The RocketDog

The RocketDog

Monday, January 8, 2018

The Darkest Year is Just Before Dawn



I stared at the dead squirrel for some time before I recognized it for what it was. Cold, frozen, grey; in the stance of death that renders figures unkindly. I kept flashing to my daughter, her hands flexed like the squirrel's paws, the same grey color, the same mouth-slightly-open because death doesn't allow for working muscles. Immediately, the stronger part of me would push it out with great force, refusing to look. Because looking means it will happen. It means I'll see her the same way I was seeing the squirrel. I forced myself to turn away and staggered stiffly back into a run. Heroin leaves its victims with a deathly grey pallor only an addict possesses; it's recognizable, in fact, undeniable. Once you become unfortunately familiar with it, it's like being handed a pair of eyeglasses that suddenly show you things that you never saw before, that most people never see. And once you see it, it can't be unseen.  


Two years ago this month, my daughter became a heroin addict. It was then that the darkest period of my life began. To look at her childhood, her pictures, she was a happy, outgoing, beloved, popular child; a child that had a safe and stable home, with two parents, who had videos and books and games and got to eat McNuggets and mac-n-cheese whenever she wanted. Who never had to worry about where her next meal was coming from, and who had warm, clean clothes.  A child with grandparents and aunts and uncles who doted on her. Who took ballet at age 5, played soccer, played violin, took horseback riding lessons, loved art. Who could read before the age of 5, taught herself to tie her shoes, to ride a bike. Who went camping, went on vacations with her family, had Christmas traditions and woke up to a bulging stocking.  With a plethora of pets to snuggle with and many friends, she seemingly possessed every advantage. The four of us ate dinner together every night, even when her firefighter father wasn't home. She loved her little sister and brother fiercely, taking great care to protect and nurture them. Because she and her siblings were so close in age, there was one joyful, raucous bath time. And every night, save for the very rare one, bedtime followed a comforting, predictable routine. Bath or wash up, snacks and a family book read aloud, then teeth brushing and tucking in. We read fantastic books, including Where the Red Fern Grows; The Secret Garden, The Little Princess, Harry Potter; Hank the Cow Dog; often I would read them in English (or Texas) accents, much to their howling delight, her especially. Her siblings and her were close; they hugged, they laughed, they loved. These pictures say it all.








She grew through the typical awkward adolescent braces-and-glasses stage into a stunningly beautiful young woman. The kind of beauty I'd always wished I'd had as a child. She was incredibly bright; and with a gifted IQ, we didn't worry too much, even though her teachers were always frustrated that she wasn't living up to her potential for grades, in their opinion.  Intelligent kids are often bored with school, we figured she'd find her way.  They always remarked upon her empathy for others, her kindness, her emotional intelligence. Our house was always full of teens on the weekends, who would stay the night. The Costco bill was enormous, but the sound of laughter from the basement made it seem like a small price to pay. She had a propensity for drama, though; hating to see others being hurt or taken advantage of, she always inserted herself into things to try to help. In an effort to help her navigate the angst of teenhood that she seemed to feel so deeply, we took her to counseling twice. Once at the age of 14, and again at the age of 17, after she came to us and told us she'd been experimenting with hydrocodones. Both counselors told us she was remarkedly empathetic, mature, and that she would be fine. The second one told us, "She will go on to do great things. Don't worry about her." She told me many things about her life, things I would never have dared tell my mother at her age, and I felt grateful for the honest relationship I had with her. Upon her graduation, she was so happy, so bright, it was hard to look at her longer than a few seconds, she shone so intensely. But somewhere along the way, things had happened. Little pieces, little traumas, that I, we, didn’t know about. It's funny, how you can get to be 47 years old, and think you know something about something, until you suddenly are faced with the fact that you know nothing at all. Such is my newfound and uninvited guest: addiction. 


It's some of the worst news a parent can hear, especially from the mouth of their child. Heroin. You envision a world of hell, and you're not wrong. Everything horrible runs through your mind, and you're right. Except you don't know it yet. You think it's controllable still. Especially if it's early. You've seen the signs: the gradual loss of personal care, the sleeping late and being awake all night, the drifting away and fighting with close friends until they seem to have no one at all. I watched my daughter struggle with trying to reach out, to want desperately to save her friendships, but her friends, not understanding, withdrew one by one, leaving her in even more desperate loneliness, with only one sure friend: one reliable, steady companion who goes by Brown, and who whispered perfect lies of  comfort and promises. The more friends she lost, the more she turned to the numbness of nodding off, deep in Heroin's hellish arms. The more she used, the farther away her friends ran. And who can blame them? We don't tell our kids the real truth about addiction. We don't teach them the role genetics play, that trauma plays. Few among us have not had childhood or adolescent traumas, hurts, shocks, angst. But for some of the unlucky few, those fall into place all at the right- or wrong- time. She had fallen in with some that played the Roulette wheel and won; but for her, it was a losing game. 

She came to us, after we thought she'd stopped using, in the fall of 2016. She hadn't stopped, she wanted to; she needed help. Would we help her? Of course. If I could have traded places with her, I would have. We were encouraged, that the first step was taken. She asked for help. It was a good sign. How we didn't know, how much we didn't know. It's almost like a play: you can practically predict the path of drug addiction. We were naive, although we didn't think so. She started an outpatient, and for a while, things were looking up. There wasn't major change, but she wasn't using, so we felt it would just be slower than we anticipated. A few months in, and we suddenly found out she was on probation at her treatment center. Her dad and I were separating, and after discussing it with her counselor, we were advised to be honest with her. The response was not what we'd hoped; her counselor had said she didn't have far to fall, but we were wrong. Oh, how we were wrong.

The thing about addiction is, the road is not linear. You hear it, you nod and say "Yes, yes, we know", but you really don't-- until you've been on that road a long time. You watch them get better, you have hope......then it's all burned to the ground. So many times, until you're left wondering, what can possibly be left to catch fire? Your life becomes a Warzone. You stand in the middle of the smoking ruins, and wonder, how did I get here? You learn that the lack of personal care is a visible testament to their lack of self-worth, that they carry such a burden of shame, they don't even feel worthy of humanity. They try to hide behind their skins; you feel such guilt for persisting to criticize their appearance you can hardly stand yourself. You listen to brilliant addiction psychiatrists with 22+ years of experience explain how their genetics set them up to fail where so many don't, and you see that your own history had a lot of luck in it. You want to hold them; to let your tears, your sobbing, intense rush of regret and shame absorb all of theirs, to wash them clean of their pain. You lie awake at night, thinking of every mistake you made, and while you rationally know all parents make mistakes, and you're not directly responsible, you know that there are what-ifs. She'd been in dance as a child, and she loved it; but it was so horribly expensive, we decided that she'd be ok without it. Often, I wonder: if only. If only we'd kept her in dance. You learn what enabling means and does not mean, mostly through hard won personal experience. You start out initially not wanting to let anyone know, because DRUG ADDICT is a terrible phrase, NOT MY KID. Shhhh, it's private, you don't want the neighbors to know. Mostly, to protect them, from what you hope is 'youthful indiscretion.' But you learn, that it is everyone, everywhere; that addicts are worthy of love, of recovery, that they are still the people you know and love inside, somewhere.  And yet, you sit amongst your friends and feel like an outsider. Your friends innocently make disparaging remarks like "probably a drug addict" when they see people on the streets, in their workplace, on the corner. They suddenly remember you in their midst, and shift uncomfortably in their seats, quickly changing the conversation. You sit in groups in treatment, you listen to their stories- the other addicts, their families, their spouses. Initially you think "This is not us.  We didn't have that.  She simply got caught up in the wrong crowd, we're different." But the more you hear, the more you nod, you feel it; you realize you are they, and they are you.

Addiction is recognized by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, the American Medical Association, and the National Center on Addiction as fitting the Disease Model Criteria. It is a “real” disease just like Diabetes, Cancer, High Blood Pressure, and others.  In fact, the recovery rates are actually better than many of those. It is caused by a complex combination of behavioral, environmental, and biological factors. Some will argue that people don't "choose to get cancer or diabetes or high blood pressure!" But many cancers are caused by behavioral and environmental factors, along with biological predisposition. Same with diabetes and HBP. We don't walk up to people with type II Diabetes and proclaim "Listen up Fatty! Lose some weight and your diabetes will get better!" Or people with skin cancer "You shouldn't have tanned and laid out in the sun all that time!"  "You know smoking is bad for you!  It's your own damned fault you have lung cancer and are going to die a horribly painful death!" We don't shun people with lung cancer; we gather around them, we support them. At one educational class, the psychiatrist, a brilliant, compassionate individual, remarked upon how everyone gathers around people with other diseases; we hold drives, we make food, we support.  But addicts are shunned; vulnerable people, often with untreated mental health issues and/or horrendous trauma in their past, who need us the most, are run away from as if they are catching. People often say "But you CHOSE to use in the first place!" Well... very few of us can actually say we have never done something that could be viewed as risky. Raise your hand if you've never had a glass of wine, a beer, tried weed, used a narcotic- even if it's for prescribed purposes. The point of the disease model in relation to addiction is, you put the behavioral and environmental (trauma) pieces into the wheel, then add the genetics: suddenly, it's rolling. And it's a big, stone wheel gaining massive momentum with every revolution. Yes, it's true-for some, it only takes once. When asked what it was like to use Heroin the first time, one addict replied, "It was like a hug from God." People would be wise to remember "There but for Grace, go I." 

