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My life collapsed helplessly down the rabbit hole; but now it's time to climb out.

CyanThorn

Greenlighter
Joined
Jan 31, 2015
Messages
28
I was the person you hated. I mean, I grew up in the worst area of my home city - in fact, the infamous Trainspotting was set just down the road from where I live - and I remember nights as a child going hungry because my mother simply couldn't afford any food that month. Nobody's perfect. But I was that one in school - in high school - the one that took too many classes. We're talking several classes more than average and got perfect grades in all of them regardless. The one that got an unconditional offer for Cambridge. The one that ended up doing medicine. The one that could also speak several languages and played a variety of instruments to a high standard to boot. I could even eat whatever I wanted and effortlessly maintain a slim and toned physique. I'm not trying to brag here - I'm setting the scene. I was that guy. The guy you think just has it ridiculously easy. But for every silver lining there is also a cloud. That cloud for me was huge, dark and deep depression and borderline personality disorder. Throughout my life I managed my best to keep it under control with sheer will power and determination. It was still there, eating away at me, but I let it do so in vain because I did not plan on ever giving in to it.

Or so I thought.

About two years ago, I wasn't in a good place. I could say that I literally wasn't in a good place - in a flat with people I hated, and with a crazy landlord. I could also talk about the long term relationship that broke down leaving me in a vulnerable place. I could talk about the decision to withdraw from my medical school programme, as I'd been miserable with it for a while. Regarding all of it, I sometimes wonder now if I was really sad, or if depression cast a veil over everything I would have normally been enjoying. I wonder if these things that happened should have happened, or if they happened because of my mental health and not just me. I could say something about any of these things, but in the end excuses aren't really a good source of catharsis.

In the end it doesn't matter how or why it happened, it's just that it did. I was left unemployed, homeless, single and alone. My career path was cut off, my social life was mostly cut off (how on earth could I face my medic friends after committing the cardinal sin of not wanting to do it? - after all, we all recite exactly in our interviews and every moment of med school "Oh medicine is my life - I love it. I'm so devoted and determined.") and my support systems were thereby cut off. I was lost. Remember that cloud? It broke, and the heavens opened.

After years of independence I found myself going from my double bed with my boyfriend to the single bed at my mother's house I'd left years ago. I went from an intelligent person valued by a medical school to a number patronised at the job centre. I went from happy to sad; ambitious to despondent; disciplined and sensible to wild and reckless. I'd spent my entire life playing by the rules - say this, say that, do this, do that, study this, study that, yes sir, no sir, three bags full sir, of course medicine is my life sir. All of this change, all at once, broke me.

Like it always does, it started innocuously. Going out more, drinking more, being promiscuous and being generally wild. A friend and I discovered legal highs and we would get completely wasted and go out - I was high as hell and loving it every second. I danced on tabled and kissed strangers who came up to me. I could reel a man in with a glance. I was fantastic and possibly the most confident I'd ever been. I thought I was invincible and I thought with all my pharmacological knowledge and previous discipline in life I could handle myself better than those "undisciplined junkies" (I never would say that, but hell at the time did I think it). It went from legal highs, to illegal highs and I thought I was strong enough. I look back on that golden era and see how amazing I felt and was and sometimes wonder what my secret was to it.

Drugs. I was on drugs.

About a year and a half ago discovered that my mother's 30/500 co-codamol were quite the enjoyment for an opiate naive person like me. Hell, two of those buggers could get me high. And CWEing about 10 I could be nodding all night. This continued for about six months and I got away with it somehow - slip a strip from her box and pop them as I went about doing this or that. But as tolerance works, all good things must come to an end.

I wasn't having it though. I wanted more. I wanted to experiment. We only live once after all. The rain was falling from those clouds all around me, and I wanted to feel better. I deserved it.

