Gotta love all the judgmental freaks out there. Obviously it is so fucking easy to kick an addiction, especially opiates. You have no idea what that drug does to the body/mind of someone who has used it. It consumes your every waking moment, to make matters worse we as a society have convinced ourselves that opiates are not that dangerous. After all, they are prescribed by doctors. The majority of people who die from opiate addiction got their start in a doctors office. They got their start because of a surgery or illness. Then they started consuming more and more, eventually moving onto higher doses and finally turning to heroin.
I hope the individuals in this thread who are saying horribly insensitive things never have their lives or the lives of their loved ones destroyed because of an addiction that starts with a trip to the doctors office.
I think people judge the fact that you first take opiates to begin with. But sometimes you have no choice. Plenty of people have to take opiates for an injury. What they don't realize is the absolute hold it can have on you after getting off it. As I said earlier, it's not just physical. It plagues your mind and drops you to your deepest despair. You will lose all will to live. You have no motivation, and every day is a private hell. You could be a person that is always happy and has never been depressed. It will take you through the ringer and make you feel and think things you would never imagine.
So people cave in and take more because they don't think they can survive it. In their current mind set they think it's permanent and they will always feel that way. Even someone logical who is self aware and knows the withdrawal is causing these feelings, and is temporary if you wait it out, even that person will find themselves wrestling with their own thoughts. Giving in to the thoughts and emotions.
I'm not going to debate drug use, and how people feel about those that get hooked. I've never abused drugs myself, or been depressed to the point of seeking them out (or felt the need to use drugs for thrills). But the actual effect it has on you after you stop using is immense. And addiction is another complex matter all together (as I said, staying sober for years doesn't mean a person can't be susceptible to relapsing).