He was shaking uncontrollably. Almost as if he was convulsing with seizure, except he was lucid. So high that he'd lost all muscle control. My mom held his head while he cried, and his girlfriend and I held down his legs so that he wouldn't attempt to get away.
That was the day I knew my brother was going to die
When I tell the story of my brother (I don't tell it often), that's always the day that comes to mind first. The image of his intoxicated body thrashing around. The whaling sounds of his crying. The look of panic and fear in my mom's eyes. Our hearts beating so fiercely it hurt.
Substance Use Disorder in Numbers for the U.S.
7.1 million with an illicit drug use disorder, and 2.6 million who had both an alcohol use and an illicit drug use disorder. The percentage of people aged 12 or older in 2014 who had an SUD (8.1 percent)
source
That's 1 person for every 12.5 people (aged 12 and older) in the country will have substance abuse issues with illicit drugs. How many people in your work place does this equate to? How many people that you see in the grocery store, at the gas station, in the shopping center or in your church? 8% when you break it down like that is a staggering number.
Yet You Still Never Believe It'll Be You
It's something that happens to other people. It's something you see in the movies or read about in the papers. You know it's a real thing, but you never expect it to become YOUR reality. Until it does...
Let's Start at the Beginning
In November of 1978 my parents gave me a best friend. In a lot of ways it was a New England uptopia, of sorts. It was a stable home with two parents and a tight-knit village of grandparents, aunts, uncles and close friends we called aunt and uncle. My dad worked a good job and my mom stayed home with us. I was not quite 5, and a baby brother was just about the best thing ever. I remember helping by fetching diapers for my mom. I'd care for my dolls along side my mom as she took care of my brother. The early years, in my memories, were simple and full of joy and love.
Not but a year later the baby had some severe issues with allergies. The doctor suggested the best thing for him was to pack up and move the family to the west. I don't remember the move at all, but have been told the story several times over. My mom, dad, brother and I, along with a dog and a cat took the long haul from Connecticut to southern California. My grandparents on my mom's side had just moved to Las Vegas, so it made sense. My uncle was in California and that was more attractive to my parents at the time. They were unsure of raising a family in Las Vegas. Turns out my parents couldn't make it on a single salary in So. Cal (in hindsight I now realize they were only in their mid-20s at the time). So we came to Las Vegas.
It was the kind of neighborhood everyone dreams about. Most of the home owners were young like my parents. There were kids in almost every home on our block. The parents hung out and the kids played in the front yard all day until dark. My brother was a sweet boy. Long lush curls, soft eyes and a kind soul. We still had a strong and stable household. Our parents were very much in love. My mom stayed home and was there for us every day after school. We weren't rich, but we had everything we needed and were able to go to private school.
My brother became a local soccer star. One of the best goal keepers in the country in his age group. He traveled and trained with some of the best coaches in the country. His club team went on to win several state tournaments and had a chance at going to nationals were all the best youth teams compete. His teammates were like family and my mom was president of the youth soccer association of Nevada. We were active, my parents were engaged.
When my grandfather passed away in 1987 we built a new home so that my grandmother could move in. She'd always been the matriarch of the family, so it really was never a question. We moved into an upper middle class neighborhood. A nice 3200 sq ft home with a pool. Our happy little life continued, we just moved the village in with us.
And It All Changed In An Instant
It's now early in the 1990's. I'd gone away to college, my parents had a sudden (but amicable) divorce. He's growing up. But he's still a good kid. Soccer is taking off more than ever, he's dating, he's working as a referee for little kids' soccer. I'm talking to my mom on the phone from college and out of nowhere she asks a question I will never forget.
She said it so innocently. I froze. My mind was racing. Was somebody we know in trouble? Could it have been one of the soccer kids? Before I told her what it meant, I asked her why.
And That Was The Day Our Lives Changed Forever
Turns out that he has been doing meth for several months at that point. He was 15. Couldn't sleep at night so would stay up and journal. We always called my mom 'Snoop Dogg' because that's just the kind of mom she was. If she was in your room, she was going to look around for things. Annoyed us both to no end back then. But in hindsight, she was just being a good mom.
He was missing school a lot. We were in public school then (our choice) and he was kicked out. Fortunately his club soccer coach was the coach at another private high school and got him on based on athletics. Through relationship alone, we were able to get him through high school. Coach lobbied for him over and over again and they would allow him to remain in school. He graduated on time with his class. We really thought that was the end of it. Everyone, and I mean EVERYONE came up to my parents saying how much they loved him and what a great kid he is, and they were all pulling for him.
We Thought It Was the End, But It Was Only the Beginning
Over the next year or so things got progressively worse. Meth turned into cocaine which got expensive and eventually led to crack. I'm rarely at a loss for words, but I have none. There is no way to help the world understand what crack addiction does to a person. Unless you've lived it, there is no movie, TV show or documentary that can help you understand how it feels to be either the addict or the people that love the addict. It's a monster like no other.
He'd go missing for weeks at a time. On his 17th birthday he was beat to a pulp simply for being white and in the wrong neighborhood for a white guy. He was at one point just 130 pounds. His teeth were like fragile china, cracking and nearly disintegrating. It was NEVER about the money, and only about getting him safe and healthy, but oh the money. Nearly hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash, jewelry and cars. He'd come down and come home. Cry and beg for help. We'd spend more thousands in rehabs, and he'd just walk out after a week or two.
He Was No Longer in Control of His Own Life
There are dozens, if not hundreds, of stories I can tell about things that happened during the downward spiral. I will share a few that stand out in my mind
I had graduated from college, and was working my first 'real' job in the town I went to school. My mom was out of town at a soccer event (she needed some normalcy). He had been missing for 2 weeks, so we knew he was due to show up soon. Pattern was about a 2-3 week binge before he ran out of money. He'd sober up and find his way home. We'd put him in rehab, he'd leave, and repeat. I'm sitting on the couch and the phone rings. It's him.
He tells me he is in San Francisco and had been staying at a homeless shelter. They only allow you to stay a certain amount of time before you have to leave. That time had come, and he was ready to get home. He asked me to buy him a plane ticket, which of course I did. I got him a ticket to Arizona, where I lived. I'd pick him up from the airport and drive him back to Las Vegas. The next day I left for the airport and I waited. And waited. And waited. His plane landed and I watched everyone come out of the jetway. One after one, none of them him. As each person left the gate area I knew in my heart he wasn't on that plane. Cell phones weren't common yet. I had no way to contact him. All I could do was more waiting.
A few days later he calls again. He's not crying this time, so I assume he's high. He says he went to the airport but they wouldn't let him on the plane because he didn't have ID. That he would need a bus ticket. I didn't have internet in my home yet, and told him I needed a minute to figure out how/what/where to do that. He asks me to western union the money to him instead. At that point we'd known better to send him money. But we also often didn't have options. He'd claim to need the money to pay somebody back. To get a ride home. Anything. We gave him money thinking we were keeping him safe. So I sent the money knowing full well what he was going to do with it.
Several days go by and he calls me again. The pain in his voice is different this time. He sounds worn down. He's not crying, but clearly not high. This time he sounds scared. He's at a church that has allowed him to stay until somebody can pick him up. He gives me the address and I hop in the car. I drove the nearly 900 miles in tears and panic. Would he be there when I got there? What would I find if he is there?
So I drove around the area looking for him. It was a long shot, but what else was I supposed to do? He needed me and I thought (I always thought this no matter how many times he proved me wrong) I thought that If I could just talk to him. Hug him and tell him that I love him. That we ALL love him and want to help. Then he would stop running and come home. Left without knowing what else to do, I purchased a bus ticket and left it with the people at the church. They offered to see him on the bus when and if he showed up.
I arrived at my mom's house in Las Vegas to help prepare for my bridal shower. My brother had been in and out of rehab at that time, and we were all playing it by ear as to whether or not he'd be able to make the wedding. With our best fake and forced smiles we proceeded with wedding planning. My mom doing her best to not let my brother's situation override my wedding day. I arrive, my mom is there and doing her best to be happy for me.
I look to my mom and I'll never forget what I saw that day.
My mom is a horrible liar. She said she had fallen. Her feet were covered, literally every inch, covered in scabs. Swollen to the point she couldn't wear shoes. Come to find out my mom had been sleeping with her car keys under her pillow for months. He had been stealing cars from the family, and this was her way to try to prevent hers from being taken.
What really had happened is that he did steal her car. He did take the keys from under her pillow and start to drive away. Back then the ONLY reason he left the house was to find more drugs. My mom jumped on top of the car thinking he'd stop with her in the way.
He Just Kept Driving
My grandmother was a walking zombie. Her nerves and stress were so bad that she spent her last days dozed up on Xanax. My mom was nearly killed that day with the car. We'd picked him up so many times from the crack houses, that sometimes when he was missing my mom (who is 5'1" and 130 lbs) would walk right into these homes and demand to know where he was. Sometimes she would be successful sometimes she would not.
We had no more money to fund fancy private rehabilitation programs. My mom had to get a job. My grandmother spent most of her life's savings paying for treatment. He was in an out of jail constantly. It was so bad that we actually started to become grateful when he was in jail. Those were the only times we knew he was likely safe.
And Then a Miracle Happened
The day after we held him down while he shook uncontrollably, he checked himself in to yet another rehab program.
There was no money left. His only options were to stay until he detox'd and then they'd send him off again. The cycle repeated, each time the money the violence and the jail time grew worse. Until the Salvation Army took him in.
They saw what all of us in the old neighborhood and in the early high school years saw. We saw a really great kid who had really big troubles. They took a chance on him and they allowed him to participate in one of their youth programs.
And that boy that we all knew and loved. My first best friend. My favorite playmate. The person that knew all my inside jokes. The guy that I had shared my entire life with. He was back.
Slowly his eyes changed from dull to glimmer. He gained some weight. He smiled and experienced real sober joy for the first time in years. We had him home for the holidays for the first time in 7-8 years.
Before my grandmother passed away, she got her only grandson back. He walked her down the aisle at my wedding. A moment she dreamed about but never thought would happen
That girlfriend, she became his wife.
Today he runs a very successful small business. He just purchased his dream home. And he's given my mom and I our greatest gifts in life. His three children.
I tell this story for a few reasons. First, because I think it's important to know that addiction can happen to anyone. We didn't have a traumatic childhood. There was no violence in our life or exposure to drug use in our childhood. There was no poverty or lack of parental guidance.
Also, to say, that if this is something you or someone you love suffers though, please from the bottom of my heart...
Never Give Up
Countless people told us to stop. That we needed tough love. That we were financially and emotionally destroying our family. He was worth it. And together, we did it. People that meet him today would never believe some of the stories we have. I told just the surface here. There are so many more violent, more extreme moments while we struggled to get him clean.
That’s a beautiful today and an expected ending. Thank you sharing it with us and thank God for your brothers life
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Thank you so much!
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What an amazing story!! I'm so glad your brother is finally freed from his addiction! What a beautiful family he has now!! I'm surprised he graduated from meth to other drugs, as meth is often the end of the line for druggies. I too have a story of how someone close to me succumbed to addiction. Success is rare when it comes to defeating the dependence on hard drugs and my husband is also proof of the power or love and forgiveness as well!! His drug was meth, while I was divorcing him. Now we're back together and he is clean for almost a year!! Praise God!! I told my testimony when I first joined Steemit, but I think I'll tell it again soon, with more detail. Thank you for sharing!! :) Upvoted and resteemed!!
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Thank you so much. And you said it perfectly, and something i should have touched on more. Forgiveness. It’s crucial.
Congratulations to your husband!
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It is a strong story... Having addict in a close family means hard life... #TheAlliance
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My older brother has been an addict since I was 15 years old (I'm 52). I can relate to the beginning of your story so much, and the ending gives me hope that, even though he's almost 60, one day we might get a miracle too. Brightest of blessings to you and your family!
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So many of the people he was in drug court with didn’t make it. So many recovery attempts, but the drugs always won. Until one day they just didn’t. Please never give up. He needs you.
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To be honest, I haven't had contact with him in a number of years (long story) but I keep tabs on him through our mother. And I'm not giving up hope. Thanks! 💜
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The longer it goes on, sadly the less chance they’ll get better. From start to finish my brother was about 12 years. I can’t imagine going through it as long as you have. ((Hugs))
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This is a great story of redemption and change because of love, family and never giving up.
A story how one act of kindness can change people.
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Thank you. It was a long hard battle. But obviously worth every minute of pain for the joy we have now.
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wow!!! cheers for little bro!! nt only the way you wrote that but in general thought that this was going to go down badly. glad it turned around.
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Thank you. We all thought it would end badly too. So many conversations I remember having with my mom about how we should start to prepare ourselves.
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Dear @appiepearl, just wanted to say that I love you so much for sharing this beautiful expression of the covalent bonds of LOVE in action!
May your family always be blessed. 💘
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Thank you so much.
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This is an amazing story...I am glad it had a happy ending
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Thank you. The biggest reward is watching him with his kids. He is an amazing father with so much love.
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Every unaware person. I mean every ignorant person like some of my junkie friends should read this
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If they WANT to get better they can. It’s just very hard work.
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Really a grat story to make people think, when I was readng this I felt the emotions so strongs, in each word. Happy to see that your brother make it.
You now are a stronger family, never give up !!
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What an awesome story. Thank you @princessmewmew for resteeming this. What great ending and what beautiful kids!
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Hi @appiepearl
My name is Gail and my daughter is an addict, I am raising her son, my grandson and what I have found is that addiction doesn't discriminate. It will grab you and steal everything you ever thought you had. Just when you think its done and the nightmare is over, it will laugh in your ear like a Stephen King made Tiny Tim and whisper "more please"! That statement is actually from my blog @gails-word-syrup that I write about how addiction has effected our family. Addiction hurts family, its healing for me to get it out. I never lose hope I hold onto my daughters humanity. I love the addict and hate the addiction and the collateral damage that comes from it, because of it. Thank you for sharing your story.
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Beautifully said, Gail. You, your daughter and your family are in my thoughts.
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very touching post... he was very lucky that he had so much love and wasn't given up on. It is hard to not keep people who have repeatedly let you down in your life or at best arms length
I am so happy to hear he is doing so well and that this story had a happy outcome , one that most of us who read from the beginning were not anticipating
b.a./ alliance <3
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Thank you. There were so many times we wanted to give up. We were so convinced he wasn’t going to make it, that we’d tell ourselves to prepare for it now and move on. But we couldn’t. He held on and it worked!
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Oh my God he made it? Wow. I'm crying. What an emotional story to write, and what an intense life to live. I don't even have words. Huge hugs and so much love to you and your family.
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It was intense. There are so many spin off stories I can write. Like my mom. What a hero in it all, really.
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''I'm rarely at a loss for words, but I have none.'' You almost said it all for me girl... NEVER GIVE UP! <3
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Sometimes hope is all we have ❤️
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This is so incredibly awesome, I love the ending. Thank you for sharing this story of hope and inspiration. @appiepearl.
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Thank you @rensoul17. I love the ending too :)
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oui c est vrai nous avons aimé. et nous avons aimé dur
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What an amazing story. You tell it with such passion. I have had several family members including a spouse fall victim to drugs. It does happen to anyone. I am so glad that you and your family loved him that hard and never gave up. He regained his life because of his family. So touching. Re-steemed.
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Thank you so much.
We are much closer and stronger now as a result, So few make it out.
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Resteemed by @resteembot! Good Luck!
Curious? Read @resteembot's introduction post
Check out the great posts I already resteemed.