My best friend from high school was a heroin addict. This was no secret to me, or between us, and we spoke openly about it. To this day she is my closest friend and throughout my depression, even in my darkest, darkest moments she has been there for me no matter what. In my darkness, she is my shining light. We generally kept her heroin use away from our friendship physically, but eventually I became tolerant to the codeine and wanted to chase a bigger high. To this day she claims it was her fault for opening the door to heroin for me, but it was my set of choices that led to my trying it. And trying it again. And again. And again.

I read up about people saying how hard it was to moderate your use. "Those weaklings" - thought I. I would smoke it every other day. Go days without it just to brag about how in control I was. Over time, that control waned, until it became every day. It was a bag every day. Then it was two bags a day. Then I was running out of money and begging my best friend to help me out until I got paid. My life began to revolve around it - going to get it, smoking it, loving it, worshipping it. Waking in the morning thinking about it. Dreaming about it. How arrogant I was to think I could cheat biology. I was an addict. I'd lost everything. Everything I had loved in my life was gone, so why not just smoke another bag and forget about it.

---

To the here and now. I've been taking heroin for about six months now, and about four of them at least a bag a day on average. I've had enough. I've had enough of this life and I've had enough of all of this. I can't take it anymore. This is not what I wanted with my life. And I am going to change that.

I last smoked heroin on Tuesday, and had some 30/500 co-codamol 4 times a day on Wednesday and Thursday. It is now Saturday night and I have gone 48 hours almost without any opiates. While my heroin addiction has only lasted around six months, the co-codamol addiction started long, long ago and while I have gone without heroin easily before in earlier stages, I never went without codeine.

A few times recently I tried to go without any opiates for a day or two, but the RLS completely destroyed me. It was horrendous. All over my body and I COULD. NOT. BEAR. IT. So yesterday and today for my first 48 hours without opiates I have taken some (read: a fair bit) of gabapentin to help and so far so good. I mean, I feel like complete and utter shit to be quite Anne Frank, but I am alive and well. I am eating, drinking green tea continuously, taking multivitamins and trying to keep active. I have a feeling that tomorrow and monday will be brutal, but a friend of mine is going to give me some diazepam to help on top of the gabapentin.

Depending on how I feel, on monday I'm going to my doctor and I'm going to come clean about what's happened to me. While I can't say all I said here, I want her to hear me out. Of course I expect some judgement, and some criticism. But mostly I hope to receive the kind of support I would have given had I decided to complete my degree. Understanding and intelligent conversation about where we go from here. I'm hoping to get some clonidine and some scripted gabapentin or pregabalin (for the RLS and muscle pain) to help.

I'm stubborn. And once upon a time I was disciplined. I know it's in me. I'm so stubborn that I can annoy myself at times. And this is one of the times I want to annoy myself to bits - I want to be so stubborn to combat the desire to use again. I want to be clean. I want my life back. I want myself back. I want to start the New Year afresh. To begin again.

Thank you for reading my introduction to my recovery. Any sort of interaction at this point would be helpful, be it questions or words of support or conversation. I would say god bless, but I'd rather keep imaginary people out of this - drugs give us enough delusions as it is.
 
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Hey CyanThorn and welcome to BL and recovery.

The RlS dose of gaba from the tarscon pharmacopeia is what I have seen work best.

Your doing great :) and In a couple more days the physical aspect will start to get much better.

The physical dependence aspect turns out to be the easy part. The addiction is where the real struggle lies. Have you come up with a plan to try and deal with it. Stubborn will hold you for a bit, but will fail in the end, so you will need to exspand your aproach.

You have this and your going to love where you end up!! Just be careful your not to stubborn to get there;)
 
Thanks for the response. I really am hoping that the physical aspect gets better in the next few days indeed.

