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Recent posts

A Quiet Endeavor

April 08 2010
Sam Nerveza

I recently completed the Humanity in Perspective (HIP) course and am proud of the accomplishment. It isn’t merely that I completed the course, received the certificate or the... More

Linguistically Intoxicating

April 01 2010
Aaron Rayburn

I was halfway through my shift on a quiet night at the bar. To be fair, they were all quiet nights at that bar. I might as well have been tending in a dry county. You’d think a... More

The Stuff of Citizenship

March 25 2010
Raina Hassan

I’m sure most of you have heard of Annie Leonard—creator and host of the insanely popular short animated film The Story of Stuff (now at more than 10 million views worldwide).... More

Quiet

March 18 2010
John Frohnmayer

We live in a noisy and intrusive society. Cell phones and electronic devices summon us non-stop. They are addictive. They must be obeyed. But no electronic device I know of can... More

Planting Seeds in Auschwitz

March 11 2010
Jennie Seidewand

My freshman year in college, I stumbled into a class on the Holocaust, and four months later, I stepped off a bus in Auschwitz with a dozen classmates, my professor, and a living,... More

Shadow Art

February 18 2010
Laura Becker

Any regular moviegoer or fan of cult TV favorite Freaks and Geeks knows the name James Franco. He delivered a subtly stellar performance in Milk, stumbled his way as a hysterical... More

The Crying Game

February 09 2010
Kamla Hurst

In 1992, the film The Crying Game opened in Colorado Springs, my hometown. The film played in a cozy, fifty-seat theater tucked behind a café called Poor Richard’s. Next to the... More

The Intentions of Design

January 28 2010
Harriet Fasenfest

I’ve been thinking about design—its merits and its effect. I know nothing can escape it since, in its natural expression, design is everywhere—the rock, the potato, the wisps of... More

A Valuable Insight on Addiction

January 11 2010
Sarah Van Winkle

Perhaps I had never truly contemplated the struggle of drug addiction until I read Beautiful Boy by David Sheff. You may have heard of this book—the author garnered praise, but... More

Looking for an Out

December 01 2009
Cara Ungar-Gutierrez

If you read my last post, you know that I’m interested in gender. And, by the way, for those of you who did read that last post, I remain unsettled by Betty Draper’s character... More

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The Oregon Humanities Blog

Observations from our staff and colleagues.

A Valuable Insight on Addiction

Perhaps I had never truly contemplated the struggle of drug addiction until I read Beautiful Boy by David Sheff. You may have heard of this book—the author garnered praise, but also a fair amount of criticism for publishing what some called an exploitive account of his son’s struggle with addiction to methamphetamines and other drugs. It’s a heart-wrenching read, following a roller coaster of emotions as Sheff discovers his son’s drug abuse, makes grave missteps in his attempts to help his son, excavates his own divorce which left his son the innocent victim of an untenable long-distance custody arrangement and, finally, makes peace with the enduring struggle of addiction and its accompanying relapses.

One of the most shocking things about reading this difficult book was not the account of wasted youth, or even Sheff’s own stories of rampant drug use, but rather how it changed my thinking about addiction and how that will, in turn, change how I interact with the students in our Humanity in Perspective (HIP) class. Occasionally a few HIP students have addiction in their past and I had not realized that, though one may be many years removed from active addiction, the struggle is ongoing, and, in most cases, constant. I’d like to think that I’ve always been compassionate and understanding to recovering addicts in class, but reading Beautiful Boy made me realize that by looking at addiction for what it truly is (a disease) I will be better able to help those students.

I now understand that someone diagnosed with cancer has the same amount of control over his disease as someone diagnosed with addiction. An addict cannot “just stop“—it’s not that easy, and, according to Sheff, that’s frankly the wrong way to look at it. If we are to help, we must view addiction as a disease without absolving the individual’s personal responsibility for his actions—no easy task, certainly, but one that will surely allow me to interact with HIP students in a more productive way.

So, I suppose this blog post is one great big thank you to David Sheff. Thank you for bearing the brunt of the criticism for publishing this story. Thank you for humanizing this struggle. Thank you for being brutally honest, but also compassionate. Thank you for changing the way that I think about addiction.

Sarah Van Winkle
About Sarah Van Winkle

Sarah Van Winkle coordinates Humanity in Perspective and other education programs for Oregon Humanities.

11 January 2010 | Posted by Sarah Van Winkle in Inside O. Hm. New Ideas
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