font=Comic Sans MS]My Story…………
Addict, Dysthymic & Tired
Part I – The Recovery
I have a lot of empathy and compassion for people. I no longer look at the less fortunate with a sense that somehow they are at fault and responsible for their troubles. Nobody as a little boy or girl wants to grow up to be derelict and bankrupt in every aspect of life; morally, spiritually and physically, but it happens. These people are someone’s son, daughter, brother, wife, mother or father. They were once innocent children who for some reason grew to adulthood feeling that living life on life’s terms was too hard. They chose to live a life of addiction. I went down that road myself and unlike many, I survived.
I moved to Western Washington in 1980 from my hometown. A little town on the east slopes of the Cascade Mountains. In 1981 I landed a job with an office equipment company; where I worked the next eleven years. I was good at what I did. I liked working for commission instead of punching a clock. It appealed to my independent nature. During this time I got married, raised step daughters, bought a house and was by all outside appearances living the dream, yet I was depressed and unhappy.
My wife and I separated in 1989 and were eventually divorced in 1992. I was drinking a lot at this time. By the end of the year I lost the job and had to sell the house. I worked for a few companies through 1994 and finally could work no longer. I was not to work again for the next ten years.
The next eight years were ugly. I became lost; no purpose. I became a Heroin addict. I destroyed dreams and said good-bye to uncountable golden opportunities. I was in and out of treatment centers, hospitals, psychiatric units and jails. I was diagnosed Dysthymic with Major Recurring Depression, declared mentally incompetent to work and put on Social Security in 1997. Sentenced to county jail for six months, court ordered to inpatient treatment for another six months; I was locked up all of 1998. In treatment I met up with a girl. I lived with her and her little boy until 2002. She was diagnosed with Dissociative Identity Disorder. Oh My God! What a pair we were. We were using drugs daily; vacillating between wanting to die and wanting to quit. It was a s