Morgan Godvin Profile picture
Oct 23 14 tweets 3 min read
Harm reduction saved my life. Years into recovery, I never forgot the kindness of Haven Wheelock.

My family had forced me into treatment twice, only for me to relapse and OD.

I walked into the syringe exchange scared and alone. I’d had a hep c exposure. 1/
She didn’t say, “but don’t you want to go to treatment?!” I’d been down that road and learned I was a hopeless case. (What forced treatment + 12-step does to us.)

I would’ve spun on my heels. I knew then that I was a junkie piece of shit who would die in my addiction. It’s ok.2/
Except, for *once* someone who knew my whole truth—I am injection drug user—didn’t reflect that idea back at me.

There was just kindness and genuine compassion. For me, at my worst.

It was a jarring experience. Every other signal from society was “you’re worthless garbage.”/
But Haven just said, “How are you? What do you need?”

I needed a Hep C test and sterile syringes. That’s exactly what I got.

“Who are these crazy people that are nice to us junkies?” I would ask my friend later. 4/
Harm reduction is not at odds with treatment. But it is the one, single space where I could just *be.* Where I wasn’t being bombarded with signals about how bad I was, how I needed to change. As if I didn’t already know. As if I hadn’t already tried. 5/
Haven told me I was Hep C negative. From then on, I accessed syringe exchange services instead of buying cleans from pharmacies only when I could afford it. Because I’d found, finally, one single safe space in all the world.

A refuge. 6/
Harm reduction service providers make up a tiny fraction of someone’s daily interactions. They get those brief moments of refuge.

Then they go back to the dirty looks, family shunning, police harassment, and misery. 7/
Harm reductionists were kind to me when no one else was, least of whom myself. There was no prodding or coercion, only compassion.

The world is cruel enough, believe me. Addiction is cruel enough, I assure you. 8/
Who are these crazy people that are kind to people who use drugs? People who get it. Whether because they have lived it or otherwise seen it up close, they know that those moments of refuge are the only thing holding back the total descent into darkness and despair. /9
Harm reduction is imperative for recovery, not opposed to it. People that see themselves and worthy of nothing more than disgust are not apt to struggle and suffer. And trust me, breaking up with your only coping mechanism is little more than struggle and suffering./end
I called myself a junkie during my use. As is the point of a pejorative, it’s a label hurled against me that I then internalized, reclaimed. It swelled until it enveloped my whole being.

It was the one facet of my identity I did “correctly.”

Don’t try to sanitize my experience.
Then Haven became the chief petitioner for drug decrim, which passed. Now, I serve on the Oversight and Accountability Council implementing the services component. I sat in the audience during her presentation at #HarmRed22, never forgetting that day at the syringe exchange. Image
Here’s Haven and me with Slug at a @beatsoverdose event.

Pay it forward, y’all. Image
I never did get hep c! Because I lived in Portland and could access syringes relatively easily.

Do you know what I couldn't access? Medications for OUD! Despite going to treatment and detox repeatedly, not once was I ever offered buprenorphine maintenance.

Until years later.

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More from @MorganGodvin

May 2
I stole in my addiction exactly once, taking $200 from my mom during an IV coke binge + texting her to confess as I drove away.

I struggled—I mean *struggled*—to hold down a job, to go to college to get my military $, to have legit income.

Didn't matter. 1/
Anyone who knew I did hErOiN treated me like a thief, not based on my presentation or behaviors, but on their preconceived notion of what a drug addict is.

The police treated me like a criminal. In fact, theft would have been a misdemeanor but drug possession was a felony. /
Here's the thing: when you treat someone as if they are a certain thing for long enough, a funny thing happens. They become the thing. Treat someone as a junkie criminal to be shunned for long enough, well...

Too much jail left me jobless, homeless, and deeper into criminality./
Read 10 tweets
Apr 23
Why I won't call it a poisoning crisis, a thread.

Out of all the people I know that died from opioid-induced respiratory failure, only one truly overdosed. My mom, who knew her *dose* of morphine and then overdid it. Overdosed.

No one else could dose, therefore overdose. 1/
Back in my day, my friends died from heroin. And died they did. One day they used 0.20 grams and it was just right, the next it wasn't enough, the next they died.

Overdose implies agency and an element of intentionality. My friends had agency but the dosage wasn't intentional.2/
Poisoning implies the fault lies with someone else. It plays right into the worthy/unworthy guilty/innocent dichotomy.

There is an element of poisoning happening now. Fake pills, fent sold as "heroin," my friend who died after doing contaminated cocaine.

It's undeniable. 3/
Read 20 tweets
Jul 9, 2021
Just found a stack of bills that were sent to me while I was in prison. The highlights:

$1,000 to Washington County Corrections for supervision fees

$450 for the doctor bill for when i got scabies at a court mandated treatment center
$350 for OHSU from when I stepped on a needle at a trap house and was treated like garbage by the ED staff

$963 to Central Oregon Community College, curious since between Pell and military I had no tuition due

$1,112 to Jefferson County for two traffic tickets
All of this is directly or indirectly drug related.

I was able to pay this from prison. Well, my aunt who had power of attorney did. I’m a privileged white personal whose mom had just died and left me life insurance.

Otherwise I would have got out with debt.
Read 9 tweets
Jan 26, 2021
My catalytic converter has been stolen out of my Prius for the second time this month.

The first time I was angry. Now I'm just sad. My society is a cannibalizing itself, a thread. 1/
It was stolen out of two very different cities. Last night, they got interrupted and only sawed through it without managing to remove it.

Yes, a Prius cat is valuable. But this is less about coincidence and more about widespread desperation. 2/
I bought it two years ago from my aunt who bought it new a decade before that. We never had any issues with it. Now in January of 2021, it's gotten hit twice.

Why now? Well, that's obvious. People are hurting like never before. 3/
Read 7 tweets
Dec 23, 2020
I lost my mom 7 years ago today.

A cathartic thread. /
Even if I would have had narcan, I wouldn’t have thought to use it. I did drugs, not her. TW /
I called 911 and when the police took over CPR, I backed out of the room to see that my dope and rigs were in plain sight. I was on felony probation for PCS heroin. I thought I was going to jail one minute after my mom died. /
Read 8 tweets
Dec 20, 2020
When I think of the labels that comprise my identity, there are many. Formerly incarcerated is at the front.

Queer. Woman. Student. Portlander. Writer.

Person in recovery usually trails in the list. Until this year when my struggles reached unprecedented heights. /thread
Using + getting strung out on heroin in jail forever changed how I viewed my own addiction. It became clear to me I never wanted to use again. In March 2015 I asked my judge to transfer me to a jail with less drugs, she obliged, and I never used again. 2/
I did no program. I don't do 12-step. I just *knew.* I exercised, ate well, clumsily searched the world for spiritually and for 5 years, it was fine. Easy, even.

And then March of 2020 as I celebrated 5 years in recovery, chaos descended upon on the world. 3/
Read 11 tweets

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