There are so many misconceptions, so many stereotypes, so much judgment. So little compassion. People stare disgustedly at addicts, at their unkempt appearance, assuming they just don't care. No one thinks about what the addict sees in the mirror- that they often avoid any and all of them because it's too painful to see what they have become. They don’t believe they deserve to treat themselves kindly. Taking care of oneself, brushing your teeth, means you have self-worth, and self-respect. That you deserve to be taken care of, even by yourself. Most addicts have long since felt anything remotely resembling love of self. Maybe they are living in their car by now, or on the street, and they don't have access to bathing facilities. I've watched adults scorn and berate young women simply coming in to use the bathroom at a Safeway. Are we that callous and unfeeling? "Just stop using!" "Get help!" "It's your choice!" Oh, but if it were that easy. I ask all of you who have ever tried to lose weight. How would you feel if you failed even once on your diet, if people stood, fingers pointing at you, glaring accusingly "YOU FAILED. YOU'RE NOT WORTHY". And food, for people without that genetic predisposition, is nowhere near as addicting as Heroin. Failing on a diet even once, sneaking that piece of chocolate because damn it, you've had a hard day. It's just a little, I’ll start over tomorrow. The two are not dissimilar, but one is so much more exponentially powerful. And yet we pretend it's simply a matter of willpower to overcome this devil that destroys and controls, when we can't even say no to a plate of pasta. When an addict looks at the ruins of their life, the rubble, the chaos around them, the mountains they must overcome with little to no help from society-it can be immensely overwhelming to try.  The road is so long, so steep...just a little.  One more time.  I'll start tomorrow. 

So, you unwillingly start to learn the Fine Art of Addiction Hell. You don't hide it anymore, you freely tell people when they ask- not much -but some details. Soon you realize, people think the mere mention will somehow taint them. They become tired and weary that your loved one is still battling this. I mean, come on, it's been a year now, how long do you really think I can be sympathetic? I have things to do! I have worries of my own! My child is trying to deal with being dumped by their prom date! THESE ARE BIG WORRIES DONTYOUKNOW.  The official term is "compassion fatigue". You understand, god knows, you understand; you wish you could shut the door on it yourself.  You still feel like an outsider. People have their own stresses; they feel tired and exhausted with their own problems. You remember what it felt like to have what you thought at the time were major issues. Oh god could you only go back to those lovely, silly workplace stresses. Worrying about how to pay for college for your child, instead of rehab. (Did you know that most rehabs average $55,000 for just 20 days? If you're lucky to have insurance, you might only have to put out $5,000 or so, not counting the 20% part and the medical deductibles for prescription meds, the travel to and from, the lost work time to attend groups and education.) There are those who truly mean what they say when they offer you their sympathies, but only one other person really understands the grief-the other parent. Her dad is a firefighter. The epidemic that is Heroin forces him to confront the reality of her life frequently; administering Narcan to those fortunate few, watching the shocked, grief-stricken family and friends of those who are not. He is exposed to it in ways you are not, and you don't know how to help. The two of you are lucky, though; it has not torn you apart the way it can others, but helped you find an unfortunate piece of ground free from other arguments. You learn how to endure together, you look at your own relationships suddenly through different lenses, in a good way. Still, when others urge you to come to life again, please, let's have lunch, you feel moments of that old warmth, the old you, but they're as fleeting as a shadow. The dark devil on your back grips you tightly and whispers in your ear to remind you he's still there. Happiness becomes like an old lightbulb that was once bright, and now glows weak and dim. But although that light grows dim, it's not extinguished.  You tell yourself to have hope, there’s always hope. You look back at the family pictures, you watch the videos, you wonder just how this beautiful piece of your soul, your heart that has grown legs and is walking around outside of your body can deteriorate into something you barely recognize.  It's like Heroin is a massive tsunami and your daughter was playing too close to the shore, she's swept away and you can see her, please, please help me you can see her struggling, swimming, trying to stay afloat godhelpyouwhycan'tyousaveher.  

