 Drug users and activists worked together in seven countries to produce a movie about a day in the life of eight people, a film about their drug use and their struggles. This is the first time I have done something like this. I have had a good feeling about myself and I got caught. I don't think about it. I have already been caught. With the second fix I completely lost my consciousness, blackout. And when I started coming back, my right arm was dislocated and I had spent more than six hours unconscious on the joint and the nerve trunk, which left my arm almost completely paralyzed. This was something that really changed the way I felt and thought about the heroine and the drug in general. A film about how the drug war affects their lives. What I experienced then was that my feet were hung upside down because of them. My feet were always hung upside down and they asked me to call out the names of the people I know as the drug users. With my eyes closed, I was taken to the car and walked for a few minutes. When the car stopped at a place I didn't know, I got off the car and then they hit my feet. A film showing their fight against stigma and discrimination. We want our female drug users to come outside to fight for our rights. Let there be equality within we the men and the women too. In my city several people were killed in rehabilitation and violence continues. And today I am talking about it. Hundreds of people in Crimea have been left with non-violent therapy and dozens of them have already died. And I am talking about it. A film about saving lives. I'm walking up and down Washington Heights promoting harm reduction, promoting not to get infected with ACV and HIV, also giving out cleanser ranges. I've reversed the overdoses in my life and I saved the person's life, the person's alive. It's a very good feeling. I can't describe it. I would like to inform you about the dialysis process. This is the dialysis. This is 10 grams of heroin. Exactly, then we go here, with a spoon, spray it. We are still working on it. I'll clean it up later. A film about how people who use drugs can effectively influence policies and improve the lives of their communities. We also always promote that the use of drugs can live together with other communities. We can contribute to the community and we can also be productive. We are a part of the solution, not part of the problem. A day in the life, the world of humans who use drugs.