Pubdate: Thu, 24 Nov 2011
Source: Tucson Weekly (AZ)
Copyright: 2011 Tucson Weekly
Contact:  http://www.tucsonweekly.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/462
Author: J. M. Smith
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

FOG BEGONE

A Surprising Thing Happens After the VA Takes Away a Veteran's 
Narcotics Because He Used Pot

When the North Vietnamese launched the Tet Offensive in January 1968, 
Tucsonan Dwight Graves was a Navy Seabee with the 1st Marine 
Division, building bunkers for the U.S. Army near the demilitarized zone.

His compound 10 miles from the border between North and South Vietnam 
came under heavy attack, as did scores of other U.S. bases throughout 
South Vietnam. But the Seabees of the sea-to-ground I Marine 
Expeditionary Force weren't deterred.

"We were taking a lot of mortars, but we didn't stop," said Dwight, 
who is now 64.

Under heavy mortar fire, Graves and other Seabees continued 
fortifying the Army Special Forces encampment. Their work saved lives 
at their extreme peril, and for that, Graves earned a Bronze Star.

He left the war a hero, but a creeping legacy of his time serving the 
nation soon began to catch up with him, and still keeps him awake at 
night with cramps and weakened legs. He has to get around in an 
electric wheelchair.

You see, Dwight was exposed to Agent Orange, a defoliant used to 
clear the jungles of Southeast Asia. The chemical has been linked to 
numerous kinds of cancer and nerve problems in extremities. Dwight is 
also diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.

For years, Veterans Affairs has been feeding him various poppy 
derivatives to help him cope with the painful cramps--OxyContin to 
get through the day, and morphine to sleep. But the side effects 
suck. The OxyContin constipates him and fogs his mind.

"It makes me like a zombie," he said.

He thinks the morphine is a little extreme for getting to sleep, so 
he has been using pot to ease his leg cramps and help him nod off at night.

A couple of weeks ago, Dwight got caught by an unscheduled VA 
urinalysis. Because he had smoked pot, the doctors told him he can no 
longer get any controlled substances: No more OxyContin or morphine.

But an interesting thing happened when the VA cut off the hard stuff: 
Dwight got better.

"I feel better than I did on all those drugs," he said. "I don't 
sleep half the day; I'm up at 8 o'clock. My constipation is gone. My 
mind is clearer."

He is eating better, sleeping better, thinking better and feeling 
better. In fact, he seems kind of chipper about it all, now that the 
sleepless week of sweaty anxiety from opiate withdrawal is over.

The night before our interview, he couldn't sleep because of leg 
cramps. He didn't reach for morphine. He smoked a joint, and it went 
away, he said.

Now, the decorated war veteran--who willingly stacked sandbags under 
enemy fire to save his fellow man and spent the ensuing decades 
fending off a cascade of devastating illnesses--is highly unlikely to 
get the help he wants. As a 100 percent disabled veteran, Dwight 
asked for help covering the cost of a marijuana caregiver.

My guess? Not gonna happen.

It amazes Dwight that his doctors are willing to put him through the 
side effects of hard drugs--side effects that were more debilitating 
than the pain they help relieve--but they won't even consider the 
possibility of letting him use medical marijuana.

"They'll give me morphine, but I can't eat a pot brownie," he said.

It amazes Dwight, but I doubt it surprises him. It's the same federal 
government that won't allow a clinical trial of medical marijuana for 
veterans with PTSD. That study, which UA physician Sue Sisley still 
hopes to accomplish some day, could benefit Dwight directly. (See 
"Blocking Good Science," Medical MJ, Sept. 29.)

It's about time we let Dwight take matters into his own hands and, 
with the advice of his doctors, choose his own path, in the same way 
he chose his path in that Special Forces compound in South Vietnam.

Dwight Graves made good choices then.

Let's let him make one now.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom