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Fight to Recovery

Junkie - Addiction

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Fight to Recovery

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Addiction is a strong, uncontrollable need to take drugs, drink alcohol or carry out a particular activity such as gambling.It becomes the most important thing in your life and leads to problems at home, work and school.There’s no single reason why addictions develop. Regularly drinking alcohol or using other substances, or spendingtime gambling or on the internet (including porn sites), may be pleasurable or relaxing. Some people experience these feelings particularly intensely and have a strong desire to repeat them more often.

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This is part of our True Life interview series, in which we hear about different people's interesting/amazing/un-nerving experiences. This is the story of ------ an incredibly funny, smart, driven girl who fell into meth at the end of high school.

a d d i c t i o n

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My parents were very open about alcohol and drugs and because there wasn’t a huge air of mystery about the whole deal, I was A Good Kid growing up. I wasn’t afraid to fly my freak flag even if it meant not fitting in with the other kids; I was too academically motivated to jeopardize my glorious future; plus, all my friends were too nerdy to even drink. The final year of high school, I fell, hard, for a sort of unsavory guy and ended up following him to lots of parties where binge-drinking and drug use were the order of the day. I actually barely participated: got drunk a few times, maybe smoked pot once, but the environment played arpeggios up and down my repressed inner bad-girl chords.

Tell us about your relationship withdrugs and alcohol growing up.

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By the beginning of of my final year of college, I started a methamphetamine addiction that would last for about two years and didn’t take long to completely control my life. Final year was the peak of high-stress testing for my academically rigorous diploma programme. Between six hours a night of chemisty homework, applying to a staggering 32 high-caliber universities and spending every weekend sweating blood in debate, I wanted two things: to occasionally feel like a kid again, and to somehow fit thirty hours' worth of work into a 24 hour day. Oh, and losing forty pounds wouldn't hurt either. What do you know,methamphetamines seemed to perfectly fit the bill.

Which drugs did you get into? And how did that happen?

One day in maths, one of my good friends, another repressed bad girl slipped a tiny bag of white powder into my textbook. We cut English class to snort it in the girls’ room. By the end of the day, I’d finished two weeks’ worth of assignments, drank a gallon of water, not eaten a morsel and lost six pounds. No exaggeration. Plus, it filled me with confidence and a sense of love for everyone around me. It was love at first snort. She hooked me up with her dealer and I was never without a magic little bag of my own.

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Babysitting. Is that a small-town cliche or what? But when you're a college student with no interest in fashion, all of your cash is disposable. I made a few hundred pounds a week on babysitting and snorted at least half of it usually more. Lord knows I wasn't spending the money on food. By the time I got to university and was snorting (and by then smoking) even more, I had the good luck to be funded with a very generous quarterly student loan. I can't even begin to tell you how much I regret funding my habit with money that had been given to me because I was a promising young student. The only thing I can say about my defense is that at least I was never spun when I was babysitting children. Can't say the same about being sober while taking my classes, though.

How

did

you

fina

n ce

you

r ha

bit?

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That's one thing about methampetamines: they could definitely be worse for your grades. Often when I got spun, I was insanely productive, practically sneezing out term papers and memorizing text books. That is, when I didn't get spun and stay up all night obsessively trying on all of my (ever smaller) clothes or tweezing all the hairs out of my legs.

How did it affect your grades/relationships/etc?

But by the time I neared the end of my addiction, I forgot to ever come down and get sane again. I'd write a eight-page paper in an hour, convinced it was brilliant, then look at it a few weeks later to realize it was absolute raving lunacy. But maybe because I've always been obsessively academic, my grades didn't really suffer: the worst that happened is that I had to drop a class the term that my addiction hit its all-time high.

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I tried to keep my addiction a secret from everyone I cared about because I knew they would try to make my stop and in my junkie's lizard-brain, the most important thing was to keep that from happening. By the time I was in University, I was afraid to speak to my parents and refused to answer their phone calls, for fear that they'd realize something was up. By function of living together, though, my roommates who were my best friends realized I had a problem. I'd lock myself up in the room for hours to smoke, then come out as a manic parody of myself. I'd sit in the kitchen with them, picking at a slice of bread, and incessantly smack my mouth which was always cotton-dry despite the gallons of water I would drink.

Did the people in your life know you were struggling with this?

Other people have drug problems, I'd tell them. I just have a drug hobby. And although they sometimes asked me to seek help, they didn't push it too hard. I think this is partially because they were afraid of completely alienating me, and partially because they like me were sheltered academics and had never had any exposure to drug addiction. They wanted to believe that I was right.

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I accidentally OD-ed, thank god. My rock-bottom had been flying upward to meet me for a while: after about a year of being almost permanently spun, I'd started suffering from tactile, auditory and visual hallucinations. I'd stay up all night writing pages of whacked-out work, then become convinced there was a man standing outside my window staring at me, and be too paralyzed with fear to do anything but sit there, my pulse a 220-bpm machine gun.