Regarding support there's a local NA on Friday that I'm planning on going to, plus a variety of local addiction support groups that I know of. I'm hoping I feel better enough by Friday to go to this one and get started from there. Regarding the rest of the support it gets tricky - I want to admit to my family and mother what's going on and been going on with me, but I really recoil every time I get close to in fear of some sort of retribution. I think she knows already anyway, but I've known this woman for over 20 years and know when she's likely to go off on one. Does anyone know what the average parental reaction is to this sort of thing? I've been speaking to her about my mental health recently, and how bad things have become for me and how I want to get better, in the hopes that if she knew I knew she knew (oh god) she would understand that I also meant my addiction. I know in the end she'd just want to support me as best she could, but I'm afraid of the backlash at the start.
 
It's hard to say what the average parental reaction to the news of addiction will be.
I learned of my child's heroin addiction recently and my reactions have been all over the board.
Just like there are phases to recovery, I think there are phases to the response to a loved one's addiction.
Initially it hit me like a truck. I nearly feel to the floor. I felt light headed and sick.
Within a half hour I moved to trying to figure out what to do next.
Then I questioned whether or not there would be any commitment to recovery.
Then back to wtf does detox look like?
Scouring the internet for guidance while sitting bedside waiting for the worst.
Frantically searching for suboxone doctors.
Abandoning that idea. Looking for rehab. In or out patient?
Taking care of business and insurance and cash.
Loading up on detox otc meds. Counting the hours in and watching my baby tough it out CT.
Four days in came the feelings of anger and the betrayal. Remembering every sign I should have picked up on. Recalling every story and statement that were actually lies. All the lies. All the bs stories.
Then trying to do recovery myself. Trying to control someone else's process.
Learning about PAWS. Wondering what's going on two weeks later?
Finding Naranon. Unwilling to embrace the idea of detachment.
Finding Bluelight.
Holding on to the words of other users and addicts. I'm so appreciative of the honesty that pours out here. The information and the misinformation. The recovery and the relapse.
BL has given me a much better picture of what people think and go through before, during and after drug use and some of the reasons why they use. As well as some of the reasons some want to quit.
Months later. Still mourning the loss, but still holding on to hope that heroin hasn't stolen my child's soul and future.
It's a process. For everyone.
I hope the best for you and your mother. I hope she gains some understanding. I hope you help her with that. It's going to be a lot for her to digest. And I hope you can reclaim your life.
 
Update:

Tuesday - Last heroin use.
Wednesday - 30/500 co-codamol 4x daily. 2x tramadol 4x daily.
Thursday - 30/500 co-codamol 2x daily. 2x tramadol 2x daily.
Friday - No opiates.
Saturday - No opiates.
Sunday, today! - No opiates!

Last night, I went to my bed around 11pm to play some online games and watch netflix. I'd been feeling generally bearable, though naturally achey and generally like crap, and then when I thought I'd give sleep a go, since I hadn't had any in a couple of days the RLS and associated horrible sensations kicked in like a hurricane all over my body. I took some gabapentin, and it cleared it up so well once again - all hail this miracle substance. I managed to get to sleep and sleep around 5 hours or so, and those few hours felt like a godsend. I don't want to tempt fate but today I feel really, really good. I've been up and about and cleaning and putting up Christmas decorations. Personally, I follow buddhist philosophy (though over this period, I can't say I've done so well. Though that doesn't mean I'm not still philosophically buddhist - think about how you get people who believe in, but don't quite follow their religion's teachings very well) and I haven't observed religious holidays since I was old enough to know better. But alas, my family seem to be in the mood for decorating so I joined in. It was surprisingly uplifting, and after I even had a shower and took my dog to the beach. I made some comments the other day about "oh I feel like my potassium and magnesium are low..." to my mother and she's been throwing multivitamins at me like there's no tomorrow. About two hours ago I took a couple more gabapentin and so far so good.

Regarding what stage of the detoxification I'm at, I'm really not entirely sure. On the wednesday and the thursday, and especially the friday, I felt the worst. The diarrhoea and the sweats and the chills and all sorts were running rampant through my body, and while yesterday I felt bad, looking back I didn't feel as bad as I probably should have. I think that maybe by taking the Co-codamol and the tramadol on the wednesday and thursday, I took the edge off the hard part of the issue - coming off the heroin. In terms of strength, that was the biggie that I was going to have to struggle with compared to the codeine. So I'm not really sure if I'm on day 5 or day 3 technically. Either way, so far so good. I feel a bit chilly and a bit achey, but not in a way I can't handle.

