Parent Connection Forum-Three Young Newtowners Tell Their Stories Of Addiction
Parent Connection Forumâ
Three Young Newtowners Tell Their Stories Of Addiction
Despite the historic baseball game played last Wednesday evening, about 150 people came to hear three brave young Newtown men speak of their hopeful stories of addiction and recovery at the Newtown Parent Connectionâs âDare to Discuss Drugs â Part II.â Parents were encouraged to bring children from intermediate grades on up and so they did.
John Hamilton, who once again facilitated the forum, opened with a sobering statistic. Bridgeport has the distinction of having the highest purity of heroin of all US cities â 91 percent pure. âIn Boston,â according to Mr Hamilton, âa bag of heroin can be purchased for less than a pack of cigarettes.â With heroin being one of the drugs of choice for at least one of the speakers, this information seemed especially appropriate.
Each young man told his own story. Throughout the evening there seemed to be the common thread of low self-esteem, ADD, difficulty in school, self-medication, major manipulation, and questionable friends.
The panelists are identified only by their first initial.
C, age 19 and a Newtown native, spoke of his extensive involvement with sports, scouts, family, and church. Yet something was missing. He always felt different from others and had a difficult time expressing his feelings. He began to drink and smoke pot in elementary school. Use leveled off until high school when the drinking picked up because then âI didnât have to worry about expressing myself.â C got in with a âbad groupâ the summer before his freshman year and experienced his first run-in with the police. The incident resulted in him beginning a long road of therapy and admission to various residential treatment facilities.
In between stays C would party. âI didnât change until I was ready to change.â
Downward spirals continued, leading to blackouts, trouble at school, leaving home, and disappearing for days. C declared, âI am an alcoholic.â His last rehab facility taught him a lot. He learned who God was. âGod is anything I want He, She, It to be for help.â
Now back at home, C is going to AA, growing as a person, and is respectful of others. Recent knee surgery tested his resolve. He made the decision to go without pain medication for fear of beginning the cycle again. Today, he has a full-time job, attends school two days a week, feels better about himself, and has a wonderful relationship with his family. âMy father is my best friend!â
J opened with âmy life was a mess from a young age.â He experienced multiple family issues. He saw his first therapist at 10 and did poorly in school. âI never did more than I had to.â He used his parentsâ estrangement to avoid accountability as he bounced from one parent to the other. He attempted suicide twice â the first time at age 13. This is when he felt his addictive characteristics began. While in therapy he âtold people what they wanted to hear.â He was a great manipulator. He described his life âas not a good picture.â
J admitted to using drugs to feel better when he felt badly and even better when feeling good. His drug use led to an arrest and time at the Bridgeport Correctional Facility. He spent the better part of a year in rehab outside the country and is now learning to assimilate back into the community. He is better able to think through situations and consequences. He hopes to go back to school. Right now he is working and going to meetings.
âIâm sober and I feel good. Thatâs all that really matters.â
A, who was the initial panel member for this forum, was very blunt. âI am a professional drug addict. I am 22 years old, a native Newtowner, addicted to heroin, used coke, manipulator, sneaky, no self-esteem â generally a toxic person.â He said he was a late user and professional liar. His introduction to the drug world began with Ritalin, Zoloft, and Wellbutrin.
âPills were an answer for help.â He snorted Ritalin, sold Ritalin, smoked pot, got arrested, and has been in mental hospitals. He described himself as a âmedicine cabinet bandit.â
His drug use became so bad he experienced blackouts and overdosed. âI knew I had to get out of here to get better.â
A recently celebrated one year of sobriety. âI have grown up a lot in this last year!â But A had a lot to say and was anxious to answer audience questions rather than speak about himself. He had a message that he wanted to share, stressing âwe are all good kids.â
Following the three presentations, Mr Hamilton opened the evening to questions, which were submitted on index cards.
All three men fielded the following questions:
âWhat advice would you give teenagers today?â
âTake my word â heroin, coke, partying, getting high, you will be scared and all alone.â
âWhat would you tell parents that would be helpful?â
âAddiction is a disease. You can try to change schools, friends, but threats are within.â
âGo with your gut instinct. Know who your kids hang out with and their families.â
âTry your hardest to help but itâs not your fault if kids fail. Change comes when ready.â
âHow easy /hard was it to get drugs?â
All three felt the majority drank and used pot.
âThere are medicine cabinets everywhere.â
âWhat could the schools do not to enable?â
âNot the schoolâs fault. If I wanted to do it, I did it.â
âIt helped after I got clean to speak with the substance abuse counselor.â
âIf you have 30 kids snorting Ritalin in the bathroom what can schools do? Be aware.â
âWhat advice do you have for parents about expressing their feelings?â
âLead by example. Show affection and emotion.â
âWhat about parents in denial?â
âPray that the kids donât die. Physical addiction is very strong.â
âTake charge and do what is in your heart. Kids will thank you.â
âIt may be risky but do whatâs necessary to save your kidâs life.â
J ended with a plea to the students in the audience: âFor kids who arenât using donât start â simple as that.â
Mr. Hamilton read a comment from one of the cards to close the evening, âYou are remarkable young men and if you have helped one person tonight you should be very proud.â