Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

UK: 'Cannabis destroyed my brother'

BBC Online

Sunday 20 Mar 2005

---
As home secretary Charles Clarke re-opens the debate on the classification
of cannabis, one woman tells the BBC how she believes the drug destroyed
her brother's life.

Pam Blake, 51, from Hayling Island near Portsmouth, said her brother Brian
Buckman spiralled into schizophrenia and delusional behaviour because of
his heavy smoking.

Brian started smoking at a very young age, in his teens.

We used to live near Henley-on-Thames and he grew his own cannabis. I have
two other brothers, both straight as a die, and one of them found his
plants growing in the greenhouse.

My father hit the roof and my brother promised he'd never smoke again.

'Practically disowned'

My brother was a daily smoker and he used to smoke the equivalent of a pack
of cigarettes a day.

I saw his decline. He was a very intelligent guy. He was married and he has
a 21-year-old son who hasn't seen his father now for 19 years.

I had a phone-call once from the police in High Wycombe saying they had
found him. He was talking like a Rastafarian and he believed he was John
the Baptist.

I had to get him sectioned which absolutely broke the family up. My father
and mother had very old-fashioned ideas about mental illness - you didn't
speak about it - and they practically disowned him.

He came to live with me. He would be awake all night and sleep all day.

One doctor asked me if he was smoking cannabis and I said he was - she
believed that was what triggered his downfall.

They put him on medication because they believed he was schizophrenic - he
was hearing voices, saw messages in the paper and was having delusions of
grandeur.

My parents moved to Wales, and he moved with them. For about four years he
was fine. But when my father died he became depressed and that tipped him over.

My brother believed he had written the Boney M song Brown Girl in the Ring,
things like that.

I believe the last time anyone saw him was around High Wycombe in 1996 and
he was basically living the life of a down-and-out.

I believe his problems were brought on by the smoking. He had to have 28
days off it while in hospital and he improved. He seemed in better shape to me.

The family tried to get hold of him after my mother died a few years ago
and we couldn't find him. I went to a medium, and she said he had gone.

I don't think cannabis should be legalised. It's not the same as cigarettes
and alcohol.

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!