A
Ani_Ibi
Guest
oat soda:
So much error happens in interfacing with drug addicts; error resulting from the enabler wanting to look good. Addicts are manipulative and smart as the day is long.
You remember someone on this thread (I forget who) counting his rating earlier on? Addicts have a meter. As soon as you start interfacing with one, the meter goes on and the deeper his or her hooks go into you. In their minds, the time you spend with them is time they could be doing something else. They have an acute sense of the economics of any given situation and particularly of opportunity cost.
You think you are giving of yourself and of your time. This gives you a good feeling about yourself. You look good to yourself. You think that gives you leverage over the addict. It does not. The addict thinks you are consuming a product for which he has exclusive marketing rights: himself, his own time. And he has you played for a mark. He has you played for a mark, because he sees straight off the starting blocks your weakness, your points of leverage and that is that you want to look compassionate.
Does the addict understand true compassion? True compassion, yes. False compassion, yes. Both.
False compassion is what makes you into his next mark. True compassion is what makes him crash and burn; it is the mirror which you hold up to him. It is the reality of his fallenness; the ineffectiveness of his ‘program’ and his ‘self-reliance.’ It is the realization that all roads lead to his destruction except the road to God. That is true compassion. And sometimes that true compassion has nothing to do with us personally. God chooses whom He chooses. Whom He chooses may not be us.
Well, isn’t that a confronting little piece of information?
What does compassion look like?i have to agree with you here. durg addicts have a sickness which needs treatment. we shouldn’t demonize them and think the answer is to enforce tougher laws.
something over 90% of all crimes are drug related. but i don’t know if that means you make them legal. for example look at abortion. if something is inheriently evil like drugs, pornography, contraceptives, …etc., it should be illegal.
the fact that they are illegal does provide for organized crime and violence. maybe we should see that drug use is a symptom of a larger problem -the break down of the family. i think we should attack the problem at it’s source and promote healthy loving families. contraception, homosexuality, pornography, divorse, secularism, only exasterbate the problem.
So much error happens in interfacing with drug addicts; error resulting from the enabler wanting to look good. Addicts are manipulative and smart as the day is long.
You remember someone on this thread (I forget who) counting his rating earlier on? Addicts have a meter. As soon as you start interfacing with one, the meter goes on and the deeper his or her hooks go into you. In their minds, the time you spend with them is time they could be doing something else. They have an acute sense of the economics of any given situation and particularly of opportunity cost.
You think you are giving of yourself and of your time. This gives you a good feeling about yourself. You look good to yourself. You think that gives you leverage over the addict. It does not. The addict thinks you are consuming a product for which he has exclusive marketing rights: himself, his own time. And he has you played for a mark. He has you played for a mark, because he sees straight off the starting blocks your weakness, your points of leverage and that is that you want to look compassionate.
Does the addict understand true compassion? True compassion, yes. False compassion, yes. Both.
False compassion is what makes you into his next mark. True compassion is what makes him crash and burn; it is the mirror which you hold up to him. It is the reality of his fallenness; the ineffectiveness of his ‘program’ and his ‘self-reliance.’ It is the realization that all roads lead to his destruction except the road to God. That is true compassion. And sometimes that true compassion has nothing to do with us personally. God chooses whom He chooses. Whom He chooses may not be us.
Well, isn’t that a confronting little piece of information?