All in all, feeling very positive. Here's to see how the next few days go. :)


@SliceofCake

Thank you so much for sharing your personal story and experience of this with me. It's so nice to be able to get a real-life perspective about this from someone who has been in the position I've had to put my mother through and will do once I tell her. Currently I'm still unsure about how to bring it up and when to bring it up. But your story has given me a bit of faith that while it won't be the easist, I will probably in the end, be looking at a supportive force to help me.
 
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Big yay for you Cyan Thorn!
Keep it up.....
I think the Gabapentin is a godsend also. My kid just happened to be taking 900mg/day when she detoxed. From what I could tell at the time it really limited the RLS. She's still on it and I think she would have had a much worse acute phase without it.


The sooner you let your mom know the better. It will help her understand some of the PAWS you might experience. Plus it will help you mentally to come clean with her. She needs to start her own recovery too. I assume she knows you are physically ill.

I remember now every single time my daughter was dopesick. I'm glad I was there for her when she finally quit. It
gave me a different perspective than just thinking she had the flu (again). I really respected what she was going through, my little tiny girl fighting such a big monster.

I know it's the holidays but your mom obviously loves you. It will be a blow for her to find out, but the best gift you can give her is to show her what you are fighting for- your life. Since she gave you that life she will feel it to some extent too. I'm glad I found out. My daughter's addiction and recovery process has changed me for the better-it's been hard and up and down but a good hard. I'm thankful to have played a small part.

I don't look at drug users the same way anymore. I see them as real people with families and jobs and education and loved ones and some who have lost those things. My daughter lost a very good university education. But not her family. I hope she keeps building it back but her life is very much on hold right now. I understand why and that it will take time to move forward ever so slowly.

Give you mom that gift. Let her help you. Help her learn from it too.

Keep it up-you got this!
 
God, sharing my story of my struggles with opioids, heroin in particular, with my family, namely my mother, was one of the worst mistakes I have ever made. It's sad, but true. In another life I would have gone about sharing that stuff with them in a completely different way. She's the most supportive person in the world, and she's been there through thick and thin for me. But her involvement in my recovery led to years of bad choices and misery that neither of us really had to experience for the situation to improve.

Telling your mother may be a great thing if she is supportive but still will allow you to control your life and your recovery. If telling her about your addiction will get her all codependently paternalistic, controlling and shit, it is best avoided. Generally speaking, unless it's absolutely necessary, I don't advocate people telling their parents about their addiction until it's either A) unavoidable or B) they've already started making good progress in their recovery. It's easier to take for the parent and easier to explain for the addict.

Family is an amazing source of support in this whole thing, but their involvement can make things worse too. Be very careful how you go about involving them if you make that choices - and I hope at some point you do. In terms of when to bring it up, avoid sharing your struggles with your mom when you're depressed or manic, or in any state but calm and collected. Because, chances are with the stigma surrounding addiction and all else, she's not going to necessarily react in the calmest of ways. Some people do, but most tend to flip out a little upon learning their child is a dreaded "addict."

If you're seeing a therapist or social working, bringing your parent or loved one into a session and telling them in that environment is probably the safest, most constructive way of going about it. I'm not sure it's necessarily worth seeking out a therapist just for the occasion, but even then that isn't such a bad idea actually. They will have a lot of questions, and you will almost certainly not have all, or even many, of the answers they're in need of.

Parents want the best for their children, and invariably they often feel they know how best to go about providing it for them. Very, very rarely can a parent successfully help guide a child's recovery, because in reality they will know much less about how to do so than the child will. Recovery is such a personal matter, parental/familial support is only helpful in that it's centered on this principle. Having a parent or family go around telling you all about how to do this and that is very rarely helpful.
 
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Kudos on your new sobriety! A word regarding telling your mother. When you have that conversation, if at all possible, either during that conversation or shortly thereafter, set boundaries and expectations. Both of you, as its a two way street. My parents were a tremendous support to me during my recovery, but sometimes we had unnecessary conflicts. While I wanted their support, as an adult I also wanted to remain independent. However, they came in and took over my recovery process, which led to quite a bit of conflict early on. We finally had to sit down and hash out boundaries. I told them what needed from, what I wanted to included them on, and my plan for recovery. I had to explicitly state what behaviors were acceptable and what were disable takeouts to my continued sobriety. In turn, they shared what concerned them. Initially there were some hurt feelings, but it was short lived. I'm two years sober now and I feel my parents and I have a more honest relationship than we ever did. However, if I would have known about boundaries in the beginning I think it would have minimized the hurt feelings and frustration we did experience. Wish the best for you!
 
Update:

Tuesday - Last heroin use.
Wednesday - 30/500 co-codamol 4x daily. 2x tramadol 4x daily.
Thursday - 30/500 co-codamol 2x daily. 2x tramadol 2x daily.
Friday - No opiates
Saturday - No opiates
Sunday - No opiates
Monday - No opiates
Tuesday - No opiates

Re: Telling My Mother
Hello you guys and thanks for your advice regarding speaking to my mother about this. Yesterday I finally told her what had been going on - the dark place, the self-destructive desires, why I began taking heroin especially. As any parent would be, I think she was horrified and terrified, but she remained calmer and more collected than even I did. I maintained decorum, but naturally it was very emotional for me to tell her some of these things to her face. The woman who raised me, the woman who always supported me, the woman who would always help no matter what. After the main conversation was done about the who, what, where, when and why her reaction was this:

"I have so many mixed emotions going through me right now - but let's get the first one over and done with." I braced myself for an explosion of rage, hurt, disappointment and disgust, and buried my face in my scarf as she walked over to where I sat on the couch. I knew I was in for it, until I felt her arms wrap around me and her tears fall on my face as she hugged me tightly. "I am so proud of you that you have no idea."

I was physically and emotionally stunned. While amongst various emotions I had expected her support, I really didn't quite expect that level of care and love as the first real reaction considering my admissions. I waited for the tirade of rage to come but it didn't - she asked me what support I needed from her, and how could she help and where we went from here. We spoke at length openly about my life and my mental health to a degree I don't think has ever happened before - with the truth about my drug use in the open, we could finally gain some catharsis and mutual comprehension of what had happened and was happening to me. Since, she has been nothing but kind and supportive.

In my home environment, one of my immediate stressors is my sister, younger by two years. I think it's no secret that siblings with such a small age gap are prone to fighting and arguing, but in our case the way she attacks my depression (You're just pathetic and need to get a grip), my current employment situation (You fucking filthy benefit scrounger, get a real job!) and how I left higher education (You're just a disappointment to the entire family) amongst various things.

All in all though, in my family, when it comes down to the nitty gritty there's a sort of unspoken hard-fast rule number one that if somebody needs you for something, truly needs your help, you give it without question. I've identified her as one of my highest risk factors for relapse, and I know that telling her would in the long term result in a form of support in one way or another, but her initial reaction to having a junkie brother is going to be quite the thing to deal with. I think I'd like to leave that battle for until I have a bit more time under my belt.

Re: Support Systems and (ABCDEFGHIJHLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ)A Meetings

You guys mentioned support system and it occurred to me that I hadn't quite gotten that far in my thought process yet. I guess that was kind of stupid of me - what was this detox worth if I couldn't get enough support and relapsed? Of course I had my mother now, but was she truly going to understand me if I explained how I was craving a bag. Her support is invaluable, but can only go so far.

So on Monday, I went to the local CA meeting which is about two minutes from my house, so laziness prevailed. I knew about the anonymous and twelve-step programs, and had read about them and knew fine well that CA was about any drugs, not just cocaine. I knew this, but in my mind I was (and kind of am) still feeling a bit like a fraud - hell, I've never even tried cocaine. I went, with that in mind, terrified.

That first meeting felt like a blur. I felt like Simba in the Wildebeest scene from the Lion King; everything was rushing by and I felt quite overwhelmed. Of course, I'd read quite enough about what anonymous meetings are like and what happens. I knew the structure and I knew the rules, and I knew about the everyone saying certain things in unison at certain times (not that that didn't stop it creeping me out - does anyone else get reminded of the Borg collective voice when they do that?), but experiencing it was a different thing. It was slightly uncomfortable in a way, but most of that I think was due to unfamiliarity with the situation. When you're a drug addict there is familiarity in everything - your entire day, every day is quite routine and simple: get drugs. You see the same people, you go to the same places, you do the same things, you say the same things. It had been quite some time since I'd been anywhere really new like that.

Now once you get past the unfamiliarity, I realised that it was a very positive and nice place. Complete strangers were giving me hugs and sincere support to keep up with detox and abstinence. Some of them gave me their numbers in genuine concern saying to call at any time, even in the middle of the night, if I was struggling. They made me feel welcome and they made me feel good about sobriety. I chose to abstain from saying anything during the meeting, but spoke to people in the intermission and after, and really welcomed the influx of positive energy. As a person, I tend to be negative, be that negativity toxic or ironic. I have a very insult-based and self-deprecating sense of humour, using quick wit comments fired off quickly after someone says something. If you don't know what I'm talking about, you need to watch a bit of Bianca Del Rio performing because you're clearly not paying attention to the right kind of entertainment. My close friends and family who know me, understand it as humour, but that doesn't alleviate the fact that underneath the fake negativity there is real negativity, especially regarding myself. I am very hopeful for the future if I can keep positive influences in my life.

As an LGBT(Well, just G) person, I was a bit nervous about that in the meeting too. I mean, regardless of sexual orientation, addiction is addiction. But when sharing and trying to recover, you really need someone who understands the unique struggles that LGBT people face. I'm not saying it's any better or worse for us, but it's different, with different struggles and different triggers. So imagine my pleasant surprise to find a fellow LGBT addict, and around my age (or rather, someone else asserted we're the same age - I'm 23 and have 0 idea how old he is other than that he's under 30). He was immediately helpful in identifying a local LGBT oriented abstinence group for me, and invited to take me along to it, which was tonight. If he hadn't done that, I might have struggled to go to another meeting on my own. I plan to keep going to meetings as often as possible and have even cleared other commitments to make room for them.

Re: Withdrawal and Detoxing

So I still haven't used any opiates/oids - including loperamide - so that's a positive. I reduced the gabapentin back to the amount I should take for nocturnal RLS normally and it's still definitely eliminating that symptom, which is basically the best help I could have at this point, as otherwise I'd likely be crawling up the walls begging someone to kill me. I've suffered from RLS most of my life, and have mostly coped with it via rocking or gentle, slow, rhythmic leg movements as I tried to fall asleep, and detoxing made it ten to the nth power worse. I'm so glad that finally I have control of that symptom so I can keep recovering.

Regarding the other symptoms I've really been blessed to not suffer so much. Of course, I'm experiencing:

- Muscle aches and pains continually.
- Lack of sleep. I find that I'm getting between one and four hours of sleep per night.
- Extreme tiredness, especially which comes in waves of pure exhaustion where I can barely pick myself up from the couch to go get water.

I've been stubborn though. I have dragged myself from the bed and the warmth and walked my dog for an hour and a half in the mornings and swam for half an hour at the local pool every afternoon. I'm hoping the aches do begin to fade because I'm frankly not impressed.

TL;DR - Today is Wednesday, 16th of December and I've not used Heroin in 7 days.
 
I'm glad you told your mom. I'm glad she's there for you.
She may have her ups and downs, ins and outs and what nots. But I'm glad that for now she is finding the strength to support you.

As for your sister, I get that too. I'm the sister of a deceased addict and the mother of both a non addict and an addict. I wasn't supportive of my sibling and never bought his "bs". I didn't have the same kind of connection that he had with my parents. It was easier for me to detach and safer emotionally. I couldn't deal with the dashed hopes and deceit he brought to our relationship. My parents were supportive and more willing to take chances and just had more hope in general than I did. So I understand that in my own children. I understand how it feels to be robbed of your parent's approval because the addict is drawing all of the attention and approval for another day clean. Sorry , but that's how it felt to me and I can see it in the eyes of my other child.

My opinions about my sibling's recovery had absolutely nothing to do with him or his recovery. I hope he disregarded anything that I might have thought about him. Considering me and my opinions had no positive affect on him whatsoever. It wasn't my life and we shared no deep connection.

My two don't exactly interact in a positive way very often and aren't tolerant of one another in any way. Let alone supportive. That's a place where I need advice and can't give any.

I would agree with Toothpastedog that someone else trying to control your recovery is not tolerable or helpful, but there are amazing humans out there who can at least sometimes step outside of themselves and be supportive. Your mother sounds like one of those people.

Personally I'd rather ride it out with the support of people who love me than continuing the lies trying to get better and fighting the demon on my own. But to each, his own.

Congratulations on your one week!
 
Imo thats the way to do it. Make your recovery priority one and everything else falls into place and blossoms. Most people who descide not to do this struggle hard and most often watch their efforts on all fronts wither.
 
good work. Something that is huge for me...I am the addicted sibling. I did some things and said some things to my brother and we had to have a real heart to heart after I got sober so I could apologize. He always knew I loved him, even if he didn't like me at the time. In fact one of the reasons I am sober today is because he couldn't watch me self destruct. It was his phonecall to my dad that got me started into recovery.
 
I also grew up in a rough environment, but unlike you, I said fuck it very early. I'm a brilliant person who was raised by wolves. I was expelled from school in the first semester of grade nine. I was just too angry at the system by that point. The system really did objectively fuck me as a child... I started doing opiates when I was 20 because I just couldn't handle the pain of my childhood and subsequent depression and anxiety. The funny thing is that I am now 27 and sober and finally ready to go to university and maybe get phd or md. I've wanted it forever, but have never been stable enough to attain that. The reason I\m saying all this is because I identify a lot with the fact that you grew up in a shit show, but also have a head on your shoulders with character to boot!

I think you just one of these people that had something going on inside of them that needed to be worked out. It was gonna show you your folly whether you liked it or not!
I think you'll work it out of your system. You just understand how pointless heroin is and also you have another life that you can go back too. Seriously how hard would it be to get back into medical school? I just saw a lecture by a Dr who was a junkie in med school and he got busted stealing morphine. They kicked him out and he had to earn the right to get back in. He did and its old news now.

Anyway, you seem really cool and I just wanted to say I love seeing that there are people like you out there. It makes me feel not so alone. You just keep being you!
 
Update:
Tuesday - Last heroin use.
Wednesday - 30/500 co-codamol 4x daily. 2x tramadol 4x daily.
Thursday - 30/500 co-codamol 2x daily. 2x tramadol 2x daily.
Friday - Clean!
Saturday - Clean!
Sunday - Clean!
Monday - Clean! Went to CA
Tuesday - Clean! Went to CA
Wednesday - Clean! Went to CA
Thursday - Clean! Went to NA in the afternoon and CA at night
Friday - Clean! Went to NA in the afternoon and CA at night
Saturday - Clean! Went to NA twice in the afternoon and CA at night
Sunday - Clean!

Hello everyone and welcome to my recovery again. I did write a post the other day while sitting in a cafe between meetings and I somehow managed to lose it all and the auto-save-insert didn't work. In retrospect this was probably all for the best because I was having a bit of a hard day and the entire thing was a few hundred words of complete vitriol. I was tired, stressed, second-guessing myself, riddled with guilt and anxiety and had been hugged more times (goddamn meetings) than I would care to count. So without further ado, on to the juicy details:

W/D & Detox
By this point I'm not sure we can consider it withdrawal/detox anymore. I am quite aware that I don't feel 100% fine but I feel well enough that I can mostly pretend that I am. The insomnia is gone, and with it went the majority of the aches and chills, though I still experience them. The aches I can kind of attribute to the exercising which I had neglected for quite some time, and feeling cold can be easily attributed to the fact I live in fucking Scotland and it's the middle of winter. So all in all on that front I feel good. I am waking up in drenching sweats several times a night, but while they're irritating and inconvenient, there are worse things. I am feeling very tired though. I'm forcing myself to walk my dog for an hour and a half every morning and go for short swims at the local pool whenever I have time to. The exhaustion seems to hit my like a 100ft tsunami wave over and over and over and over and over (ad nauseam) and while at first it was so debilitating to be down on the beach with my dog and suddenly be barely able to stay standing let alone fathom the concept of walking a mile home again, I've begun to simply get used to it. The waves are still ready to knock me on my ass, but at least I'm ready to cope with them now.

I'm really just trying to keep myself busy to keep myself distracted and exhaust myself so I can sleep. It's the only real option I can fathom at the moment, so on with it!

Meetings

The meetings have become a staple to my daily routine. I say that as if I've been doing this a while and it's only been a week - does anyone else get this feeling of time moving at a glacial pace? I mean obviously it's natural to consider - when you're using, life flies past faster than you can even imagine so the opposite in recovery is not that much of a stretch to imagine. I'm not sure if it's a feature of me, the meetings or general recovery but the clean people I've met at anonymous, it almost feels like you've known them for years when you've had active interactions with them for only a few hours in total.

The level of familiarity with strangers is still freaking me out a bit - there are very few people I feel comfortable enough even shaking hands with, let alone hugging. The hugging. God the hugging. I'm probably going to get bloody scabies with the amount of hugging going on. I think it's sweet that everyone is so kind, and so positive, but I am a flippant person and outwith my close friends, sometimes quite cold. I hide behind a veil of self-deprecating and insult-based humour to keep people at arms' length so to have dozens of them getting up in my face all day every day for hugs and "We're so proud of you" is quite unsettling. Is part of an aversion to having my self-loathing challenged? I don't know. I have a long way to go on many fronts, but the positivity in the meetings is really helping me. I didn't actually go to one tonight and I can feel the negativity already seeping into my thoughts; I even had to have a mini-meeting with my mother in the kitchen over a cigarette and a cup of tea to get things off my chest an hour ago.

All things considered they're helping me greatly. Hearing people's main contributions and having the platform to share my concerns with more experienced addicts than myself is invaluable. While at times their input may be a little unwanted "WHAT DO YOU MEAN I AM NOT ALLOWED TO DRINK?!?!" they're mostly supportive and helpful.

@d3thadone

Thanks for the support and whatnot! I'm glad to hear you're in a good enough place to follow your dreams now and I would say go get it with all the power in your being! Going back to medicine? I could, yes, but the thing is that I don't want to, at least I don't want to right now. I had grown disillusioned with the profession over time - the medicine that I "signed up for" no longer really existed, or would not exist by the time I was practicing. While science was a huge enjoyment for me in the profession, I hated how doctors are basically becoming little more than prescription and discharge summary machines. They put you into little boxes telling you how to think, act and prescribe. That's what being a practitioner was becoming and I became miserable with it. I know I'd like to work in healthcare, but I don't know where how or what at the moment.
 
Wow, you said you were going to quit and you did. I envy your will power and your willingness to go 100% balls to the walls with this. Congrats!
 
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