I came home from Vietnam addicted to heroin....I was a functioning junky for 16 years. I put a lot of $$ into my arm back then. The VA gave me methadone for 4 years until I finally decided to got to the mountains and stay with a childhood friend who also an ex junky. He helped me kick the junk cold turkey. Proud to say I've been clean 40 years.
@RuleofFive3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations!
@mccarthy58253 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story Ron. Was on heroin and methadone for 12 years or so myself. I hope you are doing well and sending you much respect and best wishes from 🇮🇪
@MaasHomes3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations and thank you for your service sir!
@CanoeToNewOrleans3 жыл бұрын
Congrats. That was a true friend.
@theexpresidents3 жыл бұрын
Dude that’s an old wives tale. This same story is in “A Thousand Junkies.”
@mjmcnult6 жыл бұрын
The happy days when one could be politely interviewed on a controversial topic and be allowed to speak candidly without being attacked or ridiculed.
@McCensored3 жыл бұрын
Or totally canceled!
@laurencegoldman46393 жыл бұрын
I beg your pardon but the interviewer here was clearly in accusatory mode. He clearly had an “already convicted” attitude that backed Burroughs into a somewhat defensive posture. This was NOT an open, interested exploration about heroin, but a kind of “contempt prior to investigation” that riddles popular belief.
@WinkLinkletter3 жыл бұрын
@@laurencegoldman4639 Even his "civility" itself had a somewhat snide undertone. You can definitely "politely" disregard ideas and information offhand.
@gordongordon983 жыл бұрын
@The Sexecutioner bath salts and rubbing alcohol?
@HigherPlanes3 жыл бұрын
@The Sexecutioner Haha...it has the most influence, but it doesn't rule the world.
@DTM-Books3 жыл бұрын
Could we please have TV shows like this again? Not everything has to be dumbed down to the level of The Jerry Springer Show.
@smucklehead893 жыл бұрын
@@pashadyne he means like having intellectual conversations, all the late night shows nowadays come out with questions like "Is it true you ate ice cream for breakfast once?" Nothing like this on TV nowadays
@smucklehead893 жыл бұрын
@@pashadyne i was kind of expecting a response to my question
@blablableh7243 жыл бұрын
no, people are dumber now
@jdub39993 жыл бұрын
I guess we have Joe Rogan and other long form podcasts.
@last75093 жыл бұрын
no. the agenda requires society to degenerate.
@snapcult4649 ай бұрын
Yet the interviewer has an ashtray on his desk. An addiction that killed how many people? 😂
@kateskeys9 ай бұрын
Great point
@sceneAMERIKA5 жыл бұрын
What he said about junkies taking a bath is absolutely 100% true. Even now that I'm on methadone and no longer using heroin I'm still on an opiate so a lot of the old side effects are still there. It takes everything in me to shower because I can't stand the way it feels on my skin when I'm wet. I never understood why until this interview. I thought it was just depression but I know a lot of depressed people that shower and do makeup everyday. This man has given me so much insight into my self and we've never met. It's amazing being able to connect with someone on such a deep level like that.
@ElektrOpium Жыл бұрын
I thought that part was weird & was sure he was gonna say it was just a stereotype. I loved showering while on heroin/opiates. In fact I was way more active while using them & had more motivation to get things done. Now during withdrawal, yes, I wouldn't shower. But that's because in withdrawal or when fiending, I simply did not have the energy & motivation to pick myself up & do it. However, when I had my drugs, I took care of myself & better.
@kpatters78 Жыл бұрын
I never had that issue. Didn't shower when I was dope sick, but was fine if I was well and was fine when I was on MOUD.
@OphiuchiChannel Жыл бұрын
Only true on methadone/withdrawal.
@azrael4771 Жыл бұрын
@@kpatters78 when I was withdrawing I would lay in the bathtub switching the water from hot to cold, i showered and changed frequently due to sweat, when I was using I didn't care about anything especially washing my hair and sometimes showing. It's weird
@jimmyb6830 Жыл бұрын
Same!!! I was blown away the first time I read junkie how much I could relate to an old time junkie someone so far removed from my era and the more things change the more they stay the same it seems!
@BrianSmith-vl7xu10 жыл бұрын
They never do intelligent interviews on talk shows like this anymore. The questions and answers are consice, serious and thought out.
@sk-nj7gk10 жыл бұрын
now it is all about, such conversation will take your attention from all the advertisment shows are for these days
@HEAD34559 жыл бұрын
hey brian there aint no life nowhere
@neilsun25217 жыл бұрын
Yeah it's usually just some emotion-based state propaganda nowadays.
@jakedoc46107 жыл бұрын
Charlie Rose does this style of interview for PBS
@styxcreek7 жыл бұрын
Now you get Jimmy Fallon playing charades with some celebrity. Stephen Colbert has his moments though..
@scarlettthebrave7379 Жыл бұрын
I had an eating disorder for ten years and tore through therapists without taking any of their help on board. My fourth therapist was a drug and alcohol addiction counsellor in a men’s prison before The Priory where I saw him. He taught me that an eating disorder is an addiction and the road to recovery is by following the recovery route for any addiction. I finally started to make progress. I am an addict. I am in recovery. I can always relapse. Tomorrow I could relapse. I hope tomorrow I will continue in my recovery. Sending peace and love to all those on this harshly travelled road
@criticalbil1 Жыл бұрын
I wish you continuing success! May I ask though - what is the 'recovery route'?
@MrUberguber Жыл бұрын
You are beautiful. You have a lot to live for.
@countdown2xstacy Жыл бұрын
Stay strong Scarlett
@wishcraft4u27 ай бұрын
I'm coming to believe that a lot of psychological issues people have tend to be a lot like or even just the same as an addiction.
@aido19876 ай бұрын
Choosing to be weird about food is nothing at all like being legitimately addicted to something
@dustinf498 жыл бұрын
I had no idea what real addiction was until this took over my life. Most people would never dream of doing heroin or any drug for that matter, and that's good. But there are people like me that couldn't die without finding out what it was like. It's great at first, then the greatness doesn't come anymore. You end up doing it so you don't get sick. And the sickness I'm talking about is no regular sickness. Words can't describe the pain. You will do anything to avoid the sickness. Those were the darkest times of my life.
@sbx2.08 жыл бұрын
hope ure doin well
@dustinf498 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I'm well.
@SavingPrivateBob8 жыл бұрын
Keep doing well. Do you still get seduced by the wicked mistress from time to time? I hear she's beautiful from afar, but up close riddled in grotesque scars.
@thedevilsadvocate52108 жыл бұрын
what wait was someone in an accident
@herbertnorkus33818 жыл бұрын
Dustin 3423 me too bro and much of the darkness remains after all these years, best wishes and stay clean!
@DANIELMABUSE3 жыл бұрын
Of course its all about William Burroughs, but its great how Peter Gzowski mostly lets him talk and asks the questions his audience wanted to ask themselves.
@MegaSnippezz2 жыл бұрын
Although Naked Lunch is often the most discussed, Junkie is also a fantastic book and is quintessential to an understanding of the Beats.
@mikeberry2332 Жыл бұрын
I could not get Naked Lunch but I am interested in reading Junkie.
@pattymulligan23896 ай бұрын
Read it. It's spare, realistic, riveting. And a short novel for younger people who won't read long novels
@pattymulligan23896 ай бұрын
yes, he was a Beat, older than Kerouac Ginsberg, Casady.
@malfeitor13496 ай бұрын
@@mikeberry2332once you understand what was going on in his life at the time ‘Naked Lunch’ was assembled, you’ll be able to better enjoy it. With proper context, I should’ve said. ‘Junky’ is more autobiographical and definitely more straightforward and digestible. There’s a few mini documentaries on KZbin about William S Burroughs. Check those out before you start and I think you’ll better appreciate the style of his writing. *and another rabbit hole to journey into AFTER all that: check out William S Burroughs and Brion Gysin, if you REALLY want to get right. Godspeed to you, child.
@1060michaelg11 жыл бұрын
In the diary he kept in the last year of his life "Last Words", WSB with takes brief aim at himself and admitted he was never really off. Even when he wasn't using heroin he was imbibing on codeine or paregoric...So, his statement in JUNKY, "Once an adddict always an addict" holds true. It has certainly held true for me and every fellow addict of my acquaintance.
