Blind groper wrote:Rainbow
You will recall that I said 27% of heroin users became addicted. That means 73% of heroin users can quit without any serious side effects. This is more or less consistent with what you said about Viet Nam, allowing for journalistic exaggerations.
It is also interesting to recall what happens in hospitals with morphine users. If morphine is used at a level just sufficient to combat pain, addiction does not result. Perhaps something similar happened in Viet Nam?
Alcoholics run to 15% of alcohol users. That means 85% of alcohol users can quite without even mild side effects.
Addiction on heroin is directly linked to duration and frequency of use. Using heroin causes physical changes in the body. Users build up tolerance very quickly if they take the drug regularly. Full-blown junkies require about 75 times the heroin of a newbie to get high - an amount that would kill a non-user instantly! However, it only takes a few weeks to "reset" the clock - ie. for the body to readjust to the lack of smack. The trouble is, that readjustment is an extremely painful and traumatic experience.
You can take heroin a couple of times a month for years, never need to increase your dosage, and walk away with little or no withdrawal. Take it 3 times a day for a couple of months and you
are going to become addicted and
will suffer withdrawal. What it comes down to is whether you are the kind of person that develops a psychological need for the drug and becomes a regular user.
Alcoholism, on the other hand, is very different. Many regular, heavy drinkers simply don't become alcoholics. There are genetic factors at play that are not completely understood.