 The “well-meaning” begins. People outside this inner circle that think they can 'be the one'. The HERO! They advise you, with heartfelt concern, brows furrowed, that you should do 'this'.  'That'. "You should really stop/start/try/don't/do/" everything, and nothing. You stop sighing, and just stop responding. They say all the things you've already said; they try all the things you've already tried; they unwittingly enable, undo, all the things you wish they wouldn't, but you wonder, unfairly, unfruitful as it is, maybe it will work; you can't bring yourself to ruin the possibility it might make a difference. You watch your little girl, the baby you cared for, the child you rocked all night, for whom you sacrificed sleep, yourself, who you gave everything to- slowly become a shadow of herself. Her birthday comes and goes.... your heart, what's left of it, shreds even more. You watch her sister and brother worry and wonder in disbelief at the path their sister is choosing, knowing you can't take away their hurt and feeling it all the more because you can't save them from it; you watch your parents suffer, your sister suffer, your entire family, all suffering- and you still feel like you bear some responsibility for saving all of them. You have family dinners, minus one, but it's almost like death has already come to claim her, for she is not present anymore. You look around and wonder, is this what it will be like? Will our family pictures now be only four? You watch other families, that you've known, and your children have grown up with, transition into happy families that start adulting together. You wonder what happened to yours; then you remember your daughter is a casualty in that tsunami. You see pictures of families vacationing together, and you remember your beautiful past ones and wonder if they will ever return. You encourage your other children to have hope, to have compassion, to remember this is their sister. You try to teach the concept of loving without enabling, that supporting and loving someone emotionally is different than acting as if the relationship is normal. To let go of their expectations, to simply love. You still have to parent. Even in the midst of this, you must encourage them to continue to grow themselves, to focus on their goals and dreams. You wish you could do the same yourself. All the while, you slowly blacken and wither away on the inside, as the trauma becomes yours to carry and bear, too. You feel cuts deep, and many, so many, that you bleed so much you become limp from loss. You keep your phone on you, close; you answer every unknown call because you don't know if that's the phone call telling you they found your daughter. You think things no parent should ever have to think. You accept inquiries about your well-being in the spirit they are intended, but you become numb, and start answering with "oh, well, you know. They are what they are" because you have no other answer to say.  You feel as if you are wearing Ebenezer Scrooge's chain around your neck and dragging, with no end in sight. It is heavy, so heavy, if only you could put it down. 

In the beginning, you suck up the moments of joy, because you still believe. You need these moments, they sustain you. But slowly, ever so slowly, weeks run into months, and months run into a year, and year becomes years. And you die a little more every day. You find less and less happiness makes its way into your being, because your being has become a shell; a cold, hard husk, bereft of anything living left inside of it. You know you must make your own way, there is nothing you can do. You realize you're becoming used to the weight. You know, even if a miracle happens, you now carry deep and intense scars. As a parent, a mother- you are forever attached to the soul you brought into this world, that you were tasked with bearing to adulthood safely, and your happiness and well-being is directly tied to them inexorably and forever. The light has grown dim, but it is not out. Not entirely. It lies cold, like the January sun; pale, weak, but not out. You cling to this small hope, that spring will come, that dawn will break. 













*I have wanted to write about this for so long.  It's hard to adequately express the emotions of having an addict for a child.  There are so many resources, please take the time to educate yourself and seek support through Al-Anon or Nar-Anon if you struggle with a loved one's disease.  Reach out to me if nothing else.  

Resource links: https://www.centeronaddiction.org/what-addiction/addiction-disease
 https://www.asam.org/
 http://www.nar-anon.org/






18 comments:

  1. You are amazing, strong, fierce, loving. Your kids are lucky to have you on their side. I love your, Hallie! I hope you never felt/feel judgement from me. Thank you for sharing. I know it will help so many struggling in silence.
    Jeanette

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jeanette, your kindness has done great things. Thank you so much.

