DE's points come as much as anything from a law enforcement side where you see what addiction has done to the weak. At least, they match the opinions of a few officers I've chatted with over time. Law enforcement sees the end product, they deal with the clean-up when someone has overdosed, or done something equally stupid that ends their life or others. Addicts ending themselves is never a pretty sight. I understand DE's viewpoints and don't think he dismissed my comments out of hand. He has justification for his views.
I work in the field of treatment. I see addicts at all stages. Well, I talk to them occasionally, and the ones I meet are usually already in recovery. Most of them have pretty scary horror stories. Most of them have Hepatitis C too. Tuberculosis is common as well.
I work for the State of California, at the Department that licenses, certifies and oversees alcohol and other drug treatment and recovery facilities. Methadone clinics are among the facilities we license. I worked on the in-house side of licensing those clinics for about four years. Our Director is a recovering alcoholic, she's been clean and sober over 20 years. The Director before her was a heroin addict early in her adult life. Through a methadone progam she recovered and has gone on to lead a fairly decent life.
Methadone is one of the few valid treatments for Heroin addiction. There are people in California who have been undergoing Methadone treatment for over 30 years. Some people never can kick the addiction but they can deal with the replacement addiction.
For those who don't know what methadone does, and I know several of you do, methadone connects to the receptors in your brain (and probably other parts of your nervous system, not sure about that) that heroin and other opiates use to make you feel so omg fantastically good - the first time, and occasionally dangerous highs after that. Mostly you chase the memory of the first times. After awhile, by the time you get truly addicted, you are just trying to keep from feeling bad.
While you can get high with too much methadone, the proper dose just keeps your cravings in check and lets you go on about your day without needing a fix. Methadone is longer lasting than heroin, lasting a little over a day. Heroin has a much lower duration, some addicts are shooting up every two or three hours, but they probably aren't going to last much longer when they get to that frequency.
Methadone is not the only drug used to treat opiate addiction, but it is by far the most popular one. The biggest drawback to methadone is that it is more addictive than heroin. Not all opiates are created equal.
Buprenorphine is also used, google it. It is more expensive than methadone, but it lasts longer and has a very low addiction rate. It is usually used for the people who are within their first two or three years of addiction, past that it doesn't work as well.
Per UCLA's research, every dollar spent on treatment for the addicted creates seven dollars in various savings -
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/515638/ - yet drug treatment programs are usually among the first cut in a budget crunch. Drug treatment programs are vilified for the reasons you've seen in this thread. People see drug addicts as the sewage of humanity. You would be surprised how many talented people you know and pay money to see perform are or were drug addicts. Robert Downey, Jr. had a hell of a time with drugs, check the public record. Jerry Garcia died of a heroin overdose one of his friends snuck into the recovery home he was staying in, found with a needle sticking in him. Those two just popped into my head. Shall we mention Rush Limbaugh's experience as a drug addict? Is Rush the human sewage you think of when you think of drug addicts?
I haven't seen the pamphlets referenced earlier, but the videos and other pamphlets I have seen on safe usage usually deal with this is the way to do it right, and if you don't OMFG that could happen. Scare them with AIDS and other infections, show how abscesses happen from inter-muscular usage. Those types of pamphlets are meant as much as scare tactics and encouragement to get into treatment as they are to show people the least dangerous way to do heroin.
Scared straight doesn't work with that high a percentage of people, most are ten feet tall and bulletproof until the morning they wake up and realize they are addicted and can't function without their morning hit, and they don't have anything to take the edge off.
As I am sure Diamondeye is aware of, over 80% of the people arrested for anything are either high on drugs or alcohol. Most are doing their crimes to support their habits in one way or another.
Darkseige, I admire you my friend. I walked away from alcohol when I knew it was killing me. I used pretty much the same technique. I made new friends who didn't drink, I was having fun with them and the booze never came out. My old friends weren't interested in spending time with me unless I came to my senses and started drinking with them again.
You walked away from Methamphetamine, cold turkey, dude that is truly amazing. It is a much harder addiction to kick, very few people can do it, you sir have amazing willpower. Your daughter is your guardian angel, her imminent presence inspired you to do something many people in the substance abuse field think isn't just hard, they think it is impossible. I've read a few stories like yours so I can believe it is possible, but extremely rare.
Hardening your heart to the wild pack you left behind is a survival technique. I can understand how you feel the need to shut them from your life. I am not encouraging you to let them back in. Keep considering them zombies spreading a deadly infection. Whatever works for you.
Know that not one in 10,000 could do what you did. That is why treatment centers and those stupid pamphlets are needed. Without help, the fools and losers you left behind have no chance at all.