Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 2010
Source: Honolulu Star-Advertiser (HI)
Copyright: 2010 Star Advertiser
Contact: 
http://www.staradvertiser.com/info/Star-Advertiser_Letter_to_the_Editor.html
Website: http://www.staradvertiser.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5154
Author: Rosemarie Bernardo

DAD SHARES PAIN OF 'ICE' ADDICTION

Roosevelt Students Take Part In A National Meth Awareness
Day

Ewa Beach resident Anthony Marrero had hoped his adult daughter would
have joined the family for dinner on Thanksgiving.

But she never showed.

To Marrero it was another sign of his daughter's destructive
relationship with crystal methamphetamine, or "ice."

Marrero said he and his family have tried everything to help her
overcome her addiction to ice, but nothing has worked.

"I never thought it could happen to me or my family," the Army command
sergeant major said.

About 500 students sat in silence during an assembly in Roosevelt High
School's auditorium yesterday while Marrero shared his story of how
ice has devastated his family. He warned teens of the drug's dangerous
effects as part of National Methamphetamine Awareness Day.

Wristbands and T-shirts emblazoned with the Hawaii Meth Project's
message, "Not Even Once," were passed out to students by Roosevelt
High's peer educators to remind them that trying it once is enough to
get them hooked.

"I would never try it. It definitely ruins lives permanently," said
Ruth Taketa, a senior and peer educator at Roosevelt High. "It ruins
not only the user's life, but it ruins the family and the community
and just everybody who's around that person."

During the assembly, Cindy Adams, executive director of the Hawaii
Meth Project, also provided facts about the drug. Representatives of
the project visit three to five schools weekly throughout the year to
educate middle and high school students about ice.

Vivid photos of meth users' facial scratches and rotting teeth that
flashed on a large screen in the auditorium caught the attention of
senior William "Willy" Kaina. An athlete involved in football and
canoe paddling, Kaina said he would never try it. "I don't want to
look like that, that's why," he said.

During the assembly, Adams shared a story about Josh, an alias for one
of the teens featured in a radio advertisement sponsored by the Hawaii
Meth Project. When he taped the announcement in the beginning of the
year, Josh was in treatment at the Bobby Benson Center. Since then he
has bounced from one treatment center to another, relapsing three
times. "It's that hard to get it out of your system and out of your
mind," Adams said.

Some of the chemicals used to make meth are found in Drano, batteries
and nail polish remover. It causes permanent damage, Adams said.

The cost of meth abuse in the state, including treatment,
incarceration and foster care, is estimated at $500 million annually,
she said.

For Marrero the struggle to help his daughter continues.

Battling a six-year addiction, his 22-year-old daughter was kicked out
of the Hawaii National Guard and has been involved in a string of
crimes that led her to become listed as one of Hawaii's Most Wanted at
one point. She spent 72 days in jail and underwent treatment, but it
was not enough to keep her off ice.

When asked by a student what people can do to help family members
addicted to ice seek help, Marrero told her that addicts have to
accept help from others. "From my experiences, they have to want the
help. If they don't want the help, you're wasting your time. It's
unfortunate but it's true," he said.

After the assembly, Marrero said he and his family continue to hope
his daughter will one day want to kick the habit. "We just keep hoping
and praying," he said.  
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