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Success Stories"This
is the "thank you" I meant to write you long ago. It is from both Alicia
& I. One fine day, many years ago, you met us at LAX airport. That was the
beginning of the end of Alicia's drug abuse. You took 1 scared, addicted teenager,
and guided her through a process that saved her. You said to me if Alicia stays
here & participates in this program, she will never need another drug-rehab
again. You were so kind, so positive, explaining the Remember
when she ran away & you went out after her? Above & Beyond! I know she
was a tough one to have around all that time, after all, I lived with her all
those years. She kept messing up, she was always on "Ethics" with Pat!
You told me she only knew how to self-destruct & self-sabotage. She never
experienced success, so this was the only road she knew. You all were trying to
show her another road to travel. How about how long it took her to graduate! When
I finally flew to She
thinks so highly of you, all of you at I began using marijuana at the age of 10. My parents had divorced. My father moved away. I was angry and confused about life. I wanted to escape. I wanted friends. As the years went on, I gravitated toward kids that were in similar circumstances as myself. Kids who were from single parent households, who stole, who used drugs, and who had little responsibility. I started to sell marijuana by age 14. It started out small and eventually went into large quantities. All of my hopes and dreams faded away. I lost the motivation to work and succeed in a legal occupation. I had no goals and no self-esteem. To deal with this along with the increasing anxiety of being a drug dealer, I started to go out to clubs to drink, I also started using ecstasy and crack. I found myself in a deeper and deeper pit. I finally realized I needed help when I ruined a nine-year relationship. I was depressed over the loss and the partying only made me feel worse. I didnt know where to go for help. I
went to -G.M. 9/2/02 To Whom It May Concern, I wish to offer my testimony of the ![]() My mother was the granddaughter of Dr. Willard, an apostle in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who loved the prophet Joseph Smith and was with him at Carthage when he was murdered by a mob. As a child I sat at the feet of my grandfather many times to hear stories his father told him about his good friend, Joseph Smith. With an unbending testimony of the gospel of Jesus Christ, I served a full time mission and was 2nd counselor to the mission president. After being sealed to a choice companion in the temple, we have enjoyed bringing 6 lovely children into the world; I have been called to 4 high councils in the LDS Church, 3 stake presidencies, served twice as a bishop and once as a stake president. As chairman of the Denver Temple District, with a membership of 84,000 people, I was responsible for the site selection, zoning, preparation, and daily observed the construction of the Denver Temple. I was released as stake president to serve in the first Denver Temple presidency. Five of our children lived very straight moral LDS lives --- which has included temple marriages for each and full time missions for 3 boys and 1 girl. We now adore 18 happy grandchildren who are all active in the church. One of our children, our youngest son, got involved with liquor, nicotine, and drugs early in junior high school. For ten years we struggled with this terrible experience. Satan had total control. We were on our knees continually and attended the temple weekly, placing his name on the temple rolls. By the time he had reached college age, we had to ask him to leave our house and make his own way. We would love him always but could not contribute financially to his downfall nor allow him to destroy the spirit in our home. When he finally discovered that he could not support his habits by working 4 jobs and trying to get an education, and after a short stay in jail, he woke us up in the middle of the night and asked for a blessing. He said that he wanted to go on a mission (being the only one in 5 generations not to do so weighed heavily) but that he needed and finally wanted our help. We had a friend, Dr. Fila, who has studied drug addiction and rehabilitation for many years. We followed his advice and took our son to ![]() ![]() He was so committed to his ![]() Our son is returned to us -- he is his old, loving self and now goes to the University of Utah full time. What a thrill it was for our family to have all six children seated with their mother and me in the temple prior to his mission and again upon his return. We cannot say enough good about ![]() ![]() ![]() I believe that the program is divinely inspired and would strongly recommend it to anyone. Sincerely, J.B. To Whom It May Concern; I wanted to take the time to write you this letter of thanks. Three years ago, I sent my son to ![]() Patrick was always a hard working young man. When he was in school, he always had a job and although I was well off at the time, he wanted to be self-sufficient. This made me very proud. Upon his graduation from high school, Patrick attended flight school. It was his dream to be a commercial pilot. Although I wanted him to follow in my footsteps, it made me very happy knowing that he was pursuing something that he truly loved. When he was in his mid-twenties, after receiving an honorable discharge from the Air Force, he came to work for me. About one year after he started, I began to notice that something was not quite right. He was losing weight, and he would call in sick often. He was also struggling