From
the Street to the Straight and Narrow
by Christian D. Piatt
Jackie’s
entire adult life has been marred by addiction. By
the age of sixteen, she was using, and her habits
steadily grew until they became the focus of her life.
For three decades, she actively used narcotics, from
ecstasy to cocaine, heroin, ice and more. Not knowing
anything more than a life within a haze of mind-numbing
drugs, her behavior became increasingly risky. She
descended from carelessness to recklessness, and then
finally to behavior that most would consider suicidal.
“I would do whatever I had
to do to make money, illegal or not.” Jackie
said. While she and her husband were living with her
mother, he died of an overdose on cocaine. Her husband
already suffered from high blood pressure, and the
drugs finally placed an unbearable strain on his heart.
Jackie recalls the day she witnessed his death.
“I didn’t want to live
anymore either,” she said. “I was tired,
but I was too afraid of other types of suicide.”
Instead, Jackie tried to overdose on cocaine as well.
As providence would have it, her efforts failed.
When Jackie was not on the streets
working for her next fix, she spent much of her time
behind bars. Her periods of incarceration were the
only times in her adult life she was clean, she recalled,
before coming to Samaritan House. In these times,
she would sometimes reflect on her situation and wonder
if things could have been different.
“Now I look back on my life,
and I realize most people I used with have HIV now
too,” she said. However, given her self-destructive
patterns, she realized that this was another gamble
with her life. Regularly, she would share needles
with people she suspected were already HIV-positive,
but it was only another part of her attempt to self-destruct.
While in jail, case workers offered
free HIV testing, and Jackie agreed to take the test.
The positive result did not surprise her. But the
case workers had different ideas for Jackie’s
life, provided that they could convince her that her
life was worth saving.
Jackie’s parole officer referred
her to AIDS Outreach Center for support upon her release,
and with nowhere to live, they suggested she visit
Samaritan House. With no other options than the street,
Jackie agreed that this might be the right place for
her.
Samaritan House ended up being much
more for Jackie than a warm bed and three meals a
day. The intensive individual and group counseling
helped her find new strength and potential within
herself that had lain dormant during decades of drug
use. Jackie learned about the twelve-step approach
to sobriety, and began rebuilding her life around
dependence on a higher power, instead of on drugs.
“My life is based on the
serenity prayer,’ she said. “I always
take something away from those (counseling) meetings.
I used to say ‘so what, if I use again I’ll
go back to jail, no big deal.’ Now I wouldn’t
take a piece of candy from the store without paying
for it.” Jackie explained that she views each
resident’s job as staying clean and sticking
to their program of sobriety. At first, the threat
of being kicked out if she tested positive for drugs
was a big motivator to stay clean. Now, she has greater
aspirations in mind for herself.
Jackie has been clean now for six
months: the longest time in more than thirty years
that she has not used drugs, outside of jail. She
realizes that she has not won her battle with addiction,
but instead, she takes each day as a new challenge,
and as an opportunity to make new, healthier choices.
She has worked with her case manager to set up an
educational program for herself that would lead her
to certification as a Licensed Chemical Dependency
Counselor. As do many former drug users in recovery,
Jackie believes that her experiences can help save
someone else from the years of pain and hopelessness
that she experienced.
Jackie looks forward to celebrating
Christmas with her new family at Samaritan House.
It will be her first holiday in recovery since she
was a teenager. “You have to have your mind
made up to leave the streets,” she said. “Don’t
bring the street into Samaritan House. If you’re
not ready to get better, you’re only damaging
yourself.”