News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: How Pot Saved My Life |
Title: | CN ON: How Pot Saved My Life |
Published On: | 2002-05-30 |
Source: | NOW Magazine (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 06:11:43 |
HOW POT SAVED MY LIFE
I Was Wheelchair-Bound Before I Found Weed
Another day like yesterday. excruciating pain in my face. My head halfway
down the toilet "praying." I have just finished vomiting for the fourth
time tonight, and it's only 5 am. Nice life. This is a typical start to a
typical day in the life of me. Thirty-eight years old and this is what I
have come to. I have been better than most, though, because of medical
cannabis.
Ten years ago I couldn't move from the waist down and could barely write my
name. I was taking 32 prescription pills and 600 mg of morphine (yes, 600!)
every day, enough to kill a horse, they told me, and spending most days in
a wheelchair.
I was diagnosed with chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. Doctors told
me I would be in a wheelchair full-time by the time I turned 40. So far, I
am on the right path to prove them wrong, with the help of some wonderful
therapists, some very patient medical professionals and a few natural
therapies -- including cannabis. I am able to walk by myself again.
The federal government doesn't seem to care, however.
Now, six other sick and disabled Canadians and I are suing the feds on
behalf of all sick and dying Canadians who choose to use pot as medicine.
We don't all have exemptions to smoke marijuana as medicine. We believe the
Medical Marijuana Access Regulations drafted by the federal government are
unworkable.
We want the government to release the medicine they've been growing in a
mine shaft in Flin Flon to the many sick Canadians waiting so desperately
for relief. The government refuses, saying the pot it spent millions
growing was never intended for widespread distribution, but for clinical
trials.
So we have no choice but to continue to go out on the streets to fill our
prescriptions. It's an injustice to me and the many sick people like me who
can't afford to continue living this way.
In the last eight years, my mother, Joyce, and my boyfriend, Gary Lynch,
have spent over $14,000 each year to keep me in medical marijuana and out
of pharmaceuticals. This has to be changed.
It's only because of medical marijuana that I now have a life.
Before I was reintroduced to the beautiful medicine, I was spending time in
every pain specialist's office from Chedoke McMaster in Hamilton to Mount
Sinai in Mississauga and beyond. No one could help.
I was trying every new medicine on the market, including getting tiny
spoonfuls of cocaine put up my nose and losing 11 pounds in one week on a
heroin patch.
Then one day, a friend offered me some smoke.
After watching me shuffle between three pain specialists and my bed over
the previous seven days, my friend begged me, could I please smoke this!!
I wasn't convinced. I looked at the cannabis and explained very politely
that it was something I would normally not use at a time like this.
I was left in my bed (in the total dark) with the marijuana cigarette and a
lighter. Ten minutes after I'd smoked the whole thing I was up singing
along with the radio and making my bed for the first time in a week! What
was happening to me? I had no pain for the first time in seven days!
I cannot believe how much my life has changed because of medical marijuana.
Please, Canada, help us win this uphill battle!
I Was Wheelchair-Bound Before I Found Weed
Another day like yesterday. excruciating pain in my face. My head halfway
down the toilet "praying." I have just finished vomiting for the fourth
time tonight, and it's only 5 am. Nice life. This is a typical start to a
typical day in the life of me. Thirty-eight years old and this is what I
have come to. I have been better than most, though, because of medical
cannabis.
Ten years ago I couldn't move from the waist down and could barely write my
name. I was taking 32 prescription pills and 600 mg of morphine (yes, 600!)
every day, enough to kill a horse, they told me, and spending most days in
a wheelchair.
I was diagnosed with chronic progressive multiple sclerosis. Doctors told
me I would be in a wheelchair full-time by the time I turned 40. So far, I
am on the right path to prove them wrong, with the help of some wonderful
therapists, some very patient medical professionals and a few natural
therapies -- including cannabis. I am able to walk by myself again.
The federal government doesn't seem to care, however.
Now, six other sick and disabled Canadians and I are suing the feds on
behalf of all sick and dying Canadians who choose to use pot as medicine.
We don't all have exemptions to smoke marijuana as medicine. We believe the
Medical Marijuana Access Regulations drafted by the federal government are
unworkable.
We want the government to release the medicine they've been growing in a
mine shaft in Flin Flon to the many sick Canadians waiting so desperately
for relief. The government refuses, saying the pot it spent millions
growing was never intended for widespread distribution, but for clinical
trials.
So we have no choice but to continue to go out on the streets to fill our
prescriptions. It's an injustice to me and the many sick people like me who
can't afford to continue living this way.
In the last eight years, my mother, Joyce, and my boyfriend, Gary Lynch,
have spent over $14,000 each year to keep me in medical marijuana and out
of pharmaceuticals. This has to be changed.
It's only because of medical marijuana that I now have a life.
Before I was reintroduced to the beautiful medicine, I was spending time in
every pain specialist's office from Chedoke McMaster in Hamilton to Mount
Sinai in Mississauga and beyond. No one could help.
I was trying every new medicine on the market, including getting tiny
spoonfuls of cocaine put up my nose and losing 11 pounds in one week on a
heroin patch.
Then one day, a friend offered me some smoke.
After watching me shuffle between three pain specialists and my bed over
the previous seven days, my friend begged me, could I please smoke this!!
I wasn't convinced. I looked at the cannabis and explained very politely
that it was something I would normally not use at a time like this.
I was left in my bed (in the total dark) with the marijuana cigarette and a
lighter. Ten minutes after I'd smoked the whole thing I was up singing
along with the radio and making my bed for the first time in a week! What
was happening to me? I had no pain for the first time in seven days!
I cannot believe how much my life has changed because of medical marijuana.
Please, Canada, help us win this uphill battle!
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