@randomviewer23193 жыл бұрын
he was on methadone till he died i beleive
@1060michaelg3 жыл бұрын
@@randomviewer2319 Yes...in 1980 in what was described as "A Tsunami of smack that hit New York City", Uncle Bill relapsed and was heavily addicted. Not since Tangier with Eukodol had Burroughs been so obliged to "the Chinaman" as he and the old timers called it. So Burroughs went on Methadone approximately 1981 and, as you said, was on methadone maintenance (like many of us have) until his death in August '97.
@josephsmith67773 жыл бұрын
I have been in active addiction for close to 30 yrs no major health issues
@1060michaelg3 жыл бұрын
@@josephsmith6777 Hey joseph. You got about 8 years on me. I also have been fortunate. In "JUNKY" Burroughs writes that the general health of most addicts is fine and many addicts lead long and productive lives. In "Drugstore Cowboy" as father Tom Murphy, Uncle Bill says it best: "The idea that anyone can use drugs and escape a horrible fate, is anathema to these idiots." Peace and Stay Well.
@josephsmith67773 жыл бұрын
@@1060michaelg ya its not the junk its the lack of it and dirty supply thats tge actual issue ive been forced to use fent for last cpl yrs its strong sure but no legs no "good smack" its all wham bam ty mam shame really but hey man stay safe out there and take care of urself
@DamienLavizzo Жыл бұрын
Burroughs straight up laughing at the host when he said "Bit it's done damage to your SOUL" is giving me life lol
@TheMangyCalf6 ай бұрын
Yeah, superb moment.
@raoulduke3446 ай бұрын
Burroughs was really into the occult and other religions. He wouldn't rubbish the idea of souls. When the interviewer asked him, he blew through his lips before laughing as if to say "man - you have no idea what junk did to me". At least, that's my take away.
@javierdenardo26076 ай бұрын
It hit a chord
@Randy-MacDonald6 ай бұрын
The host was right.
@alexstewart-n7v6 ай бұрын
That host was a chain smoker too. One of the only times I didn't see Peter without a cigarette.
@mizzomiz8 жыл бұрын
Lots of people die because they're kept on their own. Dying of loneliness, because other people did not care. Drugs just play the side gig. We destroy more on a psychologic basis by denial of love. We only want to blame the drugs because it's an inconvenient truth.
@dannydine52638 жыл бұрын
+mizzomiz Quite profound.Yes i've known people that that would apply to.I haven't thought of it that way but i think your right.
@DaveyJoans648 жыл бұрын
Sadly,you are very right. The very nature of drug addiction is that of extreme loneliness and isolation,which leads to sorrow and a crushed spirit. Really, who wants to be around a junkie?
@maggisclipsofthemonth39528 жыл бұрын
Lots of people want to be around Junkies, I'm much more fun when i'm on drugs, or at least in my mind :)
@ijustwishi8 жыл бұрын
Do Bo Well, that might be true. My question, though...what the hell IS a loser? Just basing this solely off this one comment, I think YOU might be a loser (you also might be greay. I've no REAL way of knowing). It's a very subjective term that means nothing, really. Boiled down, a loser is someone that you personally don't like for whatever reason. I might love the person, though. So who is right here? People care so much more than they should about things like this.
@maggisclipsofthemonth39528 жыл бұрын
True... that who is and isn't a looser is in the eye of the beholder
@vince16383 жыл бұрын
Do you remember Burrows in Drugstore Cowboy? He was amazing. The drugs may not kill you but the lifestyle sure as hell can. Car wrecks, gun shots, stabbings, assaults etc etc etc. Bad stuff.
@gutz3233 жыл бұрын
Yes! If it wasn't the fact that drugs like heroin or cocaine are illegal, there would be atleast tens of thousands (maybe hundreds of thousands +) less deaths every year around the world. Everything from the black marketers at the source murdering each other over greed to the addict on the street buying a product that has a different purity to what he is used overdosing in the gutter. The war on drugs costs so much money and lives to the general population that the government's of the world couldn't legalise it because they make a fortune themselves, and it makes too much revenue for them fighting the problem than it would by legalising it.
@gutz3233 жыл бұрын
@Auspician just like Alcohol prohibition in the American 1920's and 30's. All that did was create organised criminals and make them rich and powerful. They made fortunes which funded greater crimes when prohibition stopped. Do you think the American Italian mafia would have got so powerful if prohibition didn't happen? I don't think so, or atleast they wouldn't have got so powerful so quickly.
@carolynmurphy36972 жыл бұрын
The Governments are the suppliers of drugs and the street guys sell it and do the prison term whilst the Government creams the profits
@vince16382 жыл бұрын
@@carolynmurphy3697 You are dumb as a rock if you believe that. And no doubt a liberal.
@frankmachin54386 ай бұрын
Yes, those with access to clean medical grade heroin (i.e. doctors and big time musicians/actors etc) can go on using almost forever so long as they can continue to afford it. The life style kills you if you’re just a poor average Joe Schlub who can’t afford good heroin, you end up buying low grade crap from other junkies just higher in the chain, cut multiple times with various substances, then eventually a new more powerful heroin comes on the market that is less diluted and you overdose cos you’re not used to it. You have to beg/borrow/steal to afford your junk, you lose everything, you get desperate, you live in squalor and often end up in prison.
@yorkactivities16973 жыл бұрын
6 weeks clean
@natbrown4733 жыл бұрын
How’s it going?
@mark1234575673 жыл бұрын
Mate it’ s so hard but keep going. I found the clear pristine reality of life after drugs was a coming back home. Please please keep going. Mark. X
@billsanders81573 жыл бұрын
i’m 6 weeks on sunday dawg keep it up
@williambertels82573 жыл бұрын
Hope you are doing well. If no one else there are strangers on the internet happy for you. :)
@binkbonk71993 жыл бұрын
Congratulations!
@limzog93 жыл бұрын
He has the most noticeable iconic voice ever .
@0leander4103 жыл бұрын
It’s where the voice of Dale Gribble from King of the Hill came from. Seriously.
@bobstapp75563 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a cross between WC Fields and Wm. Buckley.
@Ketannabis3 жыл бұрын
Its definitely an opiate addict voice
@adambarnsdale27843 жыл бұрын
methadone moan
@OphiuchiChannel Жыл бұрын
Smack voice
@BD-xn2dp3 жыл бұрын
I was an addict for roughly 10 years - been clean now for 10 (although I did have 1 relapse some 5 years ago - I'll get more into that in a min). Opiates start out as the key to heaven but finish as an entry into hell, madness and despair. I was one of the unusual ones who took it and didn't nod off but became extremely productive and creative. In the beginning I was a better husband, father and employee. But then physical addiction happens and the chase begins. Dope sickness is the worst & I'm speaking as one who recently had Covid and it was a walk in the park compared to being Dope sick. So for me, it became that tired old game of not running after my high, but running away from being sick - which made me deceitful, unreliable and I wasted a lot and I mean A LOT of money. So I quit and accepted the punishment to come. The sickness is the absolute worst. I didn't sleep at all for 4 days and then for a full 7 days after that only averaged 1-2 hours of sleep a night, I ached everywhere, I couldn't control my bowels, couldn't eat and I lost 20 pounds in 2 weeks. Thoughts of suicide, which I had never had before were a common theme rolling around in my head. I developed restless leg syndrome and still deal with that from time to time today. Mentally, I wasn't sharp for roughly 6 months. I feel like it took nearly a year to get back to normal. And, believe it or not, after going through all that I had a relapse. My grandfather passed some 5 years ago I had a terrible headache from all the emotion and sadness - my aunt (not knowing my history) gave me 3 Oxy's...without hesitation, I chewed and swallowed them up. Thankfully, it made me nod off, feel sick and after 2 days of just being dog-tired I knew then that it would never be the same and I've never touched them again.
@shadowknight98073 жыл бұрын
Based on your comments here, I would think that you would agree with me that what Burroughs says here is a lot of nonsense. Keith Richards in "As Wicked as it Seems" reveals an accurate picture of what being on junk is all about. Or better yet, watch any KZbin video of addicts who have wasted every good thing in life to be nothing more than a slave to the cravings this drug creates. Like the devil, Burroughs is a liar at his core.
@BD-xn2dp3 жыл бұрын
@@shadowknight9807 I totally agree and would put Dr Carl Hart in that category as well. Both men are liars and seem to enjoy deceiving people into thinking Opioids are relatively harmless. In my book - they're the epitome of evil
@shadowknight98073 жыл бұрын
@@BD-xn2dp I've thought a lot about good and evil. For me, there are three classes of people. Those who consider how their actions will affect others in a positive way and act accordingly, those who don't care how their actions affect others ("do what thou wilt") and those who want to see harm to others and participate gladly. This seems so simple, but I believe you can reduce any theology or religion down to this. For myself, I am trying to act with the Fruits of the Spirit in mind which are based on and include love as the greatest good. One final note: Burroughs' treatment of his son in the book "When I was Cool" says so much about this man. He was absolutely indifferent to his son's degradation through alcohol and his eventual death as a result. Some kind of father.
@BD-xn2dp3 жыл бұрын
@@shadowknight9807 Interesting! Sounds very much along the lines of: Sins of Omission, Commission and Disposition. Omission - more accidental and less willful. Commission - willful, openly deceitful and manipulative (Burroughs, Hart etc..) and Disposition - all mankind, regardless of intent, are inheritably flawed & fall short of the Divine standard. Back to Burroughs - not only did he ruin his son (his son claims as much before passing at 33) but Burroughs also shot and killed his wife. I believe it happened in Mexico and after paying off several corrupt officials was able to get off scott-free. Further proving that Burroughs's was truly an evil man.
@shadowknight98073 жыл бұрын
@@BD-xn2dp Good to have some meaningful conversation! I like your parallels. It seems to me that there are those who have signed up for the good, those who have signed up for evil and the vast majority who are not involving themselves actively. Certainly, those are generalities and as always it's on a spectrum. I am particularly keenly aware of those who are currently spreading "disinformation" -which is "purposeful lies" - it is the new propaganda. [This is in contrast to "misinformation" where the person spreading the falsehood doesn't know any better.] QAnon, Alex Jones, Trump all making up their own stories for their own benefit and believed by the masses. Playing with the facts. Interesting that the tables are being turned in the courts of law where the defense has become that "no one could possibly believe this craziness" (see the Dominion lawsuit). Final note on Burroughs - he seemed to regret killing his wife greatly - probably because she served multiple needs for him. Of course he was drunk when he did it. Again, alcohol, drugs not really a problem!!
@missjem7910 жыл бұрын
I am a Junkie. Not a using junkie but one probably until I die. I make money now, due to a reintegration back into society, much more than I have ever had before. I do not buy junk with this money; I pay my mortgage, pay the bills, take care of my son, etc. I still have disposable income after all responsibilities are satisfied. The addiction is so ingrained that I don't even know what to do with extra money. I'm not a materialistic person, I am a hedonist. So basically when I have extra money I will have a hundred dollar lunch (by myself), it doesn't even come close to the opiate high. It's a far away second. I love my son though so I keep on trucking because it is no longer about me. However, I will always think like a junkie and therefore will always be a junkie.
@MrJohnnyHemp10 жыл бұрын
i found that the best feeling i could get as close to shooting up anyways, was to do something for someone else. Maybe by someone's food either at a restraunt or store, or take a family member out to do something. idk i just enjoy giving
@crotchmustonenable10 жыл бұрын
A great comment, Jeanette. Thank you. You are obviously an intelligent person and a loving parent. Merry Christmas.
@lankyFool10 жыл бұрын
For what it's worth I found your response tremendously interesting. I love it when people are honest about the exact effect things like opiate addiction have in the actual context of their personality and their regular life. William Burroughs was in many ways an astonishing person and his natural inability to tell even a trivial lie shines through in this clip in my opinion.
@dreampolice43219 жыл бұрын
Jeanette im 3 weeks clean. I disagree a bit w/ your always a junkie. Thats the one thing I do not say in 12 step. I feel it reinforces my powerlessness, or more accurately, Gods power. Im not gonna get all religious on you for that is disrespectful to agnostics. You beat a powerful, powerful demon. Many applause and it shows great character! But you know you so....keep it up!!
@fabo369 жыл бұрын
amen brother..
@steve_bal44 жыл бұрын
I know the subject is about Burroughs but man, do I ever miss Peter Gzowski; one of the greatest broadcasters and interviewers of all-time. RIP
@TAROTAI2 жыл бұрын
Oh Canada - that's why it is a civilized interview - Canadians are cool!
@madstylesnz8 жыл бұрын
It's refreshing to hear such a frank and honest interview about drug addiction like this rather than demonizing or glorifying drug use he just tells it as it is in his own experience. Drugs are neither evil nor good, they just are what they are they have consequences both good and bad and everybody has different experiences with them. It's like fire, use it properly it can heat your home cook your food, let it get out of control and it will burn your house down.
@arts17212 жыл бұрын
i need this drug that cooks my food, where can I find it
@Georgeanne17 Жыл бұрын
You can say that about money too but greed has overtaken the world and you see the result. It’s an illusion that we have that type of control. Most people fall into addictive use of drugs and the consequences are usually harrowing for all those around the addict and in many many cases ends in death.
@madstylesnz Жыл бұрын
@@Georgeanne17 I’m not sure most people become addicted to drugs; if you take the most accessible and widely used drug alcohol, most people aren’t addicted to it / alcoholics they’re in the minority although admittedly a decent sizeable minority due to it’s widespread use. Same with say marijuana I believe. Also a large swathe of the the public in western countries are addicted to coffee but that particular drug doesn’t even register on the ‘harm’ scale even my doc told me it’s fine to drink. A dangerous drug like Heroin though is a different story, that drug is designed to hook you. Although according to what William says about it you have to take it an awful lot before your body chemically adjusts itself to cause you to become physically dependent on it. The danger is that it is so intensely pleasurable (not speaking from experience here) that people take it an ‘awful’ lot.
@Gachaleieish Жыл бұрын
Yeah definitely heroin should only be used responsibly .
@madstylesnz Жыл бұрын
@@Gachaleieish I actually saw a doco many years ago on TV about heroin use, I assumed it was just going to be another doco about the dangers of drug addiction but the people they talked to did actually use Heroin in moderation. One guy was a doctor, another was a nurse who would only use it after her shift was over to 'relax'. Mainstream media will only report on the horrors of drug addiction but there is another side to it; the 'functional' addict. So I guess it's possible to use even a hard drug like H in moderation in theory. I wouldn't want to test the theory myself though, I have too many dramas in my life to add another. My sister had an ex boyfriend who's brother died from an H overdose, it's a dangerous drug no doubting it.
@richshort56599 жыл бұрын
I was a addict for 11yrs., got off in 2010. It made me feel alive, "normal"; I could fit in to any social situation. I went to work, was a good employee, took care of my family,etc., during the work-week. On the week-ends, I would "splurge" so to speak, doing larger amounts than I required to put-up with the work-week. As time went on, I found that not everyone who uses can do as I did. The few people that I knew who used, were generally a mess and could not do ANYTHING other than dose themselves, and nod-off. The drug to me was a "tool", and I used it accordingly. The only reason I quit, was because of it's worst side-affect: Jail.
@joshuadaly19769 жыл бұрын
I almost completely agree with all you said!
@XxxgrungyxxX4 жыл бұрын
I hear ya, I'm a 15 year junkie myself. People don't realize that there is a lot of "functioning" junkies out there, I would even bet that there is way more that are functioning than there is that aren't. If it was open and talked about more people would not believe how many there are... It's cause we never hear the story of the junkie that's good, and a loving caring human being that gets by and has no problem... It's cause everyone only hears is the negative things about heroin, so the first thing people think about it is that if you do it eventually it will just kill you. And that all junkies are nothing but scum and the only thing they care about are themselves. Now... I'm not saying it's great and that everyone should be doing it. I'm just saying... When's the last time you heard a positive heroin story?
@Bonesph4 жыл бұрын
I used to take 8 Oxy 30s a day and go to work. I was a essential worker even before this virus.. They took Oxy away from everyone now I'm on Buprenorphine which is ok but not as good.
@lanecore754 жыл бұрын
My problem, like many, was procurement of the drug. I used pills, I could continue my daily activities with little trouble but for procurement. Supply of my DOC became harder and harder to find.
@lanecore754 жыл бұрын
@Reece Cantrell I couldn't agree more. I lived it. The running and chasing is such a drag.
@joesliva37723 жыл бұрын
The reason these type of interviews no longer exist is because there is truth to them and if it’s one thing that the big corporations can’t stand is, it’s the truth.
@justincase47163 жыл бұрын
You nailed it!
@carlodave93 жыл бұрын
I hate corporations as much as the next guy, but WB is flat out wrong or lying about being "cured" of addiction. He was back on heroin not long after this period and pretty much used for the remainder of his life. And contrary to what he says, heroin junkies aren't generally take-it-or-leave-it types as he suggests.
@forrestrichard81333 жыл бұрын
Burroughs was lying through the whole interview though lol
@gregorycampbell79213 жыл бұрын
@@forrestrichard8133 dude literally has junky voice in this interview
@larryslemp96983 жыл бұрын
Joe Silva ..... Exactly right man!!
@brianhill92956 ай бұрын
I wish tv was still this interesting and intelligent. I miss the 70s.
@griffinmoore68192 жыл бұрын
Burroughs has good humor, a brilliant mind, a curiosity of life, and an understanding that all three can work together, perhaps with an aid of choice, perhaps not. Either way I've always gained an incredible need to experience life like Burroughs has when reading his words or listening to him in interview. To merely exist is an insult to nature and the lives we're given.
@carlosbarata1040 Жыл бұрын
"you will do anything to avoid the sickeness" , so true and yet so sad, unfortunatly its easier to point fingers than to try understand a junkie , all i can say is to walk a mile in any junkie shoes , only then you will understand how brave you will need to be to face another day every and each morning of your life
@christinajackson34615 ай бұрын
I hope you read up on his upbringing and what he did to the mother of his child. Yikes.
@clarenceeugene96923 жыл бұрын
I spent the better part of a decade addicted to opiates and during that time I was more high functioning than I have ever been. I was organized, regimented, disciplined, out-going, and congenial. Eventually the addiction led to negative behavior (Mostly due to the inability to adequately procure drugs) but as long as I had a supply, the effects were more beneficial.
@thagodwecreate51792 жыл бұрын
ThIS! and I ALWAYS have a supply
@stimso2 жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@ElektrOpium Жыл бұрын
This was my experience well. 15 years of pain pill & then heroin (before fentanyl) use & I never even once overdosed or any of these cliche stereotypes. Most people are ignorant about drugs & actually think opioids are the most deadly. lol It's incredible. I was much more functioning on opioids than I am or ever was off of them. The only thing that made them difficult was the illegality.
@faulsname88694 ай бұрын
The constipation and rock-hard stools are brutal
@michelletruelove778311 күн бұрын
@@thagodwecreate5179 until you don't.
@sharpasaneraser8 жыл бұрын
Burroughs looks like a Shop teacher on the verge of retirement.
@Chasewillis8208 жыл бұрын
he looks colonel sanders-esque here lolo
@diskochimp6 жыл бұрын
He was born in 1914 and always dressed soberly. What did you expect, a purple mohawk, tattoos and nose-ring?
@rayjr626 жыл бұрын
Personally, I would not run the risk of developing an addiction by wanting to experiment with Heroin, or any other Alkaloid. But that's me. I am certain others would disagree with me by saying they've experimented and found it beneficial.
@michaelcolello27354 жыл бұрын
He looks similar to my maternal grandfater. But perhaps that's just mid-century WASP style.
@MaasHomes3 жыл бұрын
Actually he does look like my shop teacher back in '82. I wonder if he's missing any fingers?
@clancykobane91029 жыл бұрын
"but it has done things to your soul"... a great line, which non plussed the great william s burroughs.
@maggiemae75393 жыл бұрын
One gets to choose his master
@susansparanormalpennsylvan813 жыл бұрын
he talked about no health problems, because the H was pure, now days it is cut with coffee/shoe polish etc.. which leads to abcess and infection
@ellie-tk4jy2 жыл бұрын
@odibex how did he "get lucky"??? Wtf? So only burroughs is a deep thinker? Is an interview a game? I'm tired of murdered wives being a footnote in the story of adored men. He has zero insight into himself. If he did he wouldn't have been a misogynistic pedo.
@brucecollins1904 Жыл бұрын
I laughed, from my most honest and sincere place. I laughed at the ridiculous, period-specific pretention of the question (like a Christian asking a sincere and thoughtful Buddhist or Jew or atheist about their worries about not getting into "Heaven") AND about WSB's own deep consideration of his own "soul" throughout his work. WSB was "nonplussed" by the incredible ignorance, arrogance and inanity of the suggestion, but remained polite in his reply.
@worldmikel3 жыл бұрын
Despite living on the border and watching and listening to CBC Windsor for decades, I forgot Peter Gzowski. His name should be in the synopsis of this clip. His history with the CBC should not be forgotten.
@misanthrop19587 жыл бұрын
Burroughs is not telling the truth. I am a heroin addict (on and off) and between 1999 and 2008 i was 100 % off (of all drugs ) . I was moody, had aggressive outbursts and depressive stupors that seemed to come out of nowhere all the time. Even after 9 years H was permanently in my head, and I was still mentally addicted. And there was no tendency that it was getting better at all. That`s why I don`t believe him... I DO have regrets. I wished I had never touched it, because the disadvantages outweigh the positive sides by far, the longer you take that crap!
@frequencydecline52507 жыл бұрын
Burroughs seems to have tended to change his answers on things constantly. If they asked him an hour later he would just as likely declare heroin to be a virus from voice space sent to destroy the K9 thought experiments. ...a little more seriously, he doesn't seem to look much past his own initial thoughts on things which are rooted in his experiences. At one point he claimed his constant on and off with heroin was why he was living so long because it was forcing his cells to regenerate new young healthy cells.
@terirobins4913 Жыл бұрын
I agree with most of what he is saying. After over 25yrs off heroin, I had minor surgery & took pain pills with no problem. It's nice that we could have polite discussions like this. I miss those days.😢
@sadhu719110 ай бұрын
Opiates are little less addictive then cigs. If u can quit cigs u can quit any drug
@joshuadaly19769 жыл бұрын
After being off and on heroin the better part of my life 90% of what Burroughs says is dead on. Although you hear many reasons people use dope, the big one for me and many people I've met had been that it makes them feel normal. The first time I used I thought "this is what regular people must always feel like". No anxiety wearing on me, the depression I always felt was gone. It's basically the only antidepressant/anti-anxiety medication that really works!
@soulCracka17 жыл бұрын
joshuadaly1976 I hear you. The very first time I had an opiate (one 10mg Percocet) I was like...ahhhhhhh!!!! Finally my brain shut the hell up. I've since struggled with heroin and I do regret ever trying h. The whole ritual and the paraphernalia etc. is very hard to break away from.
@07BSPtC7 жыл бұрын
Luckily for me I never got hooked but experimented with lots of drugs and agree. For me the only time I feel normal is when I am high or drunk
@Mr.Swankly6 жыл бұрын
Very true, probably very unfortunately true.
@pinkitypink62466 жыл бұрын
Yes, and for all those around the addict supposedly wishing you weren't, In reality they are glad you are... Coz of its numbing properties subdues a certain amount of personality that others find intolerable.
@chadster1236 жыл бұрын
Perfectly said
@lamper29 жыл бұрын
this is a wonderful interview-the cbc deserves thanks for posting it
@leanmchungry47353 жыл бұрын
"If you believe it, it's not a lie" -George Costanza
@denisekristen76203 жыл бұрын
Im dying... Good one! Lol
@skottyo3 жыл бұрын
Alan Arkins character in Little Miss Sunshine has it right. Pick up a habit when your in your 70s. Why not? You're near the end anyway so enjoy yourself.
@agentm00se3 жыл бұрын
totally + you'll need a lil somethin somethin to take away all the joint pain and other gnarly aging side effects
@maggiemae75393 жыл бұрын
Because it seperates you from God
@agentm00se3 жыл бұрын
@@maggiemae7539 praise be !!!
@iminyourhead99363 жыл бұрын
I couldn't imagine scoring gear at 70 and dealing with dope sickness at that age sounds horrible. It's bad enough now ffs.
@2cupojoe1366 ай бұрын
@@maggiemae7539 Is that good or bad?
@DanHarkless_Halloween_YTPs_etc8 жыл бұрын
Wow, so he always sounded like that. Thanks so much for de-archiving this, CBC. I question whether U.S. TV would have been brave enough to air an interview like that back then.
@transtremm9 жыл бұрын
Opiates also make you chronically constipated.
@sallylauper82229 жыл бұрын
+transtremm This is detailed rather graphicly in Naked Lunch.
@zobielamouche18 жыл бұрын
+transtremm thats the least problem
@luckyrocket19038 жыл бұрын
+transtremm not really, thats an old wives tale
@transmission12488 жыл бұрын
+Lucky Rocket No it isn't! I'm psychologically, but not physically addicted to opiates, and I currently use about once week. I don't 'go' for 2-3 days following taking the drug. Every. Single. Time. Ever. There's loads of evidence about this, just Google it!
@luckyrocket19038 жыл бұрын
I dont need to read secondhand information what i already know stupid, I have taken lots of opiates and its never affected me at all
@nickybadboy509 жыл бұрын
This is probably the best Old Bull has ever looked.
@craigdobbin35216 жыл бұрын
Speaking from experience Heroin addiction is the bottom of any pit of despair to start with it is like a warm cosy blanket until that blanket turns into a noose and it gets tighter and tighter until you pass out and wake up 20 yr later wondering where your life went half spent in a haze and the other half in a nightmare
@ronniechilds20023 жыл бұрын
True. Except few serious addicts last 20 years.
@pandaman89463 жыл бұрын
You nailed it.
@howey9356 жыл бұрын
I’ve been clean of heroin since 1998 but I’m still an addict.
@mikesmith74973 жыл бұрын
@wavygr What do you mean a week vs 6 Months?
@mikesmith74973 жыл бұрын
@wavygr Oh ok and ya i understand i've kicked methadone a couple times before and a was sick for a full month at least. And what where you saying about suboxone? And no one kicks methadone in a week.
@ronniechilds20023 жыл бұрын
Congratulations. It's good that you're aware of that. I was clean as a whistle for 18 years and started back using full-blown. I convinced myself I could handle a coupe of percodans. Hah!
@howey9353 жыл бұрын
@@paracelsus9282 i live in the U.K. and i dont think theyve started using fentanyl in the smack here yet. Theres only been reports of it been in 1 city in the U.K. It was going around Hull for about 6 weeks and whoever started using it stopped.
@howey9353 жыл бұрын
@@ronniechilds2002 hello Ronnie are you still using my friend or have you managed to kick it again? Ive been close to the same situation myself as my doctor has prescribed me oxycontin for long term chronic pain even though he knows im a none using addict. Im actually self medicating at the min with cannabis. I use the flower and make my own oil and for the most part thats enough but i do have times when i cant even get out of bed. Luckily it doesnt usually last to long 5 days is longest i wasnt able to get out of bed.
@TheOldOakSyndicate9 жыл бұрын
He's totally right about not bathing, and sexual apatite...I was hooked on painkillers, and couldn't stand water, especially if I was dope-sick. I think the squashing sexual desires is the reason I liked opiates so much. That being said, I don't suggest anyone flirt with the dragon.
@HimJimRimDim9 жыл бұрын
+TheOldOakSyndicate Well of course if you are dope-sick you are not going to tolerate water on skin as your hot/cold tolerance is extremely acute. But plenty of addicts do bathe or shower regularly. Depends on circumstances. A poor homeless addict is not going to be able to bathe often. A wealthier addict with ready access to the conveniences of home and a regular supply of drugs is likely to be clean.
@warrenburger99079 жыл бұрын
+TheOldOakSyndicate This actually really surprised me.. the not bathing thing. I've struggled with opiates and benzos for years (although I've been clean for around 10 days atm) I can definitely understand not wanting to take a bath or shower because you really don't want to do ANYTHING, but once you're in the hot water, I feel it really helps with withdrawls. It affects people differently, I suppose. The hardest part is getting in and out..
@susanallen19298 жыл бұрын
+TheOldOakSyndicate I couldn't stand to shower when I was strung out - sponge baths only... weird, huh?
@zetetick3958 жыл бұрын
+Warren Burger I can definitely second Warrens thoughts here - Soaking in a hot bath was perhaps the best way of dealing with several of the symptoms of withdrawal (even for an hour or so after the bath). - surprised it's not more widely used as a helping method.
@TheOldOakSyndicate8 жыл бұрын
Warren Burger Now you do make a good point that had slipped my mind. When I was being tapered off suboxone, I found hot bathes helped. But It was always difficult to get out when that cold air hit!
@ReverendBenzo10 жыл бұрын
This interviewer obviously has no clue whatsoever what happens outside of his little bubble. I love his reaction of when Burroughs says that his personal experiences cause little damage to this health.
@pussypasta643 жыл бұрын
the way he brings up the damage it does on the "soul" lololol
@blueguitar4113 жыл бұрын
the interviewer is Peter Gzowski, renowned Canadian public radio journalist.
@FrankTheTank75753 жыл бұрын
Back when CBC was actually good, rather than the cucked, racially obsessed dumpster fire it is now. I miss the old CBC.
@pattyandbustershow10313 жыл бұрын
Once again, allowed the use, most junkies are fine, function well and just need to be given their drugs.
@bgggsht3 жыл бұрын
I feel our civilization would collapse solely because of the lack of coffee or beer or anything softer than junk but still addicting, so yeah, everyone has his drug.
@josephsmith67773 жыл бұрын
Very true its not the junk its lack of it
@Mistersandyrobertson5 ай бұрын
He was such a gentleman. I had the pleasure of meeting him several times.
@christinajackson34615 ай бұрын
A gentleman? Didn't he kill his wife and leave his young son without a mother? And fill his books with violence and racial slurs for very little reason other than shock? He grew up privileged but chose to be a criminal and drug addict murdered. But eh.
@thagodwecreate51798 жыл бұрын
I have been an opiate addict and chronic relapser for over a decade and while i believe some people simply cant handle certain drugs...other people are lacking natural endorphins and need a chemical substitute. Besides tha fact that drugs are illegal i haven't seen much harm to myself physically. It has improved my mental and emotional health...opiates have literally saved me from suicide and for that i am forever grateful. All my drug problems came from tha criminilization of its use. Im not ypur typical stereotype heroin addict. I dont steal i have great work ethic it motivates me ive worked 2 jobs 7 days a week for years...never stole pawned or sold myself for a fix. I look 10 years younget than my age and due to my knowledge of use and cleanliness i have no diseases and even after shootong heroin for years straight...never once did i overdose. Im tha best worker at my job im intelligent i feel empathy for people and nature i have my own place my own car i pay my own bills and im responsible enough not to bring any children into this world. So don't judge addicts all tha same...you probably know a few and couldnt fathom that they are junkies. When i sold drugs i woukd meet nurses teachers doctors lawyers police officers...addiction does not discriminate. Sure i get clean from time to time to lower my tolerance or to stay out of jail ( i e probation) but with my depression and hatred for tha stupidity of society it always comes back. Im in love with opium its my light at tha end of tha tunnel...tha only peace and comfort i get. Sober life just isnt for me its too dark and cold. Ive been thru withdrawal more times than i can count and surely will again...why? With such negative consequences and suffering and pain why would i go back. Cuz there is much more suffering and pain without them...a more subtle pain that just wears u down everyday little by little until my choices become...use or suicide. I pick use everytime cuz i have hope for better days. Maybe one day ill be free of it...clean and sober and happy. Until then its just a basic choice not of right or wrong. ..but life or death. So ptay for addicts in your life...and work to overturn drug laws because chances are an addict is already being punished enough. Throwing them in jail taking their freedom property money and dignity helps no addict and overall hurts society. I will say if you've never tried opiates...dont ever start. Nothing that good exists without an equal bad. Hope this helps give you anotherperspective on addiction. Much peace n love to all.
@tedbundy37296 жыл бұрын
I have been using dope for a little over 25 years but have been on methadone for the past 15. In the last 25 years I have been clean off opiates maybe 1 1/2 to 2 years so I figure my brain chemistry is changed by having opiates daily for over 2 decades. At this point I wont even try to kick the one time I kicked dope and meth I was so depressed that I was so miserable. The only joy at that time was when I would allow myself 1 or 2 shots on the weekends.
@3373-g8z6 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I experienced!
@jeffryhammel30354 ай бұрын
That was a fascinating comment. You are also a very good writer.
@Kirke1827 жыл бұрын
This is especially important today due to the opioid addiction in America. As Burroughs points out, it's primarily a pain-killer. It's how people get addicted--prescribed pain-killers feel so good. When I was prescribed such a pain-killer after surgery, I took some initially. It was like floating on a cloud in a dreamy half-sleep. When I came to, I threw the pills away and never got a another prescription. I can see how people get addicted to that feeling.
@michelletruelove778311 күн бұрын
Eventually u can't feel that anymore but will half die a few hours without. Thats how people stay addicted its so hard to stop then u don't produce what u naturally used to so depression n pain are overwhelming. Good thing u saw it like it was
@Mikem-mq2hh3 ай бұрын
Man i love his voice...the sound and drawl.
@billwhite97035 ай бұрын
This is an excellent interview featuring a man with a huge intellect and spirit, managed by an interviewer whom I see as unbiased... even though he said, "But it has done things to your soul."
@rabbitss117 жыл бұрын
As long as you have financial security you can be a junkie all your life, the real question is why would you want to? This interviewer isn't really asking the right questions, it seems
@MagsTheMusicLover1178 жыл бұрын
What's people's issue with Burroughs? Not all fans of his work are addicts, most have used something at some point, and some are the full package of it. His work is not all drugs, junk, and stonerisms... Look deeper inside yourselves and the world of creativity and art you bunch of dimwits...
@randyrysdale8528 жыл бұрын
good 1
@Mdriver19817 жыл бұрын
well, he killed his first wife for one thing.
@georgeroberts91117 жыл бұрын
I liked it up til the dimwit part. Siyanara...LATTES~!
@basedsouljah7 жыл бұрын
Mdriver1981 Yeah but who cares? She shouldn't have offered to put a fucking apple on her head and have him shoot it off while both of them were drunk and on amphetamines
@silversnail14137 жыл бұрын
I have nothing against his art but his treatment of his wife and son leave an unpleasant taste in my mouth. It's not my place to judge but I have trouble buying some of his statements on the nature of addiction, considering the havoc it wreaked in his personal life.
@madstylesnz3 жыл бұрын
Junkie is a great read, interesting reading about someone being a junkie in the 40/50s before the whole hippie scene.
@endlessnameless64945 ай бұрын
Never drink and drive or drive high, guys. Value your life and the lives of others. Get messed up at home, not behind the wheel.
@RobertoTifiАй бұрын
Today such a conversation wouldn't be possible. And there's no Burroughs today. I always liked this man's voice and calm attitude. He's been in & out of drugs for sooooooo long. I miss him very much. ❤
@mattygeno2 жыл бұрын
He is correct when it comes to alcohol. I have been addicted to both, and it was physically impossible to get off because i, and I’m not exaggerating, would die without substition medicine, like high dosages of benzodiazepines. I drank half a gallon of Vodka daily for ten years, cocaine and xanax/benzos. Daily.
@r0llskyay011 жыл бұрын
"talk for a moment about being on the bottom". i always took buyrroughs for a top hahahaha
@Theevil6ify10 жыл бұрын
Happy 100th Birthday, Uncle Bill.
@mrengulfeddirector3 жыл бұрын
Are you related?
@SD-li9g3 жыл бұрын
@@mrengulfeddirector no he's not
@frankjamesbonarrigo71628 жыл бұрын
well, he lived to 83. not bad
@puipui73827 жыл бұрын
yeah better to live an enjoyable and interesting life. his life was not without ups and downs though.
@samuelparker98826 жыл бұрын
Frank James Bonarrigo He was in DRUG STORE COWBOY WITH MATT DILLON.
@phnigra1114 жыл бұрын
Burroughs is also in that early 90s MINISTRY video “just one fix”.
@TonyFrickey-ur9jy24 күн бұрын
A true addict always defends the drug. I am one. I truly understand.
@IndridCool544 ай бұрын
I’m an old dude and I’ve known many folks who were heroin addicts. One recurring story was that they never got sick with normal illnesses like influenza or colds. I don’t know what to make of this, but it’s very interesting.
@ggeemmiinnii18 күн бұрын
Either they isolated themselves and truly didn't get sick or did get sick but didn't really feel the cold or flu they had. The sickest I've ever been was when I had viral bronchitis and the flu simultaneously back in 2010 at the height of my heroin addiction. Had many colds and respiratory viruses in addition throughout my addiction. Sober since 05 Mar 2017
@johnstockwellmajorsmedleyb12147 жыл бұрын
Using was the greatest part of my life. I never learned more about myself, or was more protected, from the evil atrocities commited by capitalist racketeers. Thank you for posting.
@mikeyhout29893 жыл бұрын
2 hours clean.
@chadfeehan58203 жыл бұрын
keep goin bruh
@petergambier3 жыл бұрын
Well done Mikey, it's a start.
@Lugh4443 жыл бұрын
It's been two weeks, you make it? Should be through it now!
@danielbaker12483 жыл бұрын
Gotta start somewhere(:
@susansparanormalpennsylvan813 жыл бұрын
keep it up you can do, the first 2 - 5 days are the worst
@TheJoegodwin9 жыл бұрын
Long term opiates have little physiologic consequence, provided you don't stop breathing. Much less than cocaine, amphetamines, alcohol, tobacco. Same for THC. The same can't be said for the psychological effects. The acetaminophen in a Vicodin is arguably more toxic than the opiate. The point: know your DOC(drug of choice) and be accountable for your ingestion.
@rachaelday47099 жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@adomalyon18 жыл бұрын
+Joe Godwin That's true. There's something about Heroin though, it gets inside a person and twists their psyche, forever. (assuming they have had serious habit)
@mt.doomer66457 жыл бұрын
Joe Godwin Well said sir.
@Civilizashum7 жыл бұрын
For me it was a lack of affect, a lack of drive. Wrapped up in that is a depressed sex drive which at the time was preferable to me. I was on methadone far longer than H, it made me dead to the world. Which I miss sometimes, but the lack of drive meant not doing music eventually and I came back.
@aidanlyons6097 жыл бұрын
Joe Godwin
@runningsuperska6 ай бұрын
Excellent interview, thanks for posting.
@RosannaMahon5 ай бұрын
The worst side effects of narcotics is,They wear off. 🍾🎉💥
@rosemarymills16714 жыл бұрын
His own son died from addiction to drugs in the 80's, before Burrouughs himself died
@Karl_Squell3 жыл бұрын
The drug being alcohol
@Civilizashum3 жыл бұрын
I met Billy Burroughs in 1972. He was so tremulous he may as well have had a severe palsy. This is from speed, which is the title of one of the books he wrote. It was peculiar to read in a book an account about one day he was waiting for this check from his father, in a hotel in DeLand, Fla; a sort of raw survival that check meant, as that was an account of something I watched in the hotel room that day. (long story, I was 16, and a counselor at... an institution Billy used to work for where I was staying knew him and took me to meet him.) He didn't die from "addiction to drugs" he died from the effects of alcohol, specifically liver failure. This was a rather young man - 25 - and he was in bad shape. WS Burroughs Jr here is more or less correct that opioids do not wreck the body per se. The life can, no doubt, but the drug itself can in fact slow aging down considerably, to where _preserved in amber_ may be said of some.
@alcoholic24123 жыл бұрын
As a recovering alcoholic, with many friends and acquaintances in recovery including addicts, I find that trying to explain the disease to a "normal" person is an exercise in futility. That's not a judgment but simply an observation.
@markrothe59033 жыл бұрын
It’s difficult to understand something if you’ve never walked in those shoes.
@xyaeiounn3 жыл бұрын
@@markrothe5903 It's entirely possible to understand addiction without being addicted. It's just a rewiring to accommodate a new need. Having your body cry out for something the way it usually cries for food, water or even air is exactly what addiction is like and it's not the understanding that is the challenge. It's the lack of empathy and the moral condemnation that combine to destroy the addict. Then again, addiction can freeze a person developmentally. I've met people who show exactly when in their life they started using hard drugs because they haven't grown as a person, just become better at securing that stuff. Some addicts will also completely alienate you by being self-indulgent, ruthless and incorrigible. People don't want to understand.
@markrothe59033 жыл бұрын
@xyaeiounn... valid point. Let me throw in another quip. People tend to hate the things that they do not understand.
@alcoholic24123 жыл бұрын
@@markrothe5903 or fear things they don't understand as well. A lot of anger, hatred, resentment and mistrust is fear based.
@markrothe59033 жыл бұрын
@John Esss....yep. 👍
@philbarone46033 жыл бұрын
I was a junkie and I bathed and I got Hep C from sharing needles. I lost lots of friends but heroin itself with the exception of overdosing does not damage your health, just everything else.
@BushyHairedStranger4 жыл бұрын
“The damage to health from addiction is minimal”-William Burroughs absolutely on point! especially if heroin was legally available and provided, made of the highest standards for quality & purity. All drugs, ALL DRUGS, should be legal to use, to make, to acquire precursors chemicals in the amounts you see fit. Take away this ridiculous idea that people wont use drugs if they’re illegal or scheduled....
@glitterkittensreid50793 жыл бұрын
Look at Portugal policing a social problem is not the answer either. Portugal has had no skyrocketing rates of use among people and spend the money on treatment and education and awareness instead of incarceration.
@chickybaby22773 жыл бұрын
Alcohol causes far worse damage. I’ve had drug counselors tell me such.
@josephsmith67773 жыл бұрын
Very true and we see its evil very clear 100% of fentanly addicts would prefer high quality herion its much better and safer i imagine a few would like stable clearly dosed fentanly but not many ppl only use it bc its synthetic cheap and available the swiss and others have great succes w there heroun clinics
@gregorymoats40072 жыл бұрын
Depends on what you mean by “health”. Why on earth would one WANT to be an addict? Why on earth would one WANT to not go through life experiencing it in all its natural glory?...
@ellie-tk4jy2 жыл бұрын
@glitter kittens reid uhm... there's a huge drug problem in Portugal...
@X.davidWilliams3 жыл бұрын
Huzzah! My favorite writer, his style electrifies me. Makes me think
@reddiver7293Ай бұрын
The way you feel on opiates is so seductive. A spiraling junkie is so focused on feeling that good, they will lie to themself about everything because they know no matter what, everything will be fine as long as they get that fix. They will not get clean until they realize the high is not worth the damage their addiction is doing to their lives. The addicts that cannot or will not make the big decision, they die. Sometimes go to prison. But usually die.
@SpiderStratagemVI7 жыл бұрын
I love Burroug4hs the author! I cannot say whether I love his8 writing as a result of him being a junky or not but Burroughs, like Kerouak, Thompson, Ginsberg etc. Are some of the most observant and honest writers ever.
@ellie-tk4jy2 жыл бұрын
It's a shame those misogynistic pedos were never self aware.
@davidsnow617110 жыл бұрын
dude is blown out on junk right now
@smittylikesto10 жыл бұрын
he does sound like it.
@smittylikesto9 жыл бұрын
+David Snow i really doubt he quit, he says he did tho. i bet fans of his would send him shit in the mail. i could see people doing that.
@vinyltone49706 жыл бұрын
He probably quit shooting up smack but is now on some substitute.
@janedoex83456 жыл бұрын
He was on methadone til the day he died.
@nate-manlovesgland23475 жыл бұрын
*buepenephrine
@hellomynameisname42703 жыл бұрын
the assertion that one man could judge the condition of another man's soul... so arrogant.
@Lugh4443 жыл бұрын
The interviewer is trying to get Burroughs to tell everyone how horrible heroin is. The truth should be enough but he doesn't want to hear it.
@empedokleff_Freybier7 ай бұрын
I know about w.s b. because of my jounger brother- he get's a lot of time later on H - It was a hard time, but he passed the addiction!
@robert2112ful6 ай бұрын
Beautiful interview.
@michaelbaldwin54953 жыл бұрын
Along came Hepatitis,AIDS ,OxyContin,fentanyl 😢
@darrylwellington86383 жыл бұрын
Burroughs looks like "Uhhh.... what soul??"
@Scott-rz2vo3 жыл бұрын
I swear I could set down & listen to Burrough's lecture for hour's & be completely enthralled. I love his voice ! He'd of been my idea of the perfect college professor as well as a great guy to come home & do Dope with & talk. Something along those lines...👣🐾
@renebechtold85473 жыл бұрын
I was addicted to heroin for 30 years from 15 to 45 then I quit by coming down then cold turkey, I almost went crazy.
@ENigma-um8zw2 жыл бұрын
Grateful to be 8+ years clean from junk now, I got out just as that damn fent was getting into the primary street supplies.
@damagedbug88484 жыл бұрын
Join me after the break, where we have miley Cyrus talking her about her latest single.......
@SebTempt3 жыл бұрын
I had a huge discussion with some friends about how the quality of debates and interviews has totally declined in the last decades. Debates are just a competition to destroy others views or opinions nowadays. The world needs more of these old fashion interviews
@JG-gg9wk3 жыл бұрын
Yes, that's where we're at now, meaningless banter.
@ladyjenny17468 жыл бұрын
I love his voice...
@mandel9577 жыл бұрын
Lady Jenny me too!
@steve_bal44 жыл бұрын
😄😄😄 It always creeped me right out!
@gregorsamsa13644 жыл бұрын
Junkie voice
@AllanOstermann9 жыл бұрын
I was a junkie for four years. It was hell. Burroughs is right about one thing, kind of. Heroin, in its pure form, is safe compared to other drugs. But IT WILL TAKE YOUR SOUL! Luckily, I got mine back, and I'm still alive. William got good, pure "junk." We poor people die from the cut shit (I almost did). And, as Baretta would say, "You can take that to the bank." Sorry, Mr. Burroughs, anyone who condones what should have killed me is no longer a favorite of mine. You were just defending your addiction. I've been there. No offense. RIP, sir.
@rickyrambo84659 жыл бұрын
Yep, thats the 100% truth, i was thinking the same things. He was just defending his addiction, it will definitely steal your soul, your family, your life, and everything you have.
@91thebossman9 жыл бұрын
Allan Ostermann glad you're doing better, Allan! Sounds like you have a good head back on your shoulders :-)
@AllanOstermann9 жыл бұрын
Well, I'm still alive, and off the junk, so, fer sure :)
@methedrineradio68589 жыл бұрын
Allan Ostermann One of the most intelligent comments here. Battled with that shit for almost 20 years. Clean since fall 2009. My mind was always playing tricks on me...struggling to find some justification of sorts to continue being a miserable smackhead. Thank ME it's over. But I had to hit rock bottom to finally realize. Kudos. Oh I love Burroughs. But been there too...and I know your mind's kinda like possessed when you're down that fucking route to nowhere...
@AllanOstermann9 жыл бұрын
Methedrine Radio Been there. I may have my problems, but quitting heroin is the thing I'm the most proud of. Yeah...it will twist your mind to death. I once had a therapist, "If you stay on heroin, you might as well put a gun to your head." Thanks for your comment!
@jerrydonquixote59272 жыл бұрын
William S burroughs was a brilliant man. That was one of the most fascinating books I've ever read 'Junkie" I was in fact a junkie when I read it, glad to no longer be a junkie either! Have no desire to do that again I'm too happy...
@TheMountainMongrel5 ай бұрын
Certain, adjusted mind can get you places, sweet places where you've never been before. That is where your mind can be "adjusted" in certain ways and you adjust your mind to it. I agree with William here that dis-adjustment of the before adjusted mind is highly possible. You simply have to be a strong character.
@jeffryhammel30354 ай бұрын
Some fascinating comments here, including yours.
@jeffryhammel30354 ай бұрын
Certain drugs did help me to be the person and have the good friends that I have in my 60's. I just wasn't the type of person to enter the 20th and 21rst Century rat race. It would have destroyed me. Alas, that's me; and reading your comment closely, that's you. As long as we learn to respect everyone in their particular path equally.
@lindaharrison3240 Жыл бұрын
The damage to Burroughs’ health clearly was minimal; dude lived to be 83 years old.
@shameful3604 Жыл бұрын
he was a very rich person who had always lived with the safety net of daddys money despite his addiction, most opioid addicts cant afford the kind of treatment he could
@DonFonzarelli-uq9yx3 ай бұрын
Born wealthy. Never had to work or the stress of earning a living. So maybe thats why he lasted as long as he did.
@collinholdfield389411 жыл бұрын
i've been addicted to various painkillers, including the big H, and i have ALWAYS been clean. That includes bathing AND my practices with needles etc. It's a stereo type. No doubt many junkies are dirty people, but they were dirty people to begin with. Most times.
@randalfarrington26123 жыл бұрын
I agree,,
@bigsid543 жыл бұрын
Absolutely...
@brooke92973 жыл бұрын
The time I was on heroin was the era of my life that I was both the most clean and most attractive hah.
@randallparaday41023 жыл бұрын
Most of the dirty ones is bcuz they're homeless. I been there
@38bladerunner3 жыл бұрын
If you really wanna see a trip, watch William Burroughs in the movie Drug Store Cowboy play an 80 year old Junkie, he does it so well. That's how I was introduced to him back in 1994. Really cool movie , staring Matt Dillon 👍
@Livengoodproject3 жыл бұрын
We TRIED to watch it. Always nodded off before the end! Seriously! Lol
@ViceCoin6 ай бұрын
My favorite childhood poem is, Take Me In Your Arms, Miss Heroin.
@louisbyron8 жыл бұрын
A brilliant if substantially flawed man, Burroughs definitely was not above spinning a tale or two about his addictions. I wholeheartedly agree with his assertion that the bulk of the opioid's deleterious effects are largely due to their illegality in almost all countries and the subsequent black market & criminal justice systems that have a vested interest in keeping these drugs illegal. As for Burroughs, and his last line of the interview claiming that he was permanently cured of his narcotics addiction, that is patently untrue. He was on and off methadone maintenance & doctor prescribed narcotics most of the rest of his life, with a significant stretch of heroin relapse(s) while living in "the Bunker" in lower Manhattan in the mid-1970's to the early 1980's. It is also NOT true that Naked Lunch was written largely "off drugs". Although Burroughs may have needed to be sober to coordinate the editing of the book with Ginsberg (which in many ways was as critical to the finished product as the rough draft), the bulk of the so-called "word hoard" which Burroughs essentially cut & pasted to create Naked Lunch, Nova Express, and The Soft Machine (as well as parts of other works) was largely written on what he could illicitly obtain in Tangier. Massive doses of I.V. and S.C. Eukoden (an early German version of injectable oxycodone); good Morracan hashish which he usually cooked up in a confection with honey & various spices and ate pretty much 24/7; and the ocassional dose of heroin (when he could find it) and the even rarer cocaine, for a good 4 years while he intermittently composed (if you can call it that) the "word hoard".
@ShanOakley8 жыл бұрын
Spot-on.
@blaze41582 жыл бұрын
What an eloquent, expressive writer you are. I did a research project on Burroughs in grad school and your knowledge of his life (and life in general) is rather impressive. Thank you for your meaningful and valuable input.
@clutchcargo52592 жыл бұрын
😎👍💯no 🧢
@TheEnderBand2 жыл бұрын
he's correct in the sense that opiates ALONE don't usually cause so much of the mortality rate is based on peripheral effects of not being able to SUSTAIN the habit. The immediate dangers of opioids are respiratory depression and constipation, but people on the street are unable to stay well and have varying sources of varying potency and those variables are usually where the dangers manifest. I believe that with proper supervision and administered by the properly trained personnel, opiate "abuse" would yield next to no fatalities but we need to stop treating the sick people afflicted with it like criminals first and to do that we have to completely retrain ourselves as a society
@charlesterrizzi83116 ай бұрын
Health over 50 has to be worsened by opiate addiction.
@TheEnderBand6 ай бұрын
@@charlesterrizzi8311 opioid dependency into your later years is certainly not ideal, but neither is intense chronic pain. Again- it's all dependent on the amount one takes and how well it's managed by the person and their medical professional
@GASMan-578 жыл бұрын
I just think it was great to hear how he spoke about the topic in such a straight forward candid manner. Even when it came to easily contradict his earlier statements. This country has been bobbling between the scenario of, quote: "Narcotics have been systematically scapegoated and demonized. I predict in the near future right-wingers will use drug hysteria as a pretext to set up an international police apparatus" (W.S. Burroughs) to an alternate point where even minor detrimental effects are downplayed if the State is making a buck. Not saying which is right or wrong, just saying the country has long needed much more frank honest knowledgeable conversation on this topic. Interesting to see that this little gem of a clip dates back to '77, but then again Jimmy Carter had just taken office, so this was a while before the Reagan/Bush eras of "Just say no" and "zero tolerance".
@SavingPrivateBob8 жыл бұрын
He challenged a former ego, the true show of objective intellect.
@JenovaGirzz8 жыл бұрын
Reagan: "Just say no." Reagan: *imports crack cocaine to pay for an unjustifiable war, causes the epidemic of crack addicts in early 90's*
@SavingPrivateBob8 жыл бұрын
***** What war is ever justified?
@ZDiddy78 жыл бұрын
SavingPrivateBob...........Well, I believe Thomas Aquinas would agree that WW2 and the Gulf War were.
@salvandorum8 жыл бұрын
GAS Man ......His literary output will not be regarded in the future. Naked lunch was an insignificant contribution and he will sink like a stone.
@TheNoxar3113 жыл бұрын
00:50 "no. my soul was already deserted before addiction"
@BBQDOPAMINE5 ай бұрын
He's not a "Junkie" this wealthy man nice enough to share with us got the best.
@icurededs6 ай бұрын
I spent 15 years on fentanyl for spinal cord tumors, and while I never bought it illegally or took it not as prescribed-it did things to me that 8 years after I stopped taking it I still feel.
@philbateman19896 жыл бұрын
I would take what Burroughs says (as much as I admire his writing) with a COLLOSSAL grain of salt. He's correct in that opiates have a minimal effect on a person's health and ability to function. However, the part he's missing is that this only applies in the SHORT TERM. Short term use of opiates is perfectly harmless, but long term use is usually deadly. Ie. You can use opiates for short term relief of severe pain, and you can even use them longer term without much damage to your health, but the damage is rapid and severe when it does arrive. The primary destructive element of opiate addiction in the short term is financial. It's an expensive habit. But to imply that it has a minimal effect on a person's health in the long run is ridiculous. It's important to remember that Burroughs was from a wealthy family without financial worries, and his addiction was relatively short term, although he made bank implying it was longer than it was. He was a great writer, but he was consistently disingenuous and deluded about how much of an impact opiate addiction had on his life. Bear in mind. He killed his own wife during his addiction.
@Bonesph4 жыл бұрын
He killed his wife while drinking. Throwing in that is kind of stupid. Opioids that don't have Tylenol mixed in them are not harmful to your body. What can be harmful is trying to quit and then going back and having your tolerance drop without knowing it. He was on Methadone most his life.
@philbateman19894 жыл бұрын
@@Bonesph Ummm… I hate to break it to you, but yes, opiods of ANY kind are extremely harmful long term. They are higly potent sedatives that cause significant damage to brain and nervous system function and emotional stability. They are also SO potent that trying to quit them can be imminently lethal. That said, you are correct that opiates themselves are not immediately toxic in the correct dose. They're harmful because they cause extreme emotional and physical dependence. Once you're dependent on opiates, opiates and securing them is pretty much your whole life.
@xkguy7 жыл бұрын
It is true that chronic long term use of opiates does not have known long term effects. As Keith Richards has said...'I didn't have a heroin problem, I had a police problem'. Most deaths from heroin users are overdoses and infections from needle sterility issues. You can also get stuff laced with who knows what...but it is that stuff and not the opiate that can cause health issues. Clearly the addiction and loss of some function in some people can be a big problem. Not eating and using alcohol too are side effects of some opiate use, but again it is not the opiate per se. Society needs to balance its concern with individual dysfunction against the legitimate needs of chronic pain patients. Ironically the little old lady with a vertebral fracture who needs opiates is often the one who fears it so much she will spend months in needless pain,
@tonymasiellovids6 жыл бұрын
I'm not that familiar with Burroughs, so my first thought when hearing him speak, was that he sounded just like the old priest in Drugstore Cowboy. When I looked it up... of course it was Burroughs, himself, who acted that part!
@erdngtn99425 күн бұрын
Why didn’t I hear this in my 20s. Gdamnt
@CHRISTOPHERORROCK Жыл бұрын
I use opiates for years and I don't consider myself a junky, it's all in the mind of the beholder.
@MarkGelderland8 ай бұрын
Exactly. People who can handle it usually stay quiet because of the stigma.
@arockpcb13475 жыл бұрын
But it places you on the cliff of greatness. Only few can walk that knife edge and repeat back to us what they see.
@quogir14 ай бұрын
Barry Miles biography on Burroughs said " the man who saw the abyss and came to report on it."