a perspective on drug abuse...from one who has been there...
 "I cannot accurately convey to you the efficiency of heroin in neutralizing pain.'" ~ Russell Brand

In yesterday's post, I wrote about the death of actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman and printed a few responses about alcohol and drug addictions. I have found many to be compassionate about the reasons for addictions.
Today, I am posting another commentary, this one is from actor Russell Brand, also a recovering addict. In it, one can feel the pain of what he describes...and just how easy it would be to fall back into that life again. Please read on:
The last time I thought about taking heroin was yesterday. I had
 received "an inconvenient truth" from a beautiful woman. It wasn't 
about climate change – I'm not that ecologically switched on – she told 
me she was pregnant and it wasn't mine.
I had to take immediate 
action. I put Morrissey on in my car as an external conduit for the 
surging melancholy, and as I wound my way through the neurotic Hollywood
 hills, the narrow lanes and tight bends were a material echo of the 
synaptic tangle where my thoughts stalled and jammed.
Morrissey, 
as ever, conducted a symphony, within and without and the tidal misery 
burgeoned. I am becoming possessed. The part of me that experienced the 
negative data, the self, is becoming overwhelmed, I can no longer see 
where I end and the pain begins. So now I have a choice.
I cannot 
accurately convey to you the efficiency of heroin in neutralizing pain. 
It transforms a tight, white fist into a gentle, brown wave. From my 
first inhalation 15 years ago, it fumigated my private hell and lay me 
down in its hazy pastures and a bathroom floor in Hackney embraced me 
like a womb.
This shadow is darkly cast on the retina of my soul and whenever I am dislodged from comfort my focus falls there.
It is 10 years since I used drugs
 or drank alcohol and my life has improved immeasurably. I have a job, a
 house, a cat, good friendships and generally a bright outlook.
The
 price of this is constant vigilance because the disease of addiction is
 not rational. Recently for the purposes of a documentary on this 
subject I reviewed some footage of myself smoking heroin that my friend 
had shot as part of a typically exhibitionist attempt of mine to get 
clean.
I sit wasted and slumped with an unacceptable haircut 
against a wall in another Hackney flat (Hackney is starting to seem like
 part of the problem) inhaling fizzy, black snakes of smack off a scrap 
of crumpled foil. When I saw the tape a month or so ago, what is 
surprising is that my reaction is not one of gratitude for the positive 
changes I've experienced but envy at witnessing an earlier version of 
myself unencumbered by the burden of abstinence. I sat in a suite at the
 Savoy hotel, in privilege, resenting the woeful ratbag I once was, who,
 for all his problems, had drugs. That is obviously irrational.
The
 mentality and behaviour of drug addicts and alcoholics is wholly 
irrational until you understand that they are completely powerless over 
their addiction and unless they have structured help they have no hope.
This is the reason I have started a fund within Comic Relief,
 Give It Up. I want to raise awareness of, and money for, 
abstinence-based recovery. It was Kevin Cahill's idea, he is the bloke 
who runs Comic Relief. He called me when he read an article I wrote 
after Amy Winehouse died. Her death had a powerful impact on me I 
suppose because it was such an obvious shock, like watching someone for 
hours through a telescope, seeing them advance towards you, fist 
extended with the intention of punching you in the face. Even though I 
saw it coming, it still hurt when it eventually hit me.
What was 
so painful about Amy's death is that I know that there is something I 
could have done. I could have passed on to her the solution that was 
freely given to me. Don't pick up a drink or drug, one day at a time. It
 sounds so simple. It actually is simple but it isn't easy: it requires 
incredible support and fastidious structuring. Not to mention that the 
whole infrastructure of abstinence based recovery is shrouded in 
necessary secrecy. There are support fellowships that are easy to find 
and open to anyone who needs them but they eschew promotion of any kind 
in order to preserve the purity of their purpose, which is for people 
with alcoholism and addiction to help one another stay clean and sober.
Without
 these fellowships I would take drugs. Because, even now, the condition 
persists. Drugs and alcohol are not my problem, reality is my problem, 
drugs and alcohol are my solution.
If this seems odd to you, it is 
because you are not an alcoholic or a drug addict. You are likely one of
 the 90% of people who can drink and use drugs safely. I have friends 
who can smoke weed, swill gin, even do crack and then merrily get on 
with their lives. For me, this is not an option. I will relinquish all 
else to ride that buzz to oblivion. Even if it began as a timid glass of
 chardonnay on a ponce's yacht, it would end with me necking the bottle,
 swimming to shore and sprinting to Bethnal Green in search of a crack 
house. I look to drugs and booze to fill up a hole in me; unchecked, the
 call of the wild is too strong. I still survey streets for signs of the
 subterranean escapes that used to provide my sanctuary. I still eye the
 shuffling subclass of junkies and dealers, invisibly gliding between 
doorways through the gutters. I see that dereliction can survive in 
opulence; the abundantly wealthy with destitution in their stare.
Spurred
 by Amy's death, I've tried to salvage unwilling victims from the mayhem
 of the internal storm and I am always, always, just pulled inside 
myself. I have a friend so beautiful, so haunted by talent that you can 
barely look away from her, whose smile is such a treasure that I have 
often squandered my sanity for a moment in its glow. Her story is so 
galling that no one would condemn her for her dependency on illegal 
anesthesia, but now, even though her life is trying to turn around 
despite her, even though she has genuine opportunities for a new start, 
the gutter will not release its prey. The gutter is within. It is 
frustrating to watch. It is frustrating to love someone with this 
disease.
A friend of mine's brother cannot stop drinking. He gets a
 few months of sobriety and his inner beauty, with the obstacles of his 
horrible drunken behavior pushed aside by the presence of a program, 
begins to radiate. His family bask relieved, in the joy of their 
returned loved one, his life gathers momentum but then he somehow 
forgets the price of this freedom, returns to his old way of thinking, 
picks up a drink and Mr Hyde is back in the saddle. Once more, his 
brother's face is gaunt and hopeless. His family blame themselves and 
wonder what they could have done differently, racking their minds for a 
perfect sentiment; wrapped up in the perfect sentence, a magic bullet to
 sear right through the toxic fortress that has incarcerated the person 
they love and restore them to sanity. 
The fact is, though, that they 
can't, the sufferer must, of course, be a willing participant in their 
own recovery. They must not pick up a drink or drug, one day at a time. 
Just don't pick up, that's all.
It is difficult to feel sympathy 
for these people. It is difficult to regard some bawdy drunk and see 
them as sick and powerless. It is difficult to suffer the selfishness of
 a drug addict who will lie to you and steal from you and forgive them 
and offer them help. Can there be any other disease that renders its 
victims so unappealing? Would Great Ormond Street be so attractive a 
cause if its beds were riddled with obnoxious little criminals that had 
"brought it on themselves"?
Peter Hitchens is a vocal adversary of
 mine on this matter. He sees this condition as a matter of choice and 
the culprits as criminals who should go to prison. I know how he feels. I
 bet I have to deal with a lot more drug addicts than he does, let's 
face it. I share my brain with one, and I can tell you firsthand, they 
are total fucking wankers. Where I differ from Peter is in my belief 
that if you regard alcoholics and drug addicts not as bad people but as 
sick people then we can help them to get better. By we, I mean other 
people who have the same problem but have found a way to live 
drug-and-alcohol-free lives. Guided by principles and traditions a 
program has been founded that has worked miracles in millions of 
lives. Not just the alcoholics and addicts themselves but their 
families, their friends and of course society as a whole.
What we 
want to do with Give It Up is popularize a compassionate perception of 
drunks and addicts, and provide funding for places at treatment centers 
where they can get clean using these principles. Then, once they are 
drug-and-alcohol-free, to make sure they retain contact with the support
 that is available to keep them clean. I know that as you read this you 
either identify with it yourself or are reminded of someone who you love
 who cannot exercise control over substances. I want you to know that 
the help that was available to me, the help upon which my recovery still
 depends is available.
I wound down the hill in an alien land, 
Morrissey chanted lonely mantras, the pain quickly accumulated 
incalculably, and I began to weave the familiar tapestry that tells an 
old, old story. I think of places I could score. Off Santa Monica, 
there's a homeless man who I know uses gear. I could find him, buy him a
 bag if he takes me to score.
I leave him on the corner, a couple 
of rocks, a couple of $20 bags pressed into my sweaty palm. I get home, I
 pull out the foil, neatly torn. I break the bottom off a Martell 
miniature. I have cigarettes, using makes me need fags. I make a pipe 
for the rocks with the bottle. I lay a strip of foil on the counter to 
chase the brown. I pause to reflect and regret that I don't know how to 
fix, only smoke, feeling inferior even in the manner of my using. I see 
the foil scorch. I hear the crackle from which crack gets it's name. I 
feel the plastic fog hit the back of my yawning throat. Eyes up. Back 
relaxing, the bottle drops and the greedy bliss eats my pain. There is 
no girl, there is no tomorrow, there is nothing but the bilious kiss of 
the greedy bliss.
Even as I spin this beautifully dreaded web, I 
am reaching for my phone. I call someone: not a doctor or a sage, not a 
mystic or a physician, just a bloke like me, another alcoholic, who I 
know knows how I feel. The phone rings and I half hope he'll just let it
 ring out. It's 4am in London. He's asleep, he can't hear the phone, he 
won't pick up. I indicate left, heading to Santa Monica. The ringing 
stops, then the dry mouthed nocturnal mumble: "Hello. You all right 
mate?"
He picks up.
And for another day, thank God, I don't have to.


drug abuse is an insidious curse for anyone for whom it claims. Your compassion to keep writing stories about this shows that you do care...and do not judge. That is important. There are those who wonder, "but how much should I care?' because after awhile, people just turn away.
ReplyDeleteThere is no such thing as a "former addict" or "former alcoholic." Anyone who tells you this is lying to themselves and to everyone else. They are addicts/alcoholics. Always. The difference is that they take their recovery just one day at a time.
ReplyDeleteAs Russell said, those we may shy away from our those we should embrace. Jesus would embrace them. They are our modern day lepers.
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