A Fairytale Romance
Samaritan House residents
plan for their dream wedding
In less than one month, long time
partners and Samaritan House residents Chalk and Melanie
will make it official. As winter makes way for spring,
they will get married after more than sixteen years
of partnership.
“It’s the wedding I’ve always wanted,”
beams Melanie, who is 36 years old. “It’s
a fairytale come true.” Her fiancé, Chalk,
who is 40, agrees that life is much richer with their
newfound perspective, after coming to Samaritan House.
“I used to look
forward to my next fix,” says Chalk, now sober
for more than six months. “Now, I look forward
to living. There was a time when, even if I had thousands
of dollars, it didn’t mean anything. This is
a whole lot better way to live.” He believes
that his craving for drugs would have ultimately led
to his death, had it not been for Melanie.
Chalk and Melanie have
been together on and off since 1990. They used drugs
together and lived a very difficult life, while somehow
managing to stick with one another. Melanie was diagnosed
with HIV in 1991, and although Chalk was sure he was
also positive, he did not get tested until more than
ten years later. Melanie has been fortunate that her
natural immune system, combined with self-care, has
allowed her to continue to live without daily medication
to this point.
Chalk is not as fortunate.
Their only time apart
was during an eight-year period when Chalk was in
jail. For the entire time, both of them stayed clean,
and Melanie waited faithfully for Chalk to be released.
However, the allure of street life was too great,
and both fell back into their old habits after he
came home. It was not until Chalk was hospitalized
one of many times that he realized he was at the point
of making a critical life-or-death decision.
“I had a temperature
of 106,” