DesertHarp
Bluelighter
- Joined
- May 25, 2022
- Messages
- 380
Thanks for your post. I'm glad you've gotten to where substance use doesn't dominate your life, and you feel better. I like the way you explain your early use because I can so relate to the feelings you describe. I'm awestruck at how anyone who gets into opioids can ever get free. I mean that most sincerely.I had to learn this the hard way and it took YEARS. I ignored so many people trying to tell me this because I truly wanted to believe opiods were a magic solution. The relief was so intense I couldn't believe that opiods were also the cause of the intense discomfort. I never had a massive habit and generally abstained from anything too strong for too long but man did I find any excuse to end up on some form of pharma opiod, kratom, poppy pods/seeds/tinctures, occasional heroin dabbling that usually wrapped itself up for fear of the impending fentanyl apocalypse lol. Basically anything though that tickled those receptors was sought after and repeatedly justified until I just accepted that it was a problem, it was the cause of the pain, not the thing that would end it.
I feel better now. I still occasionally relapse but I know it's not the way. I am able to quit pretty quickly again these days and stay clean for prolonged periods of time.
In mid-Dec. 2007, I came back from a job assignment that was 90 miles west of where I lived. I'ld been on this job for awhile. But, one day, I arrived home and could barely get out of the car. Driving long distances always had caused me some back discomfort. But, on this occasion, I couldn't stand up straight. My boyfriend offered me one of his Vicodin tablets, and I took it. That might have been the first time I took one. Thirty minutes later. I said to my bf, "I can totally see how people fall in love with this stuff." I loved how much better I felt, pain free and with a mental relaxation that was bliss.
Soon thereafter, I got my own presciption for Vicodin (hydrocodone.)