Pubdate: Sun, 05 Jun 2016
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2016 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: Kerry Madden
Note: Kerry Madden divides her time between Los Angeles and 
Birmingham, where she is the incoming director of creative writing at 
the University of Alabama-Birmingham.

QUESTIONING LEGALIZATION

"I've spilt more than you've smoked," my brother-in-law, let's call 
him Marty, bragged to my husband in the throes of his addiction.

A measure to legalize recreational marijuana is heading toward the 
California ballot in November. Marty would have been thrilled - but 
then, he didn't bother much with voting. My vote, too, would have 
been a no-brainer some years ago. Legalize it, tax it, make it safer, 
I would have said then, back when I felt more certain about 
everything, when I viewed addiction as a lack of self-discipline and 
personal weakness. I never dreamed it could take down an entire family.

My husband helped his older brother move frequently in the 1990s. 
He'd load up our family minivan with Marty's stuff, always late at 
night, and transport him to a new place in East Hollywood or Echo 
Park. The neighborhoods grew sketchier, each apartment tinier than 
the last. Marty always asked him to smoke one with him for the road.

Marty was a brilliant artist who could get any shot on set with his 
camera, a favorite of directors who didn't like second takes. For 
years, I was frustrated that he wouldn't just pull himself together. 
We even asked him to be godfather to our daughter hoping it would 
make him see how much we believed in him and start to change. He 
showed up to her baptism wasted, laughing and stumbling around the 
altar on a sunny Sunday morning. The priest patted him on the 
shoulder afterward and said, "Take it easy today, my friend."

We taught all three of our children to love their uncle, but not to 
make his choices. It seemed so obvious. Sober, he was kind, generous 
and a hilarious storyteller. He told one story of an excruciatingly 
dull film shoot and how, as a prank, he released harmless snakes into 
the hotel where the actors were staying. Hysteria ensued, actors 
fled, so he and the crew got the better digs. This story tickled him 
to tears to tell, and his listeners too.

But when he drank or used drugs he turned mean, and a careless spill 
from a child or a dull knife for cutting pork butt could provoke an 
explosion and a litany of done-him-wrongs. During one of Marty's 
rants at the dinner table, my mother-in-law comforted our youngest 
child by saying, "Don't pay any attention to us. We're just 
practicing for a play."

In the fifth grade our oldest wrote a paper for the "D.A.R.E." 
program about Marty. I actually did write a play to hammer out my own 
rage. The Marty-like character choked on the Thanksgiving turkey 
wishbone at the end and nobody in the exhausted family called 911. 
Curtain. It felt great to watch my incorrigible brother-in-law die 
night after night on stage. Marty never knew about it. Marty didn't 
go to plays.

We were relieved when he finally packed up and moved back to 
Tennessee - leaving dozens of boxes in our garage for years. We fully 
recognized the damage Marty had done to himself and others by 
drinking and drugging, which surely inoculated us from making his mistakes.

When addiction dug its claws into our adult child the signs were 
subtle at first, so my denial was second nature. Too much to drink at 
a party. The apple pipe discovered by the dog and one shaped like a 
parrot hidden in the garden - and the refrain of "It's not mine!" The 
DUI came later, followed by a totaled car and evidence of scary 
drugs. And there were all the excuses, which I tried to make myself 
believe because this could not be happening to our family.

Stupidly, I envisioned myself as some kind of lion tamer able to whip 
the disease of addiction into submission and give a healthy and 
radiant life back to our sparkly kid. But there were days I wanted 
nothing more than to die. I crawled into bed more than once and 
imagined the ocean rising over me, waves lapping up over the bed and 
swallowing me whole.

I eventually found help at meetings and family therapy. I went, at 
first, to learn how to fix everything, but I couldn't get through a 
meeting without crying. As the months passed, and I listened to the 
stories, I let go of the delusion that I could control the chaos. I 
wanted peace. I wanted to have conversations again that weren't about 
saving anybody. I wanted my own life back.

When people ask how I feel about legalizing recreational marijuana, I 
have no hard and fast answer. In a perfect world, all imbibers will 
be responsible and manage their behavior. The thought of easier 
access to any drugs fills me with dread. Yet, addiction is addiction, 
whether it's alcohol or pot or heroin, and if you're hard-wired for 
it you'll use, legal or not.

Will legalization lead more people to become addicted? Probably. 
Could the revenue from legalization support more drug education and 
affordable rehab? Yes, please.

I've seen the shattered family members of addicts. I've seen the pain 
of people who think it's their fault. (God knows, I rely on a glass 
or two of wine to dull the grief of obsessing over my kid, who claims 
to be fine and free in those same L.A. neighborhoods where Uncle 
Marty lived.) I've also seen serenity on the faces of those who've 
quit judging. Maybe legalization is the ultimate act of not judging - 
minding our own business. I don't know.

Marty loved Hawaii, so his funeral was a backyard luau on a steamy 
summer night in Tennessee with an open bar. For dessert there was a 
pig cake, which took six boxes of cake mix. It was sculpted by some 
of his 12 siblings and glazed with treacle, caramel and pineapple. 
Artistic temperaments flared in the hot kitchen but ultimately the 
pig cake, with an apple in its mouth, was served and devoured 
alongside barbecue and gospel music at a red dirt, chigger-bit 
funeral where a family gathered to mourn, sing and celebrate a 
beloved brother and son.

Once, a red bird landed on Marty, who was gentle with animals. He let 
our kids feed his iguanas. Our dogs loved him. But I took everything 
Marty said or did personally. I wish I'd been a kinder sister-in-law 
instead of ticking off his faults, tallying the insults. I try now to 
be the person I wish I'd been with Marty. And that person has a lot 
more to consider when thinking about marijuana legalization.
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