At Core: Too Much Ado About Nothing
Daytop was created by a Monsignor from Brooklyn. He would send youths to the synanon, which he believed in strongly, for addictions. ( mostly heroine addictions)
When the synanon was shut down, and it?s organizer were arrested for conspiracy to commit murder, the monsignor responded ny creating his own program based on the synanon. That program was Daytop.
The syanon was an extremely violent, vulgar, and abhorrent organization. Such a place is not the type of place that most would expect a monsignor to condone, and one might ask why a seemingly well intentioned Monsignor would not only send youths to such a place, but also create his own off-shoot in it?s absence.
The answer to this question is the key to Daytop. To understand a system, you must go back to it?s source. If you want to understand the actions of a Nazi, understand Hitler.
The answer is this:
Although, he may not have agreed with all aspects of the synanon, at the time there were almost no treatments for heroine addicts available for heroine addicts. Society, as a whle, quite simply, couldn?t care less about them. When the monsignor saw a person become addicted to heroine, more often then not, they ended up dead, basically living dead.. the monsignor felt he had no alternative, and right here is where the monsignor created an idea that is the backbone of Daytop philosophy today. It is the rationalization, and justification for al the wrongs perpetrated against individuals within the walls of a Daytop center today, no matter how wrong these wrong may be at any time.
The idea the monsignor came up with, and which is the foundation of Daytop today is:
If one does drugs, one will end up dead, and so any action against another in an attempt to get them sober or keep them sober, that does not actually the person is always okay and even warranted.
His error in judgement started it all.
To them:
Sobriety= Life
It is an absolute in the minds.
Also, being that a person is a drug user, the person?s life is nullified before they even walk in the door.
In their view, a client would be dead, if not for them, and so ought have nothing to say on any matter. In their veiw, it is entirely within their rights to bring a client within inces of their death in a quest for sobriety, ands so long as the client does not actually die, their actions are both moral and just.
What about human rights?
What about the fact that drug usage is not the only thing in the world that can kill a person?
What about the right of the individual to either live or die on his/ her own terms?
What about the reality that the ends do not justify the means?
What about the fact that not all drug users will die form their drug usage in the near future?
What about the user who would probably quit on their own in the very near future?
.. and here do they get the right to decide that a person should be sober, or even that a person should live. How did they obtain this authority over others?
Even if their ideas that [ Drugs=Death], and [ Sobriety= Life], they would still be grossly wrong for their actions.
( It is senseless. ? Sobriety? is the higher power because it equals life, and so it is always right. Sobriety is good as a constant, so let?s achieve sobriety at the cost of life. Let?s achieve life at the cost of life)
But besides the idea that they would be wrong anyway, the whole idea itself is based on a fallacy.
When I was in daytop, they often said ? Notice, you never see or hear about a forty year old drug user, and that is because they are all dead, and if not dead, then they are homeless, or in jail?
I must say that I don?t know what world they live in, because, here on this planet, I know, personally, more people then I can count who are in their 40?s, and beyond, who use some type pf drug, or another, are very much alive and healthy, have very nice homes, making far more money then a Daytop counselor, and are not in jail, and most of whom never have been in jail. As many people as I know personally, I know of probably thousand times more people who fit this category. I think we all do.
So really what?s all the here and now, life or death in this second fuss about?
Paul St. John
Life is versatile. These maniacs need to chill.
Daytop is like living inside the head of a person who is having a perpetual panic attack.