      Delete
  2. I'm so glad you're writing. I love you. I love your family. I know. I see you, and I hear you. Thank you for writing this heartfelt expression so that others too, may be helped. You're exactly right as well, your views of addiction are spot on. The answers are always different for each addict. And they always do lie in the past. I hope that Hallie can speak with you about her past in ways she may not have yet. And I hope that she can understand that making peace with her trauma is the only thing that will help her heal the raw open stinging pain she feels every moment of her life. As an empath, I feel it. It's probably why I felt I could try. Try to help her find her way. Because I could feel her broken too. I can also feel her love. I see past all of the shitty stuff, I see her. I just pray to any god, whatever god exists, that she will see herself too. Mental health is so important. The key to helping an addict, is uncovering the past. It's all mental health. I hope you can feel some sort of peace with today. Even if it's small. My heart breaks daily still. Knowing the pain others go thru. It also makes me humbled. Sending lots of love your way. ��

    ReplyDelete
  3. Much love to you and your beautiful daughter.

    ReplyDelete
  4. All our love to you and your family and Hallie. I had no idea. Parenting IS hard, even when things are going right. I just want to give you a hug. I don't have much to offer, but if a sympathetic ear would help, I'm willing to listen. As much as you need. God Bless

    ReplyDelete
  5. Heidi Miller (former RA/FB girl!)January 8, 2018 at 4:39 PM

    I am so sorry you are going through this with your daughter. I understand this oh-to-well, from the perspective of a sister. You put into words all of the things my Mom/sister felt while it was happening, from a kid who came from the same sort of background as your family's has... I am still numb/in disbelief, three years later. I hope for a happy ending for all of you. <3

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Heidi, I remember that day. I think of it often. You and your sister are in my heart.

      Delete
  6. You so articulately express the pain of parenting a child who chooses the wrong path. I too saw my son go from a happy, fun-loving kid to a secretive, withdrawn teenager. I wondered (I still wonder) what happened in his life to make this change happen. It was like flipping a switch. Instead of paying for college, paying for rehab. Me, withdrawing from friends because I was ashamed and didn't want to be judged. While he's been doing well for the last couple of years, I still worry. A lot. Because he's still secretive and withdrawn. Thanks for sharing your story. Keep on running--that's what I do. It's hard to cry and run at the same time, isn't it?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Indeed, running is great therapy. I'm grateful your son is doing well.

      Delete
  7. Thank you for sharing your story. My heart goes out to you, your daughter, and your entire family.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh Aimee, you are such a strong soul.You are all in our prayers.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I feel as though my whole life is being unfolded right in front of me. I am that girl. It started innocently with smoking a little grass in 1967, then moved on to acid, speed, and eventually heroin, cocaine, and crack. It was truly an amazing journey, which gave so much meaning to the term, "Monkey on my back". The monkey grew into a gorilla, an uncontrollable gorilla, that finally ended up needing to be caged for many years. I've experienced everything that this girl has experienced, losing family and friends along the way of my darkest journey. Now, I have a son, who is about the age I was when things got really desperate for me, when no one could understand my plot besides the other Gorilla's. Now that I have found my way back into the light of the beautiful world I left behind 50 years ago, the fear of that darkness finding my son, my nieces, my friends or family, lives with me like a shadow from my own dark past. It has been a mere 1 year from being off of all pain prescriptions, almost 20 years since being off of heroin and coke. 0 years, months, or days, since worrying about my son, who thankfully is still in the light, but forever in my heart of my worries that somehow, that darkness may find a crack in him and enter him unbeknownst. It happens and no one really understands why...they just hope it does not happen to theirs. For the last few years, I have been diving into volunteering, activism, and trying to make this world as beautiful as I think it should be. There are no unworthy people in my world. We are all worthy. I have so much further to go to come back from that darkness, if I ever can. The experts say, "that the stigma is the last part of addiction to go". We need to make this a better world for all of us, and erase that part of the journey. I love the person who wrote this...it is painful, and hurtful, and true. My only consolation, is that there is always a way back to the light, as long as there is life. Please consider being a light to someone who is not able to see the light by loving them unconditionally. "One of my favorite quotes is, "Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly, until you are good at it". We all are worthy of good things happening in our lives, and we all deserve to be in the light.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for sharing your story. I'm glad you never gave up on yourself. Love and light to you and your son.

      Delete
  10. Debbie Beaulieu, August 20, 1951 - present and accounted for among the living in the light.

    ReplyDelete