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Counselor Bloggers
What is Recovery?

An essay on the subject of “What is Recovery” raises, for me, the question of what is Addiction. Since everyone of us has an idea, our own idea, of what Addiction is, we'll also have our own answer to “What is Recovery?”

Since we don’t have agreement in our field on what Addiction is, I doubt that we can come up with an easy agreement on what recovery is. I could just tell you my definition of both but my goal is not for us to have a debate over which we can come to a resolution. My goal is that we all look at ourselves and how we got to this question. It may be, that after examining ourselves, we may choose to change the question we ask.

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Cinema's Golden Age of Heroin: The Glorification of the Junkie
Columns - Cultural Trends
Written by Maxim W. Furek, MA, CAC   
Friday, 05 October 2007
Reflected in 1950s pulp fiction, heroin’s golden age navigated the dark alleyways of opiate abuse through a strange collection of motion pictures, magazine articles and books.

Nelson Algren’s 1949 novel, The Man With The Golden Arm, uniquely portrayed heroin as a serious literary topic as it rejected the standard “dope fiend” approach of the time (Caro, 1996). The gritty 1955 black and white film adaptation of Algren’s novel was the first of its kind to tackle the marginalized issue of illicit drug use. A youthful and intense Frank Sinatra, received an Oscar nomination for his role of heroin-addicted card shark “Johnny Machine.” Because it dealt with the taboo subject of “narcotics,” Hollywood’s Production Code refused to grant a seal of approval for the film. Several other motion pictures took a retro-look at the era. Lady Sings The Blues, Bird, and Ray all traced the lives of artists Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker and Ray Charles, all of whom were addicted to heroin, and were representative of the deadly relationship between heroin and the black music community. After the Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914, heroin became the drug of choice for many black urban males. Before that, the individual most likely to be a narcotics addict in the 19th century was a middle-class southern female abusing morphine (Avis,1990).




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frank Valle   |64.128.148.xxx |2007-12-07 23:59:35
As a young boy, I remember seeing the movie, honestly, just berley understanding
what heroin was, make me very afraid to know what it did to a person.
Consequently, I never tried it.
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