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Choices and Consequences
by Bo Flack ©
Even though I graduated 29 years ago this June,
I still remember high school very well. I went from being a jock
as a freshman to being a "stoner" as a sophomore. I started
smoking weed and doing speed and downers when I was 13.
Unlike many of my contemporaries, I haven't
developed a selective memory of those days as I have aged. I never
married and settled down or had children. I partied pretty hard
almost all the way up to the time I was arrested at age 32. Drugs,
booze, and partying were a big part of my life because I was in
the drug business. I grew up in the drug culture of Southern California
in the late 60's and early 70's, and it was a wild time. Interestingly,
I had been clean for five or six months when I got busted. I made
the decision to get straight and sober before I was arrested and
sent to prison. So prison wasn't the reason I quit, although it
did reinforce the decision that I had made before I ended up in
jail.
I don't claim to be an expert on drug addiction
and alcoholism. But I am knowledgeable because I have experienced
it first-hand and in recent years, have studied it in college. I
have literally spent years in thought and reflection, actively studying
the things I did, the motivations behind them, and their results.
I'm not interested in judging anyone else and don't want to dictate
how others should live their lives, but hope my story may help in
some way.
I started smoking dope and eating pills at 13.
Coming from an alcoholic family, I had already been drinking for
three years by then. By the time I turned 15, I was already doing
large amounts of LSD, mescaline, and peyote. We were using a lot
of downers and booze back then, too. We took barbiturates like Seconal
and Phenobarbital as well as Thorazine and Methaqualone, etc. When
I was 16, I started using heroin and opium, including pharmaceutical
morphine that we used to score from a guy that worked at a hospital
and Tussinex which is a synthetic opiate in cough syrup. By the
time I was 18, I was using anything and everything. We were doing
PCP, synthetic cannobanal, THC, cocaine, crystal meth, dialaudid,
qualudes, etc, etc, etc. We smoked, snorted, shot up, and drank
whatever.
All the time we were using drugs, we were drinking, too-whisky,
vodka, beer, tequila, Bacardi rum, anything. My point is that I
have been there and done that.
Personally, I hate it when someone who doesn't
have first-hand knowledge tries to give me advice. Sure, you can
learn a lot from a book about many things, but when it comes to
booze and drugs, the best advice comes from those who have been
there.
I remember very well the time in my life around
18 or 19 years old. I think more than anything I wanted to be accepted
by the group. I wanted to be popular and "cool." Trying
to fit in, be accepted, and be cool is still probably the biggest
thing for most young people. For guys, that time in life is also
really crazy because there's all this testosterone running around
in our veins making us crazy with overwhelming sexual libido. From
15 or 16 on up, we guys aren't really thinking very smart; we're
thinking about sex. That's one of the biggest reasons we need to
be accepted and need to be cool. Cool dudes always seem to get the
chicks.
Depending on the crowd that you run with, booze
and drugs come into play in varying degrees. Booze is more prevalent
than drugs in some circles, like the jocks and the goody-goody kids.
Drugs and booze are the thing for the stoners, surfers, and partiers.
Even in the partying crowd, there were the people that took it to
the extreme, the party animals.
To those of you using, I won't say "Stop!"
or "Don't do that!" You are young adult human beings who
must make your own decisions. Let me tell you something much more
important though, a concept that you may not have considered yet.
It's what I like to call the "truth of choices and consequences."
It is a very simple yet often over-looked truth. For example, if
you choose the stay up all night, what happens? You usually wake
up late and are late for school or work. Or you might not get enough
sleep and be tired and irritable the next day. Or you might be late
for an appointment and get a speeding ticket because you were in
a hurry. Or a million different things could happen as a result
of you staying up late.
Choices and consequences: I would like to stress
that you start to take an inventory of your past decisions, to pinpoint
and recognize them, and then look at what the decisions led to.
Especially the "seemingly unimportant decisions" or "SUDS"
of the past and present. Examine and try to understand the powerful
consequences of the SUDS. When you choose to use drugs and booze,
you are making a choice. This choice is a SUDS although at the time
it may not seem like it. The choice to use drugs and alcohol may
have consequences that follow you throughout the rest of your life.
The decision I made at 13 to smoke dope made all my subsequent decisions
about drugs pretty much a foregone conclusion. That decision that
I made 33 years ago still affects my life every day. When I look
around and see the bars, the concrete, and the razor wire, when
I miss my home, my family, and my freedom, I know that SUDS I made
over the years all contribute to my being here. I know now that
this prison that I have be locked up in these last 14 years is partly
a consequence of that decision I made when I was 13.
I think the thing you need to understand more
than anything is that the decisions you are making right now-good
ones, bad ones, whatever-will lead to more decisions in the future.
They will color and flavor those future decisions. These decisions
in the aggregate will determine who you are and what your life will
be. Simply stated, life is the end result of the choices we make.
Period! Yes, sometimes outside influences and chance happenings
will inexorably change your life, but your decisions are what place
you in the position. Your decisions are an integral part of your
karma. The better your decisions, the better your karma.
The decisions you are making right now as high
school students or young adults will affect you for the rest of
your life. They will affect the people you choose to have in your
life, and those people will affect what you do, where you go, and
what you experience. You are currently writing the opening chapters
in the book known as your adult life. You are making the decisions
that will determine your life. Dad and Mom used to make decisions
for you, but it's no longer up to them. You are becoming adults
and with adulthood come many responsibilities. Good decision making
is crucial at this point in your life. However, as teenagers we
usually aren't qualified or experienced enough to make good decisions
yet. I certainly wasn't. That's part of the irony of teenage-we're
adults physically and sexually, but we're not adults mentally and
emotionally. But we think we are! We think we know what it's all
about. But we don't. When I was 16 I knew everything. I'm 46 now,
and I clearly see that it's taken me 30 years to figure out that
I don't know anything!