financially, which I would not understand because he was making good money. At first, I thought that perhaps he was just under a lot of stress because his marriage was failing. He then started to disappear for days, coming up with unbelievable excuses for his absence. I did not want to face the truth, but I knew that my son might be on drugs. I would ask him if he was having a drug problem, and he would deny it. It was difficult because I did not have much reality with this sort of thing. He was always such a good person, why would he lie to me? One day his wife called and told me that she was concerned. She said that Patrick had left the house on Friday night and had not returned home. It was Sunday night. I asked her if she thought that he was on drugs and she replied yes. We then started to make plans to get him into treatment. When he returned home, his brothers and I confronted him, and he admitted that he had been using crack cocaine for the last six months. He agreed that he needed help. To make a long story short, the next three years were a living hell. We sent him to eight different rehab centers, some of which were supposed to be the best in the country. He would get out of treatment, and soon afterwards he was on cocaine again. I could tell that for the most part, he seemed as though he wanted to stop, but he could not maintain any long-term stability. I gave him opportunities, including accepting him back to work more times than I would like to recall. It got to the point where the family just did not know what to do for him anymore. All that we wanted was our Patrick back. I would have given anything that I owned if I thought that it would cure him. It was something that he seemed to really enjoy. While he was in Florida opening up an office, I received a call that he had not shown up for work for a couple of days. I immediately knew that he was using cocaine. I was furious. At that time, I was at my wits end. I still loved my son, but I hated him for what he was doing to himself and the family. We brought him back home to Cleveland, not knowing what we were going to do. A friend of mine had seen an ad for ![]() We called ![]() You told me that you could help my son, and you did. I sit in my office writing you this letter three years later with the sincerest of thanks and gratitude for what ![]() ![]() Sincerely, S. G. L. September 4, 2002 To: Shannon I am writing this letter to let you know what a positive experience I have had talking to the staff at your facility and how ![]() ![]() ![]() Jason left for ![]() ![]() ![]() Sincerely, E.J. July 23, 2002 To Whom It May Concern: As a nationwide businessman, I am writing to strongly encourage you to approve the proposed application of the ![]() I can tell you first hand, as my son went through their treatment program, what a quality, full service organization ![]() ![]() Sincerely, C. J. E. September 5, 2002 To Whom It May Concern; Approximately two years ago, my daughter Sabrina, was suffering from depression, an eating disorder and methamphetamine drug addiction. She had low self-esteem, saw herself as having no future and was ready to give up and surrender to drug addiction as a way of life. Being a father who has built a very successful business as the exclusive developer for the Sandwich Franchise in the State of Arizona, and had achieved financial security with 220 open Restaurants in Arizona plus another 30 added each year, still as a parent, I felt a certain helplessness that I couldn.t keep my daughter off of drugs. Sabrina had some experience with the traditional twelve-step drug rehabilitation program with little success. I was looking for something different. . . . A program that could teach Sabrina about the basics of life, how to re-invent her life, find her own path to happiness and also to beat drug addiction. After much searching we found out about ![]() Today, with the help of the ![]() ![]() ![]() Sincerely, R. V. S. Dear Shannon, Please accept this as an open letter of appreciation to ![]() As a successful entrepreneur and businessman responsible for million dollar payrolls and hundreds of employees, I always felt confident about my abilities to face and manage problems and issues. I was equally confident that I could deal with whatever issues and problems were involved in building a marriage and helping to raise our 3 sons. In fact I was very confident about .life. until our son Chris became involved with DRUGS in his freshman year of high school. The lectures and discussions on the dangers of smoking pot seem like they took place yesterday, but it was actually 25 years ago. Unbelievable! It didn.t take long for that confidence to give way to frustration and futility. Unfortunately we all became slaves to his addiction. It didn.t take 25 years to recognize: 1) the distance traveled between smoking pot and becoming a hapless crack addict is barely perceptible 2) .Getting clean. means nothing without being given the .hands-on, real life. tools necessary for that addict to make life style changes. My message to you is simply that Chris has been in a great many formal and informal rehab programs, ONLY ![]() Contrary to what some may say, ![]() Shannon, as you know Chris is currently part of the staff. The fact that he is a productive part of society and making a contribution is a credit to the ![]() ![]() Respectfully, G. S. C. September 6, 2003 To Whom It May Concern; In 1995 my husband and I were overwhelmed with worry, guilt and anger because of our son.s drug use. We did not know his drug of choice and we did not know the extent of his habit. What we did know is that he was lying to us continuously; his