For the three-week bender that led to my OD, every night when I lay in bed, a rat would chew its way through my brain. I'd smell that vermin sewage scent, feel its feet scrabbling on my cheeks, hear its little jaws closing around my ear drum, then ripping away the walls of my ear canal and getting into my skull. Sometimes I could "catch" the rat and throw it against the wall. Other times, its whole body would get wedged inside my brain, nibbling, nibbling, nibbling, and I would lay there crying until it went away. When it did, I would always stand in front of the mirror for ages, touching my ears and face and amazed not to see any blood.

Was there a low point that made you decide that you wanted to quit?

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The day of my OD, I'd been spun for three weeks and had to write an essay, but my mind was already at the brink of insanity and for the first time ever, I couldn't make words come out. Desperate, I smoked bowl after bowl, trying to regain the feelings of confidence and brilliance that usually accompanied a high. After my last bowl, I had the sensation that my teeth were falling out, so I ran to the mirror. My tongue started talking to me and telling me it would knock out my teeth to punish me weirdly, my first reaction was horror at the thought of being toothless who would date me then?!

I realized I was OD-ing and tried to get dressed to go find help, but my hands were melting. If I tried to pick up my jeans, I thought my fingernails would ooze off; when I reached for the door to run outside naked, I thought my hand would liquefy to a puddle of goo and be unable to turn the knob. So I just lay there on the floor, naked, screaming for help until the guy across the hall came in and helped me call the Ambulance.

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After I OD-ed, the hospital kept me overnight and made me eat something substantial for the first time in weeks. After they released me, I was still deluded enough to think I could seek help without telling my parents what had been going on. I asked the Residence Head of my University to help check me into a one-week recovery programme in the psych ward of my university's hospital. But after about an hour there, I realized it wasn't going to be a hilarious, cinematic Girl, Interrupted experience. I wanted my mum. So I called my parents, arranged to get a week off of classes, and went home to confess what I'd been doing to the people I'd let down the most. To their everlasting credit, my parents didn't scream at me once. They force-fed me and watched me every moment of the day, true, but they didn't tell me how disappointed and angry they were. They just helped me start my life without methamphetamines.

How

did

you

go about getting help?

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Recovery was, in many ways, easier that I imagined it would be, after I got through the wrenching experience of admitting to my friends and parents that I had a problem. I immediately cut off ties with my former dealer; cutting off contact with other user friends wasn't a problem, as I didn't have any in college. For the first several months, I would seize up with the urgent desire to get spun I can't even tell you how many nights I cleared everything out of the drawer where I used to keep my stash and snorted up every stray little dust mite and paint chip, hoping to find a spare crystal. But because I cut off my contacts, I had no way to get drugs, even in my weakest moments, and after being completely clean for a while, the cliche is true: it got easier every day.

I couldn't do it. I couldn't watch the baby. In no small part because I knew there would be drugs in the house. So I told her no and helped her find somebody else to watch the baby, jesus, that poor baby so it wasn't left alone. And the whole time, there was that little voice in my head: this could have been you in five years. Don't let that happen.

How has your recovery been going?

One horrifying experience that helped: I stayed at my parents' house that summer after freshman year, when I was busy getting clean. One night, after I'd been clean a few months, I got a call from my former dealer, who had stopped using because she'd gotten pregnant. She'd had her baby three nights before and called to ask if I could come over and babysit. She and her boyfriend had missed getting spun, and now that they had the baby, they wanted to go out and smoke meth again.

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And most days, when I think about my history as a junkie, it just feels like a movie I've watched rather than a life I've lived. But every time I smell a pound note or watch someone snort a line in a movie, I know that all the obsessive junkie tendencies haven't just gone away. Even thinking about smoking meth or snorting a line makes my muscles seize up and that old lizard-brain start kicking in again. I still drink moderately, I've smoked pot a dozen times or so, I've even snorted one or two social lines of coke after being clean on meth, and these things haven't been triggers for me. But I know I can never do methamphetamines again, not even once, or the junkie beast will come roaring back to life. And I can't let it happen again.

“In a few months, I'll have been five years clean”

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Tell someone. Right now. You know all those people you're shutting out of your life because you don't want them to find out? The reason you don't want them to find out is that they love you and they will make you stop. But it will be better that way. And if you're anything like I was, you might be thinking, "I'll tell them soon. I'm just in too deep now give me a few months to sort out my life and start recovery one my own!" No. That's the addiction talking. I don't care if you're superman: you cannot quit an addiction on your own. Your friends and family, the people who love you no matter how stupid you've been or how much what you're doing is hurting them, they are what's going to get you through this. And they're not going to hate you for it. They only want you to get better.

If telling your friends and family is too big a step, then just tell anyone. Tell a doctor, tell the cashier at the supermarket. The secrecy eats away at you just as fast as the drugs do. You don't have to walk alone.

Any advice for others struggling with addictions?

Article Credit http://www.yesandyes.org/2010/03/true-story-im-recovered-junkie.html

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