Some of you are aware, I run an underground syringe and naloxone distribution project. If you want to donate or buy my book, my email is traceyh415@gmail.com
Tracey, This is Rachael the one from Adams county Ohio I mentioned that I use to give out syringes to users a while back when I was in contact with a diabetic. I had just moved to the apartment in Brown county and didn't exactly know who was a user or not I seen this couple who looked strung out to in the complex. So I asked them if they used needles cause I was giving out clean ones, they said no. I went back to my apartment and 15,minutes later the cops were at my door asking me about it. The cops asked for my syringes and said I was lucky I wasn't charged with a drug paraphernalia charge. I told them why I was doing it. They informed me there was already a pandemic of Hep C and HIV like it didn't matter now. I was so upset I was just trying to help. So is it really against the law to pass out clean syringes. I went to the Harm Reduction site in Ohio you prompt me to go to it said Brown county currently has one but Adams still don't (Adams has more HIV cases and prevalence rate of 90). Thanks :-)
I want to get this in one place. Here you go When was the film made? The film was made from Dec 1995 to Dec 1997. Originally the film was supposed to be for one year but I believe when HBO picked up the film they wanted two years. How were you picked for the film? Steven met a bunch of different people at the youth needle exchange. He wanted subjects that were slightly younger than me. He filmed a few other people that never made it into the final film Were you paid for the film? No. I was not paid for the film. he bought me a hotel to stay in for a week and bought me lunch a few times. I think they left some money for me when I was in jail too. Documentary film makers, in general, don't pay their subjects. Was I friends with the other people from the film ? Sort of. I never knew Alice. I met Oreo when he was 15 or 16. He was VERY young when the film was made. His mom used to work the desk in one of the hotels I lived in. Jake and I used to hang out. At one point h...
1. Chinga babies- after you have been hooked on opiates for any period of time, you can no longer poop well on your own. When you enter a period of sickness, you may give "birth" to a chinga baby. This is when you suddenly have to poop and an enormous hard poop the length of your colon decides to come out an an inopportune time tearing apart your booty. 2. Coagulated blood hits- when you cannot find a vein, you may put a syringe clogged with blood and dope to the side. At some later time, a few hours or even a day down the road, you may rethink that hit. I have taken the liquid out, picked out the clots and stuck that right back in my arm. I also did a few of Ben's coagulated blood hits. Ahhh love! 3. Impotence- Shhh. It's a secret unless you have ever fucked a male addict. After awhile, things do not work in the nether regions. Unless they take a hit of crack or speed. Then, he is too busy looking for white specs on the carpet to get busy. 4. No periods. Yes ladie...
Being able to fall apart is a luxury many people don’t have. They carry their burdens until it breaks them. Miss Jamie was one of the most aesthetically pleasing women I had ever seen in my life. She simply glowed. When she entered a room, everyone had to stop to pay attention. She took that space over. Her smile was radiant. Her energy was infectious. She was a fireball of a human. Her petite frame was always draped with carefully selected skirts, dresses, and form fitting sweaters. She paired this with her signature plum lipstick and acrylics. She always came late in the day, usually when I had the lowest energy. Yet, I never refused her entrance. I was happy to see her. Happy to listen to her while she held court in my desk area. On this day, Jamie was wheeled into the clinic by a person I had never seen before. Instead of scrubs, he looked as if he had woken up on the streets. He looked left like a caretaker, more like a pe...
Tracey, This is Rachael the one from Adams county Ohio I mentioned that I use to give out syringes to users a while back when I was in contact with a diabetic. I had just moved to the apartment in Brown county and didn't exactly know who was a user or not I seen this couple who looked strung out to in the complex. So I asked them if they used needles cause I was giving out clean ones, they said no. I went back to my apartment and 15,minutes later the cops were at my door asking me about it. The cops asked for my syringes and said I was lucky I wasn't charged with a drug paraphernalia charge. I told them why I was doing it. They informed me there was already a pandemic of Hep C and HIV like it didn't matter now. I was so upset I was just trying to help. So is it really against the law to pass out clean syringes. I went to the Harm Reduction site in Ohio you prompt me to go to it said Brown county currently has one but Adams still don't (Adams has more HIV cases and prevalence rate of 90). Thanks :-)
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