choice of friends was questionable based on their appearance and social behavior. Ed always was concerned about his appearance and that never changed, but his surroundings and those around him showed a total disregard for his family, our privacy and our belongings. By 1995, Ed could not hold a job or continue with his own business as a contractor. He would be gone for 2-3 days, come home, and pretend to be working on a project or going to school for a new career. At this time, Ed was 26 years of age and the only hope we had, was that he came from a good family with strong values, and we hoped that his foundation and family love would bring him around to get help. We continued to accuse, ask, pry, yell, cry and beg for him to get help. He would tell us he did not have a drug problem and he did not drink. Things were going to get better after this class, or another job opportunity was on the horizon. There was always a good story. A good excuse. A reason for the insanity. When you love someone, you allow yourself to have a lot of hope. You want to believe, that all will get better. How could we have raised a son to be so totally useless? One that would lie? A son that showed no remorse for his behavior. A son that showed no awareness of what he was doing to his brother, parents and other family members. During this time, I would make several calls to drug rehab centers, but no one wanted to talk to the mother of an adult with a drug problem. We got counseling from friends, family and professionals. They suggested tuff love, .He will change when he is ready. or .When he wants to get it together he will.. We considered having him leave and move out of our home. I could not do this because then I feared our next call would be from the morgue. It now sounds so ridiculous but at the time these were real fears. In September of 1999, my husband arrived at my office to tell me that Ed was in jail. That night, after the tears, we slept well, knowing that he was not doing drugs and knowing he was not dead and knowing that a call was not coming tonight. While Ed was in jail, I again tried to locate someone who could give us some hope regarding a rehab program. Our attorney advised us to locate Ed in a drug treatment center far away from home. Now we had to locate a facility and make a big decision. I started my newest research on the Internet. I went to a search engine and pulled up multiple drug rehab facilities. Some were for 28 days and some were gender specific, some were reaching out from specific religions. My psychology degree armed me with the knowledge that someone is probably not going to change behavior in 28 days. I wanted a long commitment, a minimum of 3-4 months. I wrote to all of the centers with programs that had the smallest suggestion of hope. I gave my home number, my cell number, and my office number. These were all private programs. I was looking for a program that had a good location because I knew someone coming up again to face the world, needed to have a good feeling about themselves and their physical surroundings. I liked the information the ![]() Within 24 hours, someone from ![]() Ed was in jail for approximately one week and two representatives from ![]() ![]() The ![]() ![]() My husband is a retired fire fighter and I am the owner of a Real Estate Office in Northern California, I am also the President of my local REALTOR Association. We are active in our community and with our families. The ![]() ![]() D.S. September 5, 2002 To Whom It May Concern; Our son was in a 12-step rehabilitation program for heroin addiction, prior to coming to ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As he progressed through the steps involved in the program, we saw the son we always knew, emerging again. The supportive environment and staff dedication at ![]() Our son has been drug free for 14 months; ![]() ![]() M.W. For
over the last 10 years of my life I have been killing myself with drug use or
I've been struggling to get off them for good. Regardless, my life has been plagued
with anything but happiness and freed living. The daily habits and routines of
drug dependency are extremely difficult to let go of to say the least. I truly
believed I was the only one, the only who truly who had a unique conflict that
didn't allow me the luxury of ever learning to trust myself enough to unconditionally
confront life without drugs. I had to learn for myself I can handle, right or
wrong, anything that came my way in life. I had finally hit a point of complete
and uncontrollable disaster about 4 months ago. Prior to that, I had been through
a rehab. In Miami FL. and it just didn't help my situation. I found the help I
needed here, where above all else, I have been able to regain the control in my
life that I need in order to be happy. I need to forever say thanks to John, Nick,
Larry, Shannon and especially Dave... I will miss you all. When
I first arrived at I
never knew it could feel so good! And it's without drugs. They said it would happen
and it did. I can't wait to start my new life like this. I've gotten so many good
tools to work with now, I know I'm going to do great. I really am thankful to
everybody for all the help, I needed it. It's really nice to find out who I really
am and I'm sure some people back home are going to be pleasantly surprised. Just a short note to say 'many thanks' for the helpful tour of your facility. Both my wife and I were impressed with the program and the dedication of the people involved. More
impressive is the result we have seen in our son. With your help (and that of
our Creator) he has gained back his life after twenty years of lost time. Enthusiastically
