Kupek wrote:I'm sure the shows are compelling, but The Corner is not fiction. It's about real people, and for that reason, even the mundane details are gripping. There are people in Third World refugee camps that live better lives than some of the addicts they write about.
Speaking as someone who has some experience with the world of meth users, I'll almost guarantee you that people in Third World refugee camps who are actively taking care of themselves have a better shot at living standards than hard drug abusers who don't.
I know someone who meth for years, and years. She's now homeless (though clean last time I talked to her, thank God) and frequently doesn't know where her next meal is coming from. I try to help her out where I can, but the helplessness of her situation hits me so hard that it's difficult for me to even contact her sometimes, on the cell phone that I bought her.
Hard drug addiction is no joke. Frequently the drug slips into the role that was previously occupied by self-care activities of some sort, in my experience, and when your daily shower/breakfast/lunch/dinner/fulfilling interpersonal relationship is replaced by a meth hit that makes you feel just as good without any of the actual health-giving effects in the long term, I would guess that the Third World refugee camp is likely to surpass you soon in living standards.