RESTEEMBOT IS FOR SALE
I COULD WRITE CODE FOR YOU
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This story... It really touched me. The media often portrays it as something that happens after huge trauma or relates it to criminality. But it's can happen so close to home, to people who you'd never suspect it to happen to.
Thank you for sharing this story. It's an important one t share. I loved the pictures in it, especially the ones where he seems to be happy and healthy and seeing him walk side-by-side your proud grandmother <3
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Thank you! They both look so happy that day, didn't they? He was out of rehab for the very last time just a few days before my wedding. We didn't know at the time that it was his last but it was so amazing to see him look healthy for the first time in nearly 10 years.
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I can imagine! They look amazingly happy indeed. It must have been so hard helping him through all of this. I'm so glad you persisted and 'got him back'. Must feel like a second life for him.
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He's been clean for a little over 10 years now. So in some ways the past feels like somebody else's life now...we've sort of moved on and tried our best to block it out. It was a very difficult time. Particularly watching what it did to my mom and grandma. But everyone is happy now :)
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Congratulations! This post has been upvoted from the communal account, @minnowsupport, by appiepearl from the Minnow Support Project. It's a witness project run by aggroed, ausbitbank, teamsteem, theprophet0, someguy123, neoxian, followbtcnews, and netuoso. The goal is to help Steemit grow by supporting Minnows. Please find us at the Peace, Abundance, and Liberty Network (PALnet) Discord Channel. It's a completely public and open space to all members of the Steemit community who voluntarily choose to be there.
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You are an amazing writer, but I admit that I had to stop reading at the "what is tweaking" part. I lost my brother to suicide while he was high on meth. (Our ages and birth years are so close together) I can relate just a little too much and am feeling really overwhelmed.
I just wanted to comment to say that I am so so sorry for your loss. You have a beautiful way with words and capturing your story that really makes it feel like I am sitting and talking with you over coffee or something.
Anyway, sorry for the sad comment... I am feeling a little speechless right now.
Love that you were able to share this.
@byn
P.S. Okay, so my comment wouldn't post for some odd reason, which led me to see the other comments. I then went back and read the end of your story and I now have happy tears :) Thank you for sharing. I still had to skip the middle part, but I love that he got better and came back to himself and your family. <3
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I’m so sorry for you loss and that I drudged up bad memories for you. The horrible truth is that not too many stories end like his. My heart goes out to you. Such a terrible drug and disease.
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It's okay, really. I wasn't expecting to read a happy ending and seeing that your story turned out for him really made my heart happy for you guys. <3
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What a terrifying a beautiful story. Thank you so much for sharing this. <3
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Thank you. Not an easy one to relive but i felt his story was worthy of sharing.
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It was indeed worthy of sharing. It shows us overall the power of love. I believe that during all those times when your brother went missing something inside of him knew he had a powerful lifeline of a family love connection that wanted so much more for him. I am so glad you all loved him fiercely and held the space until he was able to stand and hold his own.
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Thank you! That really is one of the differences between him and so many that didn’t make it. We held strong. And i believe the solid foundation growing up helped a lot.
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What a harrowing, difficult story. I am so glad he made it out. Sending hugs to you and yours.
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Thank you! So few make it out alive. So very sad and difficult for those who love them.
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You are an amazing writer, but I admit that I had to stop reading at the "what is tweaking" part. I lost my brother to suicide while he was high on meth. (Our ages and birth years are so close together) I can relate just a little too much and am feeling really overwhelmed.
I just wanted to comment to say that I am so so sorry for your loss. You have a beautiful way with words and capturing your story that really makes it feel like I am sitting and talking with you over coffee or something.
Anyway, sorry for the sad comment... I am feeling a little speechless right now.
Love that you were able to share this.
@byn
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This is a courageous story of family love. It has a beautiful ending when it could have easily gone the other way. You had faith and perseverance to overcome adversity. Addiction is not an easy fight. And it does not discriminate in who it affects. I had two brothers that were addicts. One committed suicide after he had lost everything and the other managed to turn his life around.
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So very sorry for your loss. It is most definitely a fight
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wow .wow
im like this
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