As teenagers most of us don't look at life as
choices and consequences. We don't look in the long-term. Teenage
is synonymous with spontaneous. Long-term is next week or next year,
not 30 years.
The stupidest things I've done in my life were
done when I was shit-faced drunk or loaded out of my brain. In the
beginning, it was fun to drink and drug, but as I aged, it became
less and less fun. Drugs turned from fun, to subtle addiction, and
then to obvious addiction. Booze turned from being cool and part
of the crowd, to unbelievably horrible hangovers, drunk driving
tickets, and regrettable actions. It went from being one of the
most seemingly innocuous social activities-right up there with cigarettes-to
one of the most damaging habits a person can acquire.
There were many adverse health affects from
drinking and drugging-some are subtle and insignificant short-term.
Others are powerful and negative. Do too much coke and see how fast
cocaine-psychosis turns you into a paranoid schizophrenic. Shoot
heroin a few times, get that monkey on your back, and you'll sell
everything you own and steal anything of value to get that next
fix so that you won't get dope-sick. Snort or crystal meth hard-core
for a couple of years and watch your teeth fall out and your complexion
turn to sores, scabs, and leather. Eat LSD for a couple of years
and you won't even be able to remember your Grandma's phone number
that you've known by heart your whole life. Drink to excess and
sooner or later you'll get a drunk driving charge and an overnight
visit to the pokey
if you're lucky! And if you're not? Drunk
driving is the biggest killer of young people under 30 years old.
Every substance you use has negative health effects of varying degrees.
These short-term and long-term implications need to be considered.
Drugs and alcohol are the underlying cause of
the deaths of many of my family and friends. If drugs and alcohol
didn't exist, there would literally be dozens of people that I have
know throughout my life who would still be alive. Car crashes, suicides,
overdoses, degenerative physical conditions, loss of mental acuity,
etc. took the lives of many people I knew and cared about. Long
and short term, booze and drugs will have an ultimate negative effect
on our lives. Take some time to think about what you're doing to
yourself.
Before you get drunk, smoke greenbud, or snort
crystal, think about what you're doing to yourself, your body, mind,
health, relationships, goals, and dreams. Make a list of your long-term
goals and then think about what it's going to take to get your life
to where you want to be. Choices and consequences-think about it.
I won't tell anyone to quit using drugs
and booze. That's not my decision to make. But I will talk about
choices and consequences. If I told you to quit using drugs and
drinking, that would make me a bit of a hypocrite because when I
was that age, I was a hard-core party animal. But I will tell you
that if I had it to do over again, it'd be very different. I have
many regrets about decisions I made in the past. I know now the
importance of doing what is good and honorable, of doing things
that are necessary to point our lives in a direction necessary to
find a lifetime of happiness, contentment, purpose, and satisfaction.
My life is now so much better without drugs, booze, and tobacco,
and I plan to stay clean and sober for the rest of my life.
I hope the advice I gave the two young men does
some good, but I have my doubts. Why? Because I remember when I
was that age. Most of the time, I didn't listen to anyone older
than me because I thought I knew a lot. I'm smiling right now, remembering
that brash, energetic young man that I once was. Boy! Was I really
dumb or what? I was ignorant of many things and too arrogant and
full of myself to have a clue. It seems funny now, in a bittersweet
sort of way. Lots and lots of SUDs and poor choices/deicisions.
Yet here I am, still alive at 46 and in reasonably good physical
and mental shape.
One thing that I'm really cool with at this
point in my life is that I know that now my choices/decisions are
much more sound. They are not made impulsively. I'm not the spontaneous
youngster of 20-30 years ago. Now I'm a pragmatic middle-aged man.
Peer pressure, hormones, and material wealth no longer influence
me like they once did. The result is that my decisions are based
on right and wrong, good and bad, and where I want to be twenty
years from now instead of twenty minutes. My decision-making process
now considers one thing I seldom used to think about: How will this
affect other people? It used to be all about Me, but now that doesn't
wash. I like being this age, I sort of wish I could stay in my 40s
for another 10 or 20 years. It's a good stage in life because you
finally have some sense, and the sexual pressures and fitting-in
dilemmas of the teens and 20s are long gone.
You asked me what made me decide to quit using drugs. There were
several reasons, but I think the most important one was that I was
terribly unhappy with who I had become. I had gotten to a point
in my life and in a relationship with a woman where I was just so
screwed up, it seemed I couldn't do anything right. My life had
become a revolving carousel of money, lust/love, material possessions,
and drugs. I was miserable and was slowly killing myself. I made
the decision to get straight Thanksgiving Day, 1989 and quit using
drugs, but it took me months to extricate myself from the relationship.
The choice to quit using drugs and booze was one that I had to re-make
almost everyday until I got busted. If I hadn't had gotten in trouble
with the law, I might have "broke-weak" and gone back
to using. To get from where I was at with drugs to where I'm at
now-where I have no interest in them whatsoever-has been a long
road. I feel for those young people, because peer pressure and wanting
to fit-in are so strong and as a teenager one's "base of wisdom"
has not yet been well formed. That comes with the accumulation of
years and of life experiences. That's the screwed up part of the
teens and 20s: You are making life-long decisions-or decisions with
life-long consequences-at a time in your life when you are ill-qualified
to do so. With a bit of luck, hopefully they'll figure it out sooner
than I did. Part of my problem was all my authority figures and
role models were screwed up too, so I lacked examples of how I could
be different than them. I hope these young people can see the example
of adults who are together people.
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