he is looking forward to productive and enjoyable remaining years. Even I have
learned from watching his growing maturity during the four years since he left
Newport Beach. I
first came to Here while doing the program, something inside me clicked. I knew then that this would work. All I needed was someone to tell me how to do it; how to stay away from drugs. I knew that the rest was up to me. I
now know that the ability has always been within me. The problem was I didnt
realize it was lying dormant. Now with the technology of L. Ron Hubbard and the
guidance of the great staff at Because of me doing this program, the communication with my entire family has been restored. I am grateful for this because they all were there for me. I was the one who had withdrawn from them. Im back as a whole human being. I am grateful. -R.S. By the age of 32, I had abused alcohol for 16 years. At that time, I had lost a career, a spouse, and was on the verge of never being able to see my 3-year-old daughter again due to the fear that had been created in my ex-wife over my lack of control regarding my drinking. My mother was at wits end, and was also soon to wash her hands of me. In
taking one final chance to salvage her son, my mother brought me to Fortunately,
I had around the clock care. This was probably the most vulnerable time in my
life, and with me by my side 24 hours a day during this time was a dedicated staff
member of After
a few more days of this treatment, I was gradually integrated into the actual
program that After getting through the communication exercises and that had helped me to calm down to a strong degree, I was informed that I would be doing the sauna portion of the program. Okay, I was feeling a bit better, so I figured Id give it a shot and last it out a little bit longer. I still didnt feel as if I was cured. As a matter of fact, I hadnt even started addressing alcohol in the two weeks that I had been there. I hadnt talked about it once to any of my counselors, and therefore didnt feel as if I was making any progress. In doing the sauna portion of the program, I started to feel much better physically and mentally. I started exercising and was on a strong vitamin regiment combined with sweating the impurities out of my body. By the time I was done with this portion of the program, I had regained some confidence in myself. I could actually run several miles relatively easily and was overall just feeling physically fantastic. Hmm, there might actually be something to this stuff after all I thought. From this point on, I started focusing on the technology and learning what I could from it. I had been around for just over a month by now, was feeling very good, had a clear head, and was starting to feel that life was pretty manageable after all. The materials that I learned from this point on made a tremendous amount of sense to me. Much of what I was learning also had a familiar sense to me as well. Like I had known it through my upbringing, but just never had it explained to me in such a concise manner. These materials emphasized such things, as making sure you understood something when you read it, treating others the way that you would want to be treated, establishing a good sense of the reality of the world around you, developing and staying with a moral and ethical code, and staying away from negative influences in your life. By the time I had read all of these materials, I was recognizing within myself that I was not a terrible, awful person, but just somebody that had gone against the basic principles that my family and friends had instilled in me as I was growing up. Well, I could correct these negative traits about myself, and with each new principle read, I indeed did so. I was also helped during this time in putting these principles into application with my family and friends. I was encouraged to restore communication with my loved ones. I was terribly afraid of doing so at first. The anxiety that I went through the first time that I called my ex-wife was incredibly strong. By the time I was done with that first phone call, I was extremely grateful for those communication exercises that I went through in the beginning. These allowed me to be as comfortable as I possibly could despite the anxiety. The amazing part of it was, with each phone call, it became easier and easier to communicate. I was beginning to recognize more so, that my loved ones really did care about me and were just interested in me doing the right things in life and not causing any havoc in any of our lives. By this time, I began to recognize that alcohol was not the problem. It was all of the social skills that I had been lacking in that was the true problem. With each correction of my skills, I was soon becoming quite confident in my ability to deal with the everyday problems of life without turning to alcohol to escape them. And with each new victory in confronting these problems, my confidence grew, until finally, I had completed the program that had been laid out. I felt very, very good. I had been doing the right things for about four months. I had restored the good feelings of my family, my friends, and most importantly in my life at the time, my daughter. For the first time in my life, I knew I had the capability of being a father. I also knew that I had the ability to be a friend, an employee, a husband, or anything else that I so desired. Since
the day that I graduated the program, there have been many, many situations in
life that I have had to face that were difficult. But I had learned that life
is made of situations and problems that need to be sorted out and dealt with.
