Not at all. In my opinion, it does not damage his legacy. | |
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How many of you think Prince never tried any drug ? He was a rockstar after all.
That does not change my opinion of him. [Edited 9/3/16 19:16pm] | |
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The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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Well, Not really.
And here is why...all the scenarios are tragic because he suffered alone and because his possible reasons for taking drugs are sad as well.
There are three scenarios that have been proposed (with varying degrees of believability)
One--that Prince around 2010 experienced pain and possible surgery for hip problems...leading to drug usage so he could carry on performing with the same veracity. that is a great deal of pressure to put on oneself.. He may have been hard on his NPG 90's crew, but obviously he was much harder on himself. However, this theory can be challenged by the notion that he didn't look like he was ever in pain...but then again, of course if he was on pain pills, he is less likely to look like he is pain. Dangerous way of dealing with pain to say the least.
Two--less likely..he had a long term, well-regimented, well-hidden drug addiction bought on by massive social anxiety issues (shyness) and stage fright. Physiologically, this story makes no sense. But if it was an off-and-on again addiction, it may help account for his private and secretive ways even around those who worked with him. It may also explain how he was able to be so free on stage.. The argument that some have made that he had too many after shows for someone with stage fright...well, as fair as I know he wasn't nearly naked in those shows.
Three--that he took percocet and cocaine to keep his energy up for working and to keep from feeling low/empty when the show ended. That is just tragic.
All three scenarios do not indicate "recreational" use in the way that say Lindsay Lohan does it. He wasn't partying; he was coping with his issues in a very dangerous way.
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no. and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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bonatoc said:
Very well said. I believe the reason is precisely that.(blue text) And, no, it does not make any difference to me. On the positive side instead, it makes me see him more as a human being instead of the superhero he desperately wanted to portrait. "No one plays the clarinet the way U play my heart" | |
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Not my reasoning at all. I am adamantly anti-recreational use. It has ruined the lives of several people in my family. But, my admiration of all P accomplished in his short life, and the joy it brought, and continues to bring me will not change no matter what information is leaked or officially released. I don't personally think this has anything to do with recreational use.
A sophisticated mass-produced cacophony of no-win situations that aren't right... | |
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Vox, sounds like various distinctions ARE meaningful to you. I'm curious about this generally and would love to understand it better.
For example - How would you define recreational use? - How do you feel that physiological addiction (aka someone develops debilitating physical withdrawal symptoms if they stop taking the drug) relates to recreational use (or non-recreational use)? - Do you feel that non-recreational drug use (perhaps use that starts as a prescription to treat physical pain) also has the potential to lead to ruined lives? Given that Prince's life was most definitely ruined, how might his story fit into these categories?
I'm really asking these questions honestly; I have my views but I appreciate the range of POVs
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Nearly every month I get a letter from my medical insurance carrier asking me to change from one drug to another for some foolish reason. The real reason is money: I know that, they know I know that. So my doctor has tomake the decision to either go up against the insurance carrier or change the medication for me. He has done both. I am a "regular" citizen. It won't make the papers. Could you imagine being someone known the world over - someone with a questionable medication issue - who wants to keep the information out of the "papers?" What doctor can you go to? Add that fear/concern to running an international business in league with industry vipers (usually) , you're getting older, maybe there are constraints in terms of physical motion and writing new material ... and where is the money to run all of this coming from? You haven't been on a BIG moneymaker tour for years, and you are responsible financially for so many people ... I think the pressure on Prince was enormous from all directions. But no way do I think he was using to get high. Maybe more to control his reaction to his life. | |
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So your answer is "yes" it does matter to you. | |
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No. Not in the slightest. But it seems to matter to a lot of people, and I'm beginning to find that really disturbing, and to understand why P might have been so damned worried about people finding out. Not like I love my guitar.... | |
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jayseajay said: No. Not in the slightest. But it seems to matter to a lot of people, and I'm beginning to find that really disturbing, and to understand why P might have been so damned worried about people finding out. Exactly! 2 sevens together | |
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No would have made no difference to the way I felt about him.
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In my heart, I truly believe that Prince was anti-drugs. A lot of what he has said and written in his songs reflect that. This is what Prince was really about and I'm sure a lot of people who are deeply interested in him and his message will recognise that. Life Matters | |
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I think at one point they merge. The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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No, it makes no difference to me. The guy was human, just like the the rest of us; who am I to judge. Come now, isn't life a little better with a pair of good shoes? - Prince 1985 | |
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sro100 said: If Prince's drug use was initiated by physical pain, or if his drug use was initiated by anything other than physical pain?
Not really | |
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disch said: was hiding his behavior, along with his underlying struggles, from those close to him (and the public), which speaks to shame and a fear of judgment. That, to me, is heart-wrenching and just tragic.. Exactly. I just wish after the plane incident he would have said "to heck with whatever people think, whatever they say, I'm going to rehab, get me a bed tonight". But that didn't occur and it is what it is. I appreciate the music he left behind and wish him joy and peace. | |
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- No, it would make zero difference to me. Either way, he's gone. Either way it was probably preventable. Either way the world grieved. - How he died doesn't diminish his life's work one iota nor should it. I will continue to celebrate this amazing man's work and legacy because for me dwelling on his death isn't going to change anything. "What a thing to have been alive while Prince was making music." - James Corden | |
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Knowing what was going on would matter to me--I don't like the uncertainty.
I tend to believe it came from something like pain, and happened as he got older. Was he an addict? Almost certainly--if you're getting illicit pills (as those obviously were), you've clearly gone beyond the normal painkilling regimen, and you've got some serious dependence issues. Was he a different kind of addict than someone who started for recreational purposes? Not in anyway that matters, in the end. But it did matter earlier, and how I'll evaluate those times and that art will be affected by that knowledge, just as my understanding of other people's art is affected by their personal lives and habits during the times of their creating it. I mean, let's consider the way that many of us have incorporated reports of the "ecstasy story" into our narratives and understanding of the what happened in late 1987 into 1988. What the Lovesexy album means is influenced by whether you accept that story, and how you interpret it. And if we ever have a clear narrative of Prince's opioid use, then that will affect my interpretation of some of the music.
But regardless of when, how, and why Prince was taking the pills, I'm probably going to remain angry about it, in contrast to the opioid use of several other artists whose work fills large amounts of my music collection. Those people pulled through and came out the other side still making music for years afterward. Nick Cave, for example, has an album coming this week. Prince, however, is dead, and there's no good reason for it, no matter why he started taking the pills. And there's no good reason he didn't stop before the night of April 20th (oh, there are lots of reasons he didn't stop, and lots of factors and people we can point to, and all those those might be true to varying degrees--but none of them are good reasons). So in that sense, the only sense that really matters, why he started doesn't make any damned difference to me at all. | |
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[Edited 9/4/16 21:03pm] Welcome to "the org", Mumio…they can have you, but I'll have your love in the end | |
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No. It would sadden me but I don't believe Prince had a drug problem. he had a pain problem which he lost control of. . But Prince will never be an old friend for sale. 'Wherever you go whatever you do remember that I'll always be there for you '. He is. In my car, in my house, on my computer, in my head. He never promised anything more. . Sweet baby... Stand tall... "Free URself, B the best that U can B, 3rd Apartment from the Sun, nothing left to fear" Prince Rogers Nelson - Forever in my Life - | |
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I agree. It's eye-opening to me that some people see drug use as such a moral issue, and that they set up all kind of black-and-white categories to justify or condemn it (e.g., physical pain-killing vs. emotional pain-killing; doctor prescribed vs. self-medicating, etc.). | |
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Yeah, I've also found it really eye-opening (and not in a good way)...I don't know if it's an American vs. Non-American/European thing...but I don't come from a place where the people around me are so set on doing exactly what you say, setting up all kinds of distinctions to try and separate the 'good' from the 'bad.' I don't think recreational drug use is morally bad per se. I do think becoming addicted to drugs is bad, but not from a moral perspective, from the perspective that it often ends up wrecking your life and the lives of people aorund you...but it's not a moral failing, it's self-medication, and that deserves compassion, whatever the source. I have no problem with the fact that Prince was 'anti-drugs'...his sister was a drug-addict, and so were several people he really cared about, and it killed Denise in the end, so he had every reason to want to stay away from it (and as I wrote elsewhere, going by his relationship to music, Prince had a propensity to develop addictive behaviour, so it was very wise of him to stay away from addictive substances most of his life)....but it's not necessarily clear that that was a moral judgment, rather than just a judgment about harm. Maybe he bought the bullshit Big Pharma was peddling that you couldn't get addicted if opiates were prescribed for legitimate pain. I cannot for the life of me understand how that ever washed with anyone....but maybe it makes sense within the moral distinctions which seem to have been set up in the US. In Europe that never happened, we never had a 'war on drugs,' and no-one would ever had beleived that only 'bad' people could get addicted if they took opiates for the 'wrong' reasons. It just makes me really sad. It makes me so sad that the US is now in the grip of this epidemic, and that at the same time it has the most moralistic attitudes, and that is a terrible lethal combination of addiction and shame, and it killed our beloved boy [Edited 9/5/16 12:13pm] Not like I love my guitar.... | |
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Yes, but the crucial point is : has he been lying? [Edited 9/5/16 15:11pm] The Colors R brighter, the Bond is much tighter
No Child's a failure Until the Blue Sailboat sails him away from his dreams Don't Ever Lose, Don't Ever Lose Don't Ever Lose Your Dreams | |
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It would't make a difference to me. People have their issues and deal with it the best they can. I am still heartbroken over his death. Whaever his reason were why he was taking the pills, he never to the best of my knowlege promoted drug use like some other people in the industry who sing about dancing with molly and cooking crack on the stove in the kitcen with their trap queen. | |
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I've been reading that Europe is catching up, or possibly just now being properly studied, to the U.S. in terms of prescription drug abuse. And there is most definitely a hypocritical attitude among prescription drug users. I see it from online posters who reside across the world - Me? Nope, I don't do drugs, baby and don't tolerate those who do! Drug free here...O wait, lemme get this refill on my coffee, thanks, I have to go to the local drug store to fill this prescription and I am just wiped out. What were we talking about? Oh, yes, drugs. I don't do them.
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