Yellow Bird: Meth walks our reservations

"April Flores, a Crow woman, went from innocence to the deepest depth of addiction yet was able to recover, she told a group of health care givers at the Third Annual Great Plains Regional Summit on Methamphetamine. The summit was held earlier this week in Spirit Lake Casino, Fort Totten, N.D.

Flores was four years in the clutches of her devil and struggled with relapses for seven to eight years more. There were many ups and downs days and months without, then a return to the drug, she said.

Flores was a student at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. She was working toward a civil engineering degree and graduated in spite of meth. A few years later, she got a master's degree in health administration from Montana State University in Bozeman.

How did this career-bent mother get involved with meth? She was a student and a mother of two young children. In addition, when she learned she soon would be a single mother and might lose her children, she looked for ways to ease the pain and depression. She found meth could soothe, tranquilize and erase hurt. As seems to happen with meth, her "good friends" were the ones who introduced her to the drug.

The drug nearly drove her over the edge. She traded her kids for it, she said, meaning that she lost them in a custody dispute with her ex-husband. Yet, it was her children's unconditional love that pulled her from the maw of meth. She slipped her bonds, but not before she introduced more relatives, friends and another husband to meth."

Get the Story:
Dorreen Yellow Bird: 'Devil's drug' makes its Satanic rounds (The Grand Forks Herald 6/2)
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