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| Gerd Altmann, Pixabay |
One of my long-time friends has Dissociative Identity Disorder – what they once called multiple personality. Getting to know her and her people over many years has helped me to see that it’s not a mental illness at all, it’s a coping mechanism.
I see so many parallels with this thing we call addiction.
For my friend, dissociating was a sane response to an insane
situation, which in her case was a long childhood of non-stop physical, sexual
and emotional abuse. When her little-girl self couldn’t handle what was
happening to her, she found a way to check out. Some other “person” that her
amazing brain had created would emerge to take the pain and heartbreak, and then
retreat deep inside with the memory to protect my friend from having to know it
ever happened.
Being able to dissociate so completely as a child was a
brilliant strategy for her at the time. She thinks it probably saved her life,
allowing her to take repeated abuse that any fully present child could never
bear. The coping mechanism she’d unconsciously developed helped her manage
through unmanageable times.
But in adulthood, this tool that she’d relied on since she
was a toddler started to become a problem. She was no longer living a life of
abuse, but she still reacted to high-stress situations by falling back on that
old coping mechanism. And things often went badly as a result.
Her “switching” wasn’t a conscious act, so sometimes the
full-grown woman with years of work experience was gone and a helpless child
was in her place, with not a clue how to do the job. Or an angry, drunk
customer would throw hot coffee at her, and the hothead personality who existed
to punch first and ask questions later would emerge and deck the customer.
Over time, this beautiful coping mechanism that had seen her
through terrible years began to interfere with her ability to work. It affected
her friendships and relationships. She self-isolated out of fear that anyone who
learned the truth about her would reject her. Her dissociating left her highly
vulnerable to all kinds of dangers; more than once, she woke up in strange
places far from home, with no clue as to how she got there.
She owed her life to her ability to “switch.” But in a changed
situation, it had become the thing that was causing her the most harm.
Consider substance use disorder through a similar lens.
Technically, it’s also a mental illness, presuming that someone’s substance use
meets at least three of the 11 criteria laid out in the DSM-V psychiatric
manual. In fact, people whose primary “mental illness” is a substance use
disorder now account for a quarter of the 30,000 cases a year in
BC of people detained and treated against their will under the Mental Health
Act.
But is it a mental illness? I’ve been spending a lot of time
these past few months talking with people living homeless in
our region, and the drug use I’ve seen looks very much like a coping mechanism
to me. A sane response to an insane situation.
Who among us could live the dystopian life of a modern homeless person in an affluent society for more than a few days without turning to drugs as a way to check out of the misery? Not to mention all the misery suffered in the runup to homeless. Painful childhoods, histories of abuse, intergenerational trauma, brain injury, disability - off you go into a life of being constantly hated on, and these days hunted multiple times a day by bylaw officers intent on taking all your possessions away.
If all that and more are going on in your life, drugs that take it
all away for a bit make total sense.
Like my friend’s unconscious dissociating, however, what
starts out as a useful tool to soothe a savaged soul can end up being your most obvious
problem.
Using street drugs at a level that lets you check out of your life is definitely not compatible with jumping through the hoops that await anyone trying to get off the streets, for instance. It also makes the neighbours very unhappy, to the point that they’re soon supporting political initiatives to round everybody up and force them into substance treatment.
The toxic chemical soup that's now the illicit drug supply adds a whole other layer of misery, bringing death, nerve damage and chronic infection. Soon enough, the only thing anyone is talking about is the need to force people to stop their drug use, like that's the only problem.
That’s how it was for my friend, too. She was poked, prodded
and counseled by so many psychiatrists, all of them focused on eliminating her
coping mechanism, as if all would instantly be well if she just quit using that
tool she needed so badly.
Nobody asked to help her explore why she needed that coping mechanism
in the first place, or how she was supposed to manage in some future new life
if she couldn’t fall back on it at times of high stress. Nobody said hey, girl,
hurray to you for discovering a coping mechanism that kept you going through
some really heavy stuff, but now let’s go find some new tools that won’t get in
your way quite so much.
She had to do all that work on her own. (And she did.) It took many years, and many retreats back to the old ways before she was fully ready for a different way of doing things.
These days, she’s still got a few of
her people on hand if needed, but she’s got a whole range of new coping skills,
too. She can still dissociate, but it’s no longer the only coping mechanism she
has.
In theory, there’s a lot more services and systems to manage
harmful substance use than there was for my friend and her Dissociative
Identity Disorder, and a lot more people who do understand substance use as a
coping mechanism.
But there’s also a big chunk of the public – the ones with
the biggest influence on government thinking, it appears – who believe that if
people just didn’t use illicit drugs, there would be no crisis on our streets. They are
easily swayed by political rhetoric that maintains that falsity, and messaging that
blames, shames and criminalizes substance users for “choosing” to use
unregulated substances.
Between the general lack of understanding and the deliberate
political posturing, we’re in quite a state.
We’re stressing out about the drugs, but not about the underlying
reasons for using them. We’re fixating and fighting over substances as if all
the answers lie there, even while the crisis on our streets intensifies and the
harmful shaming of people just trying to get through a hard day rages on.
People living homeless have a lot of stuff to cope with.
They use substances to cope. Whatever “treatment” there will be for that, it starts
with the stuff underneath.

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