Moods wrote:What I find curious about Cousins is this. There seems to be all this good will twds him and his battle etc. People talk about how it's a disease and should be treated by society as such.
So at the end of the season, player X, Let's call him Cam Mooney or Gary Ablett or Jobe Watson, or whoever comes out and says he uses drugs as a way of unwinding. He'll do a line at the end of the year or on special occasions but he has it under control. Thanks for understanding everyone..... Not sure the public sympathy would be all that overwhelming.
I know that drug addiction is a disease, just as alcoholism is as well. A tragic disease. Most of these addictions and I stress MOST of them are borne out of tragedy in the addict's life. A life of physical, sexual or emotional abuse. Usually the addict uses to numb out some underlying pain in their life.
I just find it difficult to have as much sympathy for Cousins as I would for someone who contracted cancer or even heart disease from eating too much. The doco didn't address any 'issues' or anything else he had going on in his life - just an extremely talented, good looking, intelligent young bloke who has been given everything in life, and began using drugs to enhance his partying at a young age. People say we shouldn't treat addicts as criminals. Why not? To become an addict you have to break the law and you do so knowingly. He associated with known criminals, was told to stop and he refused. I can't believe for a second that these factors aren't linked with his addiction. He always believed he knew better than anyone else.
I have nothing but respect for Bryan Cousins and Ben is definitely one of the lucky ones.
Ben looks like he would be terrific company. I can't help but wonder if he wasn't such a great footballer, such a good looking bloke, so articulate would we care so much?
Excellent post Moods.
I think what a lot of people are missing is that whilst addiction is a disorder, the very concept of a disorder is a fairly nebulous one. Virtually any disorder can be looked at from a number of perspectives...
- biological - the most classically conceived "disease" concept
- psychological - which includes concepts such as inherent temperament, intelligence etc.
- behavioural - which largely looks at why a person is motivated to perform certain actions and the effect of developmental learning aspects in how a person makes life choices for themselves.
- Narrative - how a person or others looks at their own life-story as a way of making sense of their inner world and the outer environment.
What is very clear is that whilst most "diseases" such as cancer, heart disease etc. are usually thought of primarily from the biological perspective because of the way that the illness eventually affects the body, nevertheless in terms of underlying causes, the effects on the person's experience of their life, and the experience of the people who surround them, such a lens is too narrow. Addictions are best thought of from the perspective that they do not have a single cause or effect, rather a multitude of them. Similarly they are best managed in heterogeneous ways, which can vary from individual to individual.
Hird... The unflushable one is now... just a turd...