I had learned that if I didnt solve these situations with the best resolve
that I had, that I would not feel good about myself. But that if I did solve these
problems, I would feel much better about myself. Pretty simple, actually, succeed
or fail. And I had been given the tools to succeed, again. Once by my upbringing,
and again through I am forever grateful that I was given the opportunity to turn my life around for the better. I dont believe that I would have ever done so on my own accord. I know that regardless of whatever occurs in life from here on out, that alcohol and/or drugs is not the solution to the problem, and that these could only make the matters worse. I enjoy the confidence of family and friends alike, that I will do all in my power to ensure that I never betray, and wont through alcohol or drugs. Life is too good and enjoyable when one is doing the right things and displaying the reasons why one is loved. Im
proud to say that I have now been sober for almost six years now. I have my head
on straight, I think with the foresight of the consequences of my actions, and
only act with the best interest of others in mind. Without a doubt, I never would
have felt or behaved this way if it werent for the fact of doing the -D.W. My name is Ed. Im 30 years old. I started using drugs when I was 15 years old, smoking pot. By the time I was 20 years old, I was using speed (methamphetamines) and cocaine. I began to manufacture methamphetamines and was busted and put in jail. When
I was in jail by myself, I was thinking that this is it. Its over, but how
do I really get out of it. For years my parents had asked me to get help. I would
say, No, Im fine. So, when I asked my parents to get me out
of jail, they asked me if I was ready for a program. I said I would do whatever
it takes. They got me out of jail and into a rehabilitation program, I have to say that when my parents said that it was a 3-4 month program, I thought my life was over. It sounded like forever because I really didnt want to change yet. For the first few weeks of the program, I was very negative. But, after seeing how nice the people are and teaming up with another student, the program started to work for me. After a month, I knew that I was never going to use drugs again. Now,
after learning the technology from -E.S. I
grew up on the east coast in a tight-knit, highly educated Catholic family. I
went to Catholic schools until I graduated from high school and flew off to attend
U.C. Berkeley. There I studied physics, calculus, and English. In my second year
of college, I became an alcoholic and began an odyssey that led me to When I was 26 I found AA, a fine institution; and I stayed sober for some seven years. That was not enough; that was not real sobriety; something was clearly wrong. During my years of sobriety I finished my BA and MA and earned CA Teaching Credentials and started my career as a language teacher. I had and took the opportunity to work throughout California, the Caribbean, and South America. I did professional research and delivered presentations at international conventions, but I never nailed what wasnt quite right in my life, and I ended up drinking again. This started a roller coaster of drunkenness and dryness, of horrible times and okay times. It ended in lost jobs, a failed marriage, DUIs, a stint of homelessness, and a jail sentence. No matter what Ior otherstired, I could never put together another entire year of sobriety.
Not
too long into my three-month stay as a student at The
eight-course program, built book upon book, literally showed me the way to happiness.
The courses and the people who delivered the program to me utterly empowered me
in every aspect of my life. At Every
time I left other twelve-step program, I left them sober and with good intentions.
But I always reverted to my old ways. That is because the other programs did not
help me discover the cause of my addiction, the why of all my problems and the
how of handling them. When
I graduated from God Bless, J.A. I always thought of myself as a philosopher. From as early as I can remember Id been looking for truths that would make my life make sense to me. I grew up in a religious family, a Quaker family, and in a family that liked to help other people. My search led me into different locations and into different schools of thought, and finally to experimentation with drugs. I sought out drugs in order to expand my world, but I ended up totally trapped and confused. I had no idea, nor could I fathom the complexities of that trap. I always considered myself to be well disciplined, a good athlete, a good musician, and a good friendyet that discipline and strength that I was so proud of was just not there when confronted with the trap of drug addiction. I spent fifteen years trying to find my way out of this seemingly unsolvable maze. Somehow,
and I consider it a miracle, I found -N.K. I
would like to write this success story attesting to my completion of the -P.L. Just the other day, my best friend, who also happens to be my older brother said to me, "you truly are back and in better shape than ever before." To understand the significance of this statement you would first have to understand the years of disappointment, concern, and disgust my drug addiction caused to those I care about and even eventually to myself. It wasn't enough that I disappeared from their lives, but that I only reemerged when it served my need, to ask for money or favors or even to blame them for my own mistakes. Thanks
to the basic life skills that the I can not tell you how empty I was inside or how dim my future looked while on drugs because I barely remember myself. I can tell you I was all consumed with chasing my chemically induced high which preoccupied a 15 year span of my life. This was my pursuit of happiness. Since gaining the viable tools to battling my abberated behavior I have gained back all those lost years and lead, by example, a very productive and fulfilling existence in which everyone wins from my hard work. And in response to my brothers statement, "You bet I am!" -G.F. I
have been a cocaine addict for 20 years nonstop. Everyday, every night for 20
solid years. During that time I tried to quit, but of course after 2-3 days I
failed. Also I tried NA and AA, but that failed. I also tried a sober living house,
but that also failed. I was doomed to either be an addict the rest of my life
or die. Dying looked like the best way out at the later stages of my addiction.
