Dancing On A Razor's Edge: A mother's mission to rescue her meth-addicted son
By (Author) Mandy Whyte
The Cuba Press
The Cuba Press
1st January 2020
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
276
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 15mm
A mother decides to write the story of her son's long-term methamphetamine addiction as a means to understand why he became an addict and how she can help him. Discovering the true extent of his use and the likely result of permanent psychosis, prison or death, she launches a rescue mission to save his life. With the courage to follow her instincts, Mandy Whyte is able to get her malnourished and brain-damaged Kiwi-born son, Hemi, from his new base in Australia to hers in Indonesia, and provide home care that turns him around. This is a book about tenacity and love. It also explores the limits of care available for drug addicts in New Zealand and Australia, and challenges the idea that it's up to these people to find their own way to treatment. Whyte declares any other approach is both socially negligent and a violation of human rights. As our families, health services and courts try to come to grips with the scourge of crystal meth that is devastating so many lives, Dancing on a Razor's Edge is a must
"Every addiction worker in Australasia would do well to read this book for the descriptions of this mother's determined struggle to do the best for her addicted son, her fraught attempts to access the services she needs, and her criticism of a system that demands people take personal responsibility for their addictions when they are often unable to do so." -Doug Sellman, Director, National Addiction Centre, New Zealand
Mandy Whyte is a New Zealander who has worked for thirty years advising and managing aid and development programmes in the Pacific and Indonesia, and currently in the Solomon Islands. She was brought up in Taranaki but her New Zealand base is now on the Kapiti Coast. She is married to Opan and has one son.