs ‘to be interesting’.
They
have the privelege they’re already pretty different already. Difference
is nothing to hide. In our progressively bland and blander society,
difference is a refreshing reminder of a once natural social diversity.
... Donna Williams
author, artist, eccentric
http://www.donnawilliams.net
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Article
published with kind permission of the author.
Donna Williams is a consultant in the field of autism spectrum
conditions, and an international best-selling author diagnosed with
Autism, with nine books in the field of developmental 'disabilities' -
her autobiography, Nobody
Nowhere, its sequel Somebody
Somewhere, plus others including Autism-An
Inside-Out Approach, and The
Jumbled Jigsaw.
related
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