I called my mother one last time and she said there is a place that had a 78%
success rate. I jumped at the chance to have a cure. I came into -J.E "This
is a letter of thanks and recognition to all those associated with the work, endeavors
and promise of As
Christian parents we struggled with concerns over Our twenty year old daughter reached the bottom with a smorgasbord of drugs, raves and destructive lifestyles. Most of her friends only added to the spiral of lies, cheating and misinformation that take up all of an addicts time when relating to those who love them. Loss of her job, loss and distancing from productive friends, her feelings of worthlessness and emotional depression brought the whole family perilously close to a tragic ending. As
we approached the reality of a tragic end for our daughter, an internet web search
and analysis brought In
the end it is up to the individual addict to want to rise up from the hell of
their addiction. Our daughter now has the opportunity to be a happy, productive
member of society. That chance is directly a result of the love, care and tools
provided by the staff of Both
my wife and I stand ready to communicate through "I
have spent the last 6 years in a constant state of panic and worry over my daughter's
life style. She has been through treatment program after treatment program and
would only manage to stay off drugs for two or three weeks and than she would
fall. Night after night I would go without sleep worrying if my child was in jail
or god forbid even dead. I will never forget the day I first learned of the "John
is my son, and I love him very much. But up until a year ago, I thought Id
lost him forever. He had gotten addicted to cocaine, and no matter what we did,
he couldnt seem to stop. Hed become a different person, an unreliable,
angry, selfish young man who didnt seem to care how badly he hurt our family
or himself. We stood by him while he went through treatment after treatment. But
it seemed hopeless. Hed stay clean for a few weeks or months and then disappear.
Pretty soon wed get a call from the hospital or the police or his girlfriend,
telling us that John was in trouble again. It didnt seem like John was going
to be able to stop using drugs on this side of the grave and it was tearing us
apart. Im a doctor, and I felt that if anyone should be able to help, it
should have been me. But the cravings were just too strong for him to overcome.
Things seemed pretty grim. Then we heard about My
name is Marlene. Im the sister of someone who went through the The
first time I walked in the
This
is a great program. It had been so long since the time when I wasn't doing one
type of drug or another, that I always felt "if I'm not high, I'm not happy".
Well, this just isn't so anymore. I'm not high on drugs and I'm happy. This is
a great success for me. All the staff members here helped me each in their own
different way. They put up with me and helped me with my problems one by one.
I thank each and every one of them for their time taken and will remember them
forever. This is not an easy job and they all deserve sincere congratulation.
And for me, I now have myself back to start a new life without drugs. I
was not your typical drug user, but then again maybe I was because there are a
whole lot of people that abused drugs that came from "good" families.
My parents, both physicians, were also both alcoholics and prescription drug users.
I went to a fine private school right here in California. By the time I was 16,
I had already been to Europe, Hawaii, Africa, Japan, China, Greece and South America.
I had a car when I was 16 and carried a 3.8 grade point average in school. I was
a national merit scholar and high school All-American. I was even accepted to
play on the US National Volleyball Team. I also used drugs on a daily basis from
the time I was 15 years old. I came back to California because my mother was dying
of cancer. A year later she and my father both died within 40 days of each other.
Thus began 4 years of "hell" in which I spent close to 1 million dollars
of money and merchandise on crack. I was smoking about an ounce of crack a day.
I got pregnant 3 times, losing 2 babies, and at seven months pregnant I was arrested
twice facing a jail term of at least three years. On Feb. 17, 1993 I entered the
I
am 52 years old. I began using drugs when I was around 13 years old. By the time
I reached
For
20 years I don't think I ever told my parents the truth. Maybe part of the truth,
sometimes, but realistically my relationship with them was based almost entirely
upon lies. I've realized that this makes life very complicated! Which lie are
we talking about today Mom? I had to have this huge additional mental filing system
just to keep track of what I had told my folks. I
don't know exactly what to say about the Being
drug free is the most wonderful feeling in the world. Go for it! I have learned
so much along the way. |
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