Source:   Salon Magazine
Contact:    July 14, 1997

                             In drugs we trust

    BY SCOTT ROSENBERG | A dangerous new substance is flooding into the
    country from abroad. It causes potent, speedy changes in the user's
    brain, and it's powerfully addictive. Users huddle in special rooms,
   breathing in its intoxicating fumes. Religious authorities pontificate
   against it; political leaders declare war on it. Yet people keep using
                           it in growing numbers.

    Coffee  for that is the menacing substance we are talking about 
   was a big "drug problem" in 17th and 18th century England, and indeed
    sporadically throughout Christian Europe, where this new import from
    the Muslim East was viewed with great suspicion. Gradually, Western
    culture made its peace with the undeniably popular (and profitable)
      stuff, classifying it as a harmless beverage, and today it's big
      business  the working person's daily wakeup fix and the cafe
                     philosopher's stimulant of choice.

    It doesn't take more than a moment's contemplation of the history of
    coffee  or similar legal mindaltering substances like tobacco and
      alcohol  to realize that American society is deeply confused,
    inconsistent and ambivalent about drugs. In truth, the only constant
   in our relationships with drugs of every stripe is that they all carry
    a strong emotional charge. Call anything  chocolate, windsurfing,
   online chat  a "drug" and people nod their heads, understanding what
   you mean: You're deeply attached to it and you can't live without it,
       even though you suspect that there's something wrong with it.

      Some drugs we declare illegal and wage war upon; other drugs we
    embrace and build vast industries upon. Whether a drug lands in one
     category or the other seems to depend on historical circumstance,
    social custom, economic influence and sheer chance. Sometimes  as
       with Prohibition, the legal marijuana movement or the recently
    proposed "tobacco settlement"  there's pressure to move a popular
   drug from one category to the other; but such efforts typically create
   social upheaval and meet great inertial resistance. In the U.S. today,
   bureaucracies like the Food and Drug Administration have jurisdiction
    over the line between what's considered food and what qualifies as a
     drug; but it's the popular media that alternately and selectively
                romanticize some drugs and demonize others.

      We live in a nation that has fought a losing "war on drugs" for
       decades. But while our electionyeartimed spasms of drugwar
   militancy keep our eyes fixed on the violent crimes that surround the
    illegaldrug business, we are quietly but steadily becoming more and
   more devoted users of a vast spectrum of legal drugs. While crack took
    the headlines, Prozac, Ritalin and their many brethren began to take
             over our daily lives. And they're just the start.

     Even setting aside antidrug hysteria and pharmaceuticalindustry
    hype, it's difficult to master the calculus of fear and desire that
    seems to govern our assessment and categorization of various drugs.
   One casualty of the drug wars is our very ability to draw any kind of
                 useful distinctions among different drugs.

    The substances that captured the imagination and bloodstream of the
       '60s generation  from marijuana to LSD  were celebrated as
    dropout mechanisms, exits from middleclass conformity and doorways
   to higher consciousness. Opponents, reacting out of generational fear,
   medical concern or puritanical mistrust, held that the drug culture's
    promises were shams or scams. The result was a stalemate that's with
   us to this day; these drugs are still illegal yet still widely used 
     and the kind of rigorous, fair studies that might begin to lead us
    toward saner judgments remain unperformed, unfundable, unthinkable.
   Other illegal drugs, from cocaine to heroin, go in and out of fashion
     but also remain taboo as objects of genuinely unbiased scientific
   inquiry  which leaves us in the strange position of knowing far less
       about them than we do about tobacco, which, despite its deadly
                       effects, remains quite legal.

    It's hard to find clear thinking about such drugs, but a strong dose
    of it can be obtained from Andrew Weil's 1972 classic, "The Natural
     Mind." Written long before Weil's current popularity, "The Natural
       Mind" argues that the desire for "periodic episodes of altered
    consciousness" is an innate drive in human beings. (The only culture
   in the world that lacks a tradition of natural drug use is the Eskimo,
     according to Weil.) Drugs are simply one means people adopt toward
   this end; though they may not be the best or most effective one, they
      are "with us to stay." We can either keep fighting them and keep
     losing  or learn from other cultures about effective methods of
   living with them, minimizing the harm they do to people and maximizing
                         their potential benefits.

     Weil later also cowrote the encyclopedia of mindaltering drugs,
   "From Chocolate to Morphine," an equally lucid work that, among other
   things, attempts to clarify the difference between drug use and abuse.
   "Any drug can be used successfully, no matter how bad its reputation,
   and any drug can be abused, no matter how accepted it is. There are no
     good or bad drugs; there are only good and bad relationships with
    drugs." These are the book's guidelines for "good relationships with
    drugs": "Recognition that the substance you are using is a drug and
      awareness of what it does to your body"; "experience of a useful
   effect of the drug over time"; "freedom from adverse effects on health
        or behavior"; and "ease of separation from use of the drug."

        But sometime between the '60s, the period that shaped Weil's
          perspective, and the '90s, during which he emerged as an
    alternativemedicine guru, the drug landscape radically shifted. The
   legal prescription drugs that make up the fastestgrowing part of the
   pharmaceutical arsenal  like Prozac and Ritalin  are, for the most
    part, tailored not to offer release from everyday consciousness but
                     rather to provide support for it.

      A social theorist would explain the popularity of these drugs by
    pointing out that they efficiently transform malcontents and misfits
    into docile employees and sedate schoolkids. An economist would note
        that they provide our costcutting health system with cheap
         alternatives to longterm therapy. Anyone with a humanist
   philosophical bent  including authors like Peter Kramer ("Listening
     to Prozac") and Kay Redfield Jamison ("Touched With Fire")  will
       wonder whether they don't provide a superficial fix for deeper
        existential concerns while cutting off the roots of artistic
                      creativity in human discontent.

    And yet a person who has been genuinely helped by such drugs  say,
   someone who has found real relief from the horrors of chronic clinical
   depression  might hear all these objections and respond, who cares?
      Whatever else you can say about them, these new drugs, like the
    consciousnessaltering drugs celebrated by the '60s generation, have
    gained wide acceptance because they work. For some sufficiently high
    percentage of the population, they do what people expect them to do.

     Our problem with these drugs is that we don't seem to know when to
   stop prescribing them. Prozac and similar antidepressants can plainly
    help a lot of depressed people. But tens of millions of people? Are
    there really that many depression sufferers  or has the desire to
   squeeze profits from expensive new drugs inspired a stretching of the
        definition of fullblown depression to include virtually any
    bummedout situation? And what about the increasing prescription of
                         these drugs for children?

      No matter how narrowly drugs like these are targeted at specific
     chemicals in the brain and no matter how few sideeffects they may
    induce, they are still serious stuff. They deserve to be distributed
   with the kind of attentive care doctors are supposed to provide every
   time they write a prescription. But these very same doctors are under
   pressure from the HMOs paying the bills; a quick drug regimen is a lot
      more costeffective than the slow, uncertain progress of serious
        therapy (sometimes, true, it's also simply more effective).

       As the drug companies roll out wave upon wave of new pills 
   promoting them in TV ads worded with discreet care to stay inside the
    law  our societal dependence on drugs is only going to accelerate.
        As it does, here's a useful exercise for us all: Take Weil's
       guidelines for a "good relationship with drugs" and apply them
     collectively. Are we, as a nation, honest with ourselves about our
       drug use? Do we get the "useful effects" we seek, or are there
      diminishing returns? Are there adverse effects on our collective
                health? And can we stop any time we want to?
                               July 14, 1997