ABSTRACT
As part of a qualitative-based study on the life-course of people in Aotearoa-New Zealand who formerly used methamphetamine, this paper utilises Ronel’s criminal spin theory to provide a phenomenological and situational understanding of self-control over methamphetamine use. The initial motivation for using methamphetamine for the 42 former users was typically to adhere to social norms and fit into conventional roles and expectations. While one-third lost a moderate level of control and almost two-thirds lost a lot, almost half thought they had control while using and only seven wanted to stop but could not. Despite diminished choice and narrowed interests, people who frequently use methamphetamine can control, constrain, reduce or even stop methamphetamine use when they have good reasons for doing so. Financial considerations, family commitments, work responsibilities, and recognition of the negative impacts on one’s health or functioning show those who have a stake in conventional life have the capacity to exert self-control over methamphetamine use. Self-control can be achieved by engaging in ‘self-policing’ strategies, such as implementing social and/or geographic avoidance, or by placing a financial, temporal, geographic, technological, informational or access ‘barrier’ between themselves and methamphetamine, or by exercising willpower. Self-control may be better understood as a situational concept.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 Approved by Ewha Womans University’s Institutional Review Board. IRB#: 158–6 (2018).
2 For practical purposes, the seven testimonies are also coded as ‘interviewees’ despite the fact the author did not interview them; instead, a moderator working with an online support group moderated the free-flowing testimony the individual provided during a live online session. Since the testimonies were independent of the interviews (so did not follow the interview questions), only relevant data from the testimonies have been used. They were coded interviewee-36 to interviewee-42.
3 These three interviewees either used less frequently or used a smaller amount.
4 Boeri & Whalen, Citation2012, show frequent methamphetamine use is associated with loss of conventional roles and relationships.
5 Waldorf et al., (Citation1991, p. 205) found a ‘social avoidance' strategy was the most frequently used strategy for quitting cocaine.
6 Zinberg, Citation1984, found opioid users also used this strategy.