We live in very dangerous times. We live in a culture that is very accepting of recreational drug use. We are also very affluent and can afford to purchase street drugs at very inflated prices. Parents (many who have a history of recreational drug use spanning their younger days) worry that they might lose one of their adult children through an overdose. The fear is very real. At the same time, they acknowledge that they cannot do anything about the possibility that their son or daughter might hit a bad dose and be gone. The child they raised with such care could evaporate into one of the nameless statistics of overdoses in Canada.
Compounded this epidemic is the arrival and abuse of prescription pain killers that has gripped North America during the past six years. Many men, suffering severe pain from an accident, have been prescribed opioids, which unfortunately developed into a severe addiction.
This time around the drugs are synthetic. You do not need to import drugs from some far away country. You can manufacture the drugs (fentanyl and crystal meth as some of the most common street drugs) in your own garage – and cheaply!
When you put the numbers of overdoses in Canada at around 4500 in 2018 you conclude that everyone is just one family away from an overdose. Drug addiction covers every occupation, ethnic background, religious and cultural background. Also, very frightening is the fact that almost all these deaths are accidental (people who overdose do not set out to die). Eighty percent of overdose deaths are men who die alone.
During the shutdown and isolation caused by the coronavirus the Province of British Columbia recorded 170 suspected toxicity deaths in the month of May, 2020. This comes to 5.5 deaths per day. The isolation has caused a 93% increased in overdose deaths over the same month, May of 2019. The numbers shout out at us.
Too many Canadians are just dropping their hands in helplessness. They do not know how to control the drugs. And they are rendered helpless when they recognize that the drug used or the addicted are ingesting the drugs themselves.People shrug their shoulders: no one is forcing them to take these drugs.
As a Church we may not have any of the answers to this problem but we will not back away. Pope Francis has challenged the Church to have dirt on our feet from being out in the streets with the people. We walk with them in their struggles.
We admit our powerlessness to defeat this mountainous problem but we care, support and walk with those parents who are trying everything to get their addicted adults into treatment. We care about the parent who honestly confess that they did not know their son was a user. (Most often these adults live and work in a different city from their parents).
lost sheep that Jesus taught us may be the thirty-four year old accountant, who is working a very responsible position with his accounting firm. Even if he overdoses he is still someone’s son, brother, friend and fellow human being.
As a Church we hold the pain of the addicted individual, his family, all his friends in our hearts. Not only do we pray for them but we want to be with his family in compassion and understanding.
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