Friday, May 4, 2012

Why do we take so many drugs?


For a society prosecuting a 'war against drugs' for the last 30 years, we do an awful lot of drugs. This is true for illegal drugs--highlighting the consummate failure of the drug war by its own standard--but more to the point let's talk about the legal kinds. In one category, we're given all the kinds that tweak our bodies this and that way so we can eke out a few more pitiful years at work by day and in front of the HD whatevers by night. What I'm trying to get it is the role of the drug companies in our lives, in a broad sense. Between their advertisement and kick-back system to the doctors, they have has going to the doctor for trivial problems and come out with a simple and easy solution. One qualifier: it's addictive and you're going to have to take it forever.

So the live-longer drugs are one category, and the other category are those that we take for other reasons. This is where we can really learn something about ourselves. So let's take a look at the drugs we take for reasons other than prolonging the inevitable. You have your illegal kinds and your legal kinds. For today, let's disregard the illegal ones, as they more or less by definition are the ones our society frowns upon and to be involved with them you're essentially "outside" of the mainstream. Let's talk about the he ones the well-behaved people take.

First, there's coffee. Everybody takes that. This drug is sold on every goddamn corner from here to Seattle. Jesus, it's not even that good anymore. Coffee electrified me two or three times when I was 19 and has since been more about getting out of bed. There's alcohol. Alcohol is wonderful because they have a wide selection of varieties, for every price point and socioeconomic circumstance. We love alcohol because it lets us shrug off the oppressive distancing from each other capitalism demands. Isn't it so unnatural that in our offices they put what are essentially blinders around your eyes, ensuring that you are only able to see the work to be done in front of you? You may not talk to one another! You may not make any unnecessary noise! So what if your ancestors for 10s of thousands of years sang songs and socialized while working, they didn't have iPhones! Obviously they were miserable, unlike us. /sarcasm. But if you absolutely insist on speaking to another person, you may only speak to them in certain approved ways, on approved topic. Do not talk about politics! We have to play catch-up, so no more leaving together for lunch, either. Just eat your frozen rations and be quick about it. If you lack vigor, drink coffee! For the love of Ford, it's the only free thing around here for a reason!

Coffee is the gateway drug to the dwindling middle class. It's necessary to work that much harder than the next sucker. Keep it up and you can make middle-management. That's right, you can be the guy with the cheap tie who works Saturday and has Tuesday off. Coffee to get us to work, coffee to work our asses off, coffee to do it some more, and more alcohol to bring us down and help us forget what we did all day.

And these people don't even have health insurance. For the denizens of the working professional class, you get access to much more powerful stuff. With your prescription drug benefits, your doctor can give you all you need to cope with constant anxiety of losing your fragile position over those who die young, failed or failing relationships, egocentrism, and no chance of doing any else because you're the endured servant of the banks who gave you the money to buy the SUVs, the tract homes, the HD whatevers, and the "designer Italian" loafers made by a 14 year old in Vietnam. We'll start you out on Xanax (44 million prescriptions in the US). "This will help you," says the doc. He's got a white smock, so "seems legit." Now the Xanax may make it a bit difficult to get up on the morning, but a simple, habit forming, morning amphetamine-salt (25 million US prescriptions) will take care of that. You're going to need some Valium (14 million US prescriptions) to get to sleep at night, and might as well start you on the Ativan (25 million US prescriptions) to help with that vague sense of panic that sometimes come out when you realize that you don't really remember what happens during the day anymore, but periodically take stock of the home and family crumbling around you. "Is Daughter 15 already? Why does she hate me so much and should she be wearing that? Maybe I should get her some of this, too. I think she has a disorder. Depression "runs in our family." Now I'm on Seroquel (16m) and Effexor (15m) and life is just a blur. Come to think of it, I lost my job 6 months ago and those appear to be foreclosure papers on the table. Oh, hell, I mind as well just take them all.

Meanwhile….














 








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