What is Rock Bottom to you?
It was recently bothersome to
overhear a young group of individuals, engaged in treatment, talking about
their addiction. One patient had said to another they don’t want to stop using drugs and alcohol
because their addicted life has not been a bad life. There has never been a
consequence to their use other than the occasional grounding and limitations on
the family car.Addiction is not something that is taboo to me,
as I have been living with it my entire adult life. At eighteen vocabulary such
as stamp bag, syringe, detoxification, and rehabilitation were all common
staples in my daily language, yet this particular conversation left me bothered
and confused. Television shows, such as intervention, depict addiction as
lonely and secluded. Often times the addict is in the worst physical shape of
their life, living on the streets, facing jail time among many other things
such as diseases, like Hepatitis C and HIV. Some may call this “rock bottom”.
However, what about the new age addict feeding their habit discretely off of
mom and dad’s money, living under their roof, not surrendering to much of a
consequence to this deadly disease. This leaves me wondering, is there such a
thing as “rock bottom” for this sample of people. . . or could their first
consequence end up being their last?The term “rock bottom” was created in the 1880’s
in retrospect to bartering, in order to describe prices “at their lowest
possible limit or level”, hence how the term could have come to describe one
suffering from substance abuse. At this time in the 1880’s the population
addicted to drugs and alcohol were mostly civil war veterans medicating their
wounds, or self medication what we would later call post traumatic stress
disorder. Heroin was not created until the early 1900’s when addiction affected
nearly 2% of all Americans. One century later and five times that many
Americans suffer from addiction. Case in point, as you read this think of five
of your closest friends and family. Got them?Statistically, one of them is
addicted to drugs and/or alcohol. With the disease overcoming this person’s
brain, making it the only thing they are able to think of, what do you think it
would take to get the brain to stop? A run in with the law? Jail time? Losing
their family? Losing their housing? I can tell you from my own personal
experience, even with all of those factors in the equation; only about half of
all users seeking treatment (10% of the addicted population, which is a story
in itself!) will discontinue their addiction after suffering one or all of the
aforementioned consequences.With that said, what if the one you’re thinking
of has never had a consequence to their bad behavior? We see small children on
TV all the time who do not behave correctly, because they are not correctly
reprimanded. While the conversation I heard shakes me to the core, I can
understand how this new generation of users thinks. It’s human nature, as they
say, why fix something that isn’t broken. The scariest part is what happens
when what is broken can’t be fixed? With heroin and opiate purity increasing by
the day one dose could be the difference between life and death.I wish for anyone to take away this message. If
you wait for rock bottom to come and save you, it’s in my belief you will be
waiting an eternity. If the conversation of these patients has ever crossed
your mind, think of a consequence you might not see. Your family in upset,
arguing on the best way to treat you, your parents breaking into their
retirement fund to get you the best help money can buy, your younger sister
crying herself to sleep at night because she can’t imagine a world without you.
. . and perhaps continuing to cry herself to sleep for the rest of her life
when the world loses you.Don’t wait for rock bottom, whatever it may be
to you. Addiction can be stopped. With state of the art medicines like Suboxone and Vivitrol,
we have a way to control the overwhelming cravings. Once the brain is under
control, heavy counseling and individualized care from people that know your
pain can help release you from your addictions. Don’t wait till it’s too late.x
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