Pubdate: Wed, 15 Jun 2011 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Greg Potter POT SHOP RESPONSE ARCHAIC Dear Editor: I am writing in regards to the roadblocks being faced by the founders of the Re-Leaf Dispensary Society in their efforts to establish a medical marijuana dispensary in Deep Cove, where I have resided since 1992. I woke up paralyzed on Feb. 1, 2006, the result of an abscess formed by a staph infection that, without warning, punched my spine out of place. I am now a paraplegic living with chronic, excruciating pain, particularly in what is called the "pelvic girdle," meaning the area immediately surrounding the genitalia -- not at all a fun place to have pain, especially if your only way of voiding urine is to use a catheter six times a day. For the past five years, I have been subjected to legal pain prescriptions from physicians, virtually all of which have been useless and have led to horrendous side effects: loss of muscle strength, lumps on my body, acute depression, suicidal thoughts and preparations. The pain-control medications and programs I have been placed on are a joke, starting with the unbelievable pairing of Tylenol 3 and Ativan, the former of which could have harmed my liver, the latter of which left me with an addiction. They did nothing to alleviate my pain. I have been repeatedly denied medical marijuana, which means I have to score it on the street to the tune of $240 an ounce. I use half-an-ounce a month. As a self-employed writer/author, I am only eligible for a small government disability, over which I am allowed to earn an additional $500 a month. Any money exceeding that -- I make $600 a month writing a magazine column -- must be returned to the provincial coffers, meaning I give back $100 of my earnings each month and am effectively legislated to impoverishment with no hope of earning a sustainable or upward income due to the hideous pain which makes it virtually impossible to do my job. This does little for my psychological or financial well-being. Marijuana mitigates the intensity of chronic pain. Besides the obvious loss of so-called "quality of life," pain saps the body of energy and motivation. We're not talking about hangnails -- this is a life-altering condition brought about by nerve pain, the perpetual and debilitating effects of which are due to the slow regeneration (one millimetre per month) of nerves. I am currently on Oxycodone, but have been moved by the St. Paul's Hospital pain clinic to Oxycontin; i.e., hillbilly heroin. It's extremely addictive and responsible for countless overdose fatalities, including some notably high-profile deaths among celebrities and athletes. Those who oppose the use of medical marijuana do so based on ignorance, not experience. The attempt by municipal governments to stomp out compassion clubs is in part a response to a voting constituency steeped in the lore of archaic stigmas, and in part to the non-taxation of the substance. When municipal and provincial governments are dumping millions of dollars into outdoor Canucks parties and asinine self-promotional endeavours such as the Olympics, it is simply criminal and unconscionable that the health-care system is in the wretched state it is. There is a need and a place for medical marijuana. Wake up. It's 2011. Your petty objections only add to the current cultural climate of dumbness and apathy. Greg Potter North Vancouver - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart