Showing posts with label addiction (drugs and alcohol). Show all posts
Showing posts with label addiction (drugs and alcohol). Show all posts

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Scarred Hands

The Sunday after Easter is often the time, in Christian churches, when the story of doubting Thomas is told. If you are like me and are either a really shitty Christian or not a Christian at all you may not know that the phrase "doubting Thomas" comes from the story in the bible where the apostle Thomas refuses to believe that Jesus has risen from the dead until he, personally, "sees the wounds in his hands and touches the wound in his side." Naturally, as it works out, Jesus shows up yet again and the lucky bastard does get his proof and is gently admonished by Jesus who says, "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet still believe."

Of course, this is where the rest of us are. We are the ones who have not seen, whether it's Jesus or whatever form of God or God-like spirit you want to believe in. Imagine how much easier it would be to believe? It seems to me that the apostles had it rather easy, eh?

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Cecily is one of the contributing editors for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at her personal blog, Uppercase Woman, where she covers not only her 12 years of sobriety, but life with Tori, writing, and all things feminist.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

A Day of Reckoning

I wrote the following letter for reading at my dad’s sentencing relating to the violation of a PPO as well as aggravated stalking.

June 14, 2006

Dad:

I regret the fact that I am unable to be here today to read this letter to you myself; however, I am in Las Vegas with my Union at the UAW Constitutional Convention as a delegate for my Local, helping to make a difference in the lives of others. Isn’t it ironic that it wasn’t that long ago that you yourself were at the Convention doing the exact same thing? What a difference eight years can make. Back then, I aspired to be so much like you. Today, I live my life and raise my children to be as much not like you as I possibly can.

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Becky is the contributing editor for Family Perspective on Addiction. She has recorded part of her story at A Walk in Our Shoes and A Daughter's Journey.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Moving On

So much has been happening in my life these days, yet so little of it pertains to my father any more. There are days, particularly this time of year, where it feels quite strange not to be at odds with something my dad has or hasn’t done. While I’m thankful that things have seemed to come to a point of almost eerie calm, there are times when I let some less-than-productive thoughts in.

I miss my dad so much it hurts at times. I’ve had dreams recently where my dad has found a new family , has sobered up, and has moved on from us. In one vivid dream, I remember asking him, “How can you love them more than you loved us? Why did you get clean for them?” In my heart of hearts, I hope that when and if the day arrives that my dad is actually living a healthy life of sobriety, that he will be in contact with us. At this moment in my life, I’m not sure how I’ll ever be able to forgive him at any point in time, but I would work hard at trying.

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Becky is the contributing editor for Family Perspective on Addiction. She has recorded part of her story at A Walk in Our Shoes and A Daughter's Journey.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

James Frey Made Me Write This Post

On Saturday night, Sarah, Pete, Charlie and I went to Elise and her husband's for dinner. We had an amazing time--laughing, talking, just enjoying each other. After dessert, we ended up just sitting around the table talking for hours. Something I haven't done since the days I was drinking and drugging...

Maybe that's why I found myself talking about my using days. Elise asked a question, and Sarah and I found ourselves talking about those last few months out there in the drinking world. I've been thinking a lot about my own using insanity lately, so it felt good to just talk about it, to bring it back out into the light and look again with the eyes of someone who's been sober over ten years.

What strikes me the most is how fucking insane it was. I was crazy! When I look at it now, the things I did back then--almost all of them--seem like something only a suicidal lunatic would do. But back then, they seemed completely fucking rational. Really.

Lots of people accuse us infertiles of being obsessed with wanting a child; but honestly, they have no idea what the fuck obsession is.

Obsession is using water from a toilet to mix up the drugs you are going to put into your veins because you cannot go one. more. minute. without it. Yes, TOILET WATER. In my VEINS.

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Cecily is one of the contributing editors for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at her personal blog, Uppercase Woman, where she covers not only her 12 years of sobriety, but life with Tori, writing, and all things feminist.

Monday, September 29, 2008

Recover

Yesterday I took my baby to his first AA meeting.

I realised, after much resistance to going, that I have only done about 3 meetings in five months. That is a looooooong time between drinks. Heh. I just felt so, so low. As my sister would say, the rats were doing the can-can in my head.

I sat in that room, where I first sat 10 years ago, and looked around. 12 guys, none of whom I knew, and me. Another woman came halfway through, which was nice. I remembered all of the people who had been to that meeting over the years ... it used to be my home group for a while. I wondered how they all were, how many were still sober. I marvelled that I am still sober. I sat there before the meeting started, idle chit-chat, how old was the baby, isn't the weather warm now. I planned on giving the MOTHER of all shares, because, you know, my problems are just so important right now.

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Topcat is one of the contributing editor for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at Indisputable Topcat where she is parenting after infertility and navigating her husband's cancer.

Topcat's Story

Topcat is one of the contributing editor for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at Indisputable Topcat where she is parenting after infertility and navigating her husband's cancer.

Topcat started her blog to document her IVF treatment. She got a BFP, so it became a pregnancy blog. Five days before Monkey was born, Mr Topcat got diagnosed with cancer. He was down in the big scary hospital in the oncology ward, while she was up in the different hospital with a newborn, expecting to be widowed any day. Throughout all of this, she has not had a drink or a drug. Which is kinda good, considering she is a recovering alcoholic and heroin addict. She is also kind, vague, has man hands, and thick chin hair that has to be plucked every day.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

A Reminder for Enablers

Get this…My father calls my dear old auntie and says, “Please send me some duct tape.” Auntie says, “Why do you need duct tape?” Dad replies, “My shoes have holes in them and I need to tape them up,” knowing full-well that his sister is going to buy into this bogus sob-story. Auntie replies, “Oh, don’t worry brother, I’ll take care of you. I’ll send you $100 so you can buy yourself some new shoes.”

When my mom told me this two days ago, I thought, “You cannot be fucking serious!?!?” A grown, educated woman, stuck so far in denial it’s ridiculous, thinking she’s “helping” my dad. HERE’S A WAKE UP CALL, AUNTIE! You are an ENABLER of the worst kind! The only thing you are helping my father do is KILL HIMSELF! If you think your $100 went to buy a new pair of shoes, you are a complete and total idiot. Ironic that just two days after you sent him the money, he called one of my uncles and one of my brothers higher than a kite. Congratulations, auntie, you helped finance his crack habit! Good job. Way to go. What a martyr you are! You should be so proud of yourself for “helping” my dad.

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Becky is the contributing editor for Family Perspective on Addiction. She has recorded part of her story at A Walk in Our Shoes and A Daughter's Journey.

Becky's Story

Becky is the contributing editor for Family Perspective on Addiction. She has recorded part of her story at A Walk in Our Shoes and A Daughter's Journey.

"When the pain of cutting someone you love out of your life pales in comparison to the daily pain that they inflict upon your soul, you can rest assured that you have made one of the most courageous, brave, loving, and selfless decisions of your entire life."

This is my story: an on-going journey of an adult daughter coping with the struggles related to having a cocaine-addicted father. These are the resulting emotions: Heartbreak. Pain. Anger. Frustration. Sadness. Rage. Grief. Sorrow.

The nightmare for my family began in April of 2005, although many of us suspected that things just weren't right with my dad long before that. Upon confirmation of my dad's drug use, my family was so lost and continue to be at times. We had little forewarning as to how our lives would forever be turned upside down and inside out and how my dad's addiction would impact us on a daily basis for years to come.

I am a 29 year old mom of three gorgeous boys ages 15, 7, and 4. My husband and I have been married for nearly nine years. My biological father died a few months before I was born. A year and a half later, my mom had my first brother. By the time I was three, my mom was remarried to the man that is now my crack-addicted step-father. Over the next four years, my mom and step-dad had two more children, my youngest brothers. I also have a half-brother from my biological father's marriage before he met my mother. My younger brother's ages are 21, 25, and 28.

My brothers and I all grew up in the same house with our mom and dad. My dad had always worked as an engineer and at 40, he even went back to school to get his Bachelor's degree in Engineering. Since we lived in a small town, my parents decided it was best for my dad to seek employment in a big city (about 3 hours south of where we lived). So, my dad got a job with one of the Big-3 automakers, had an apartment in the city, and commuted home to be with our family on the weekends. It wasn't an ideal situation, but it afforded my mom the opportunity to be a stay-at-home-mom to the four of us, and allowed for career growth for my dad.

My dad commuted home on weekends for nearly 15 years. Once I got older, I realized that it hadn't always been easy on my parents, being so far apart for so long. In hindsight, this arrangement was probably a catalyst for my father's addiction, although nobody could have predicted it at the time.

My siblings and I haven't always had the best of relationships with our father because he was never there for us, or rarely seemed to make us a priority, although we did have a fairly happy home life. My dad never made it to Little League games, school plays, or field trips, and we were always told that we should try to be understanding because he was working hard for us so that we could have a house and nice things. While we understood the basic concept, it didn't fill the void we felt within our hearts when our dad wasn't in the stands cheering us on.

In April of 2005, my dad had asked to move into a spare room that my aunt and uncle (my mom's sister) had, and offered to pay them rent. For some reason, his apartment situation wasn't working out any longer (this should have been one of our first red flags!). My father insisted that he wanted to move in with them because the rent was less expensive and their house was closer to his work.

In May, we started to notice that something just wasn't right with my mom and on the rare occasion that we would see our dad, he would sleep all the time, be withdrawn, and looked plain horrific. My siblings and I had known for quite some time that things weren't going well in our parent's marriage (more so than usual, as my dad was never really respectful to my mom and never treated her very well). We just assumed that my dad was over-worked and over-tired for some time. We knew that he had a short stint with depression requiring medication not long before, so we also assumed this had something to do with his recent, odd behavior.

A couple weeks after our observations (which we kept to ourselves), my aunt had mentioned something to me about my dad "not being right". It was just a few days later that my mom called me crying to tell me that my dad had a crack/cocaine addiction. I remember sitting in my downstairs bathroom so that I could have privacy while speaking with her. The news didn't trigger a response from me other than, "I figured something was up." I imagine that I had probably unconsciously prepared myself for what I had heard based on my dad's peculiar behavior; however, at the time, I was more concerned with how my mom was doing. I learned that she knew of his addiction for longer than we had suspected; a burden that was weighing heavily on her heart. My mom sobbed and repeatedly told me how sorry she was for having to tell me this news but that she thought we should know in the event that our dad ended up dead in some crack-house. What a terrible burden for her to have to carry all by herself for so long.

By September of 2005, our family had been through so many terrifying and horrific events. My dad had drained my parent's joint-bank account more times than I can count, my siblings and I have had to pay my mom's bills and buy food just so that she and my brother can survive, my dad has "loaned out" his vehicles (and rental vehicles) in exchange for drugs (at least 5 times just by this point), he has maxed out all sorts of credit cards, written bad checks knowingly, had my aunt/uncle's house raided because the police thought it was a drug house because my dad lived there, nearly losing his job numerous times, being investigated for insurance fraud because of the missing cars and rental vehicles, and associating with prostitutes.

Things finally got so bad that in September, he went into a rehabilitation center for the first time.

When all of this was occurring, I had written some thoughts in my journal because I couldn't keep them bottled any longer. The following is an excerpt...

"I've read everything and heard all about detaching with love, not riding the "roller-coaster" with your loved ones, letting go, coping for yourself, blah, blah, blah. NONE of it is as easy as everyone pretends. I believe that my dad is only asking for help because he (maybe) is now realizing that the forms of help he once had (rehab, the ½-way house, my mom helping make arrangements for my dad to keep his job) are all exhausted now. He's without a car once again, his money is gone (including most of his retirement money), he has no place to live now, and as soon as he reports to work again (he's been gone for two days), they are going to make him submit to a drug test, he will fail it, and he will get fired. The only reality left for my dad is jail and/or death at this point. Just when my family thinks it's impossible to hurt any more deeply, something worse happens. There are so many questions that we need/want answers to that probably don't have any answers at all. How many times are we supposed to try to help our dad? Are we supposed to walk away from him? How can I rest at night knowing that my dad is living on the streets? How long can my husband and I (and my siblings when they can) keep taking care of my mom and youngest brother financially (because we refuse to let them starve or not have a place to live)? How do we get through the holiday season without my dad there? How do we deal with telling him that he's not welcome? How are we supposed to handle the fact that not once, not twice, but THREE times has my dad chosen drugs over our family? Would God want us to turn our backs on my dad, knowing that maybe that is my dad's only chance for turning his life around (i.e. hitting rock-bottom)? What are we supposed to do now? We're sick of being used, hurt, tired, stressed, sick, horrified, and disgusted. How do we deal with the reality that is going to befall my dad very soon if he continues down this road (death)? What do I tell my children as a reason why they don't see their grandpa? I am just so lost."

This is how it began, yet the struggles continue daily. I have explored answers to the questions posed above on multiple occasions and I suppose that today I am closer to the answers that I seek. I believe that the only way my family (minus my dad) had lived through this nightmare is the fact that we have an enormous amount of faith and we have each other, and with that, truly, anything is possible.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Pretend This Post is Accompanied By Festive Confetti and Balloons

In regards to my last post, many of you asked, “What do you think started you down the path of drugs and alcohol?” I think many of you were actually asking, “Holy fucking shit, how do I stop my kids from being like you?”

Truth is, I don’t know. But I’ll tell you what I think. I believe, firmly, that Alcoholism/Addiction is a disease—an often fatal, and sadly, incurable disease. Because I have that disease—which I believe I was born with—my path was inevitable.

In other words, NOTHING could have stopped me.

Unlike most of you, alcohol and drugs fit my brain the way a key fits in a lock.

Let’s take a look at a not-so-random sample of alcoholics: Sarah, Charlie, and me.

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Cecily is the contributing editor for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at her personal blog, Uppercase Woman, where she covers not only her 12 years of sobriety, but life with Tori, writing, and all things feminist.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Take-the-Baby-to-Prison Day, or Why Aren't There Any Rehab Prisons?

So, on Saturday I was changing Tori's diaper in the bathroom of the visitors waiting room at prison and I got to thinking about this post I've been meaning to write.

Wait. Maybe I should start at the beginning.

Recently, we (we being Charlie, Sarah, and I) found out that an old friend of ours had gone down a rocky path. Once sober and happy, he'd hit a bunch of speed bumps--the brutal murder of a friend and business partner, the loss of a fianceƩ, the theft of his belongings--and it all added up to his choosing to return to using drugs and drinking rather than staying sober. In short order, this led to him being where he is now: behind bars, serving a two-year sentence. We'd lost touch with him over the years and had no idea he was in jail, but after exchanging a few letters decided to go visit him.

Visiting someone is prison is a nightmare in Philadelphia (perhaps it's more fun where you are). We arrived early, took a number, sat for a half-hour, then filled out a form, found out to our dismay that we couldn't take Tori to see our friend because we didn't bring her birth certificate with us (for fuck's sake), and then we waited. And waited. The room we waited in was about 100 degrees, and it took forever for them to allow us our visits (we each got a half-hour with our friend, and we had to wait 45 minutes between our half hours for some unknown reason). Once I was finally permitted to go back to see him, I was required to take off my shoes and shake out my socks, lift my shirt and shake out my bra, lift my hair and let the guard check behind my ears, let her put her hands in all my pockets, look "down" my pants, and also open my mouth and let her look under my tongue.

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Cecily is the contributing editor for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at her personal blog, Uppercase Woman, where she covers not only her 12 years of sobriety, but life with Tori, writing, and all things feminist.

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Cecily's Story

Cecily is the contributing editor for Alcohol and Drug Addiction. She writes daily at her personal blog, Uppercase Woman, where she covers not only her 12 years of sobriety, but life with Tori, writing, and all things feminist.

On December 21st, 1995 I had yet to put up a Christmas tree. In fact, I had no idea Christmas was in just four days. I also had no heat; our rental house (recently abandoned by my roommate when she went off to rehab) used oil heat and we didn't have enough money to fill the tank. Why? Because all of our money was going into my veins, in the form of cocaine.

That day, while shooting up, a huge rock of coke fell into the spoon. I was on my second eight ball (an eight of an ounce, or 3.5 grams) of coke already that day; my habit had skyrocketed in recent weeks. I remember looking at that huge rock of coke slowly dissolving in the water and thinking, oh no--that's too much.

Then I shot it up anyway.

I proceeded to have a grand mal seizure for nearly twenty minutes. For ten minutes after that, I barely breathed. My boyfriend stood out on the street waiting for the ambulance. I remember only a little of the ride; a Christmas ornament, bouncing lightly, hanging over the doors. In the hospital, I have what is often called a moment of clarity: I could not imagine my life without drugs and alcohol, but I couldn't imagine living the way I'd been living.

It was a rough road. My boyfriend, an alcoholic, decided to quit as well. We went to a recovery meeting, and it wasn't long before I realized that it wasn't just drugs that were my problem; the daily drinking I'd done for 15 years prior to starting to use drugs wasn't exactly normal either.

But we did it. My boyfriend (now my husband) and I have now been sober and clean for over 12 years. We did it by staying open, listening to people who'd gone before us, and making lots and lots of meetings. I'm hoping this site will help others find the peace and serenity I now have. It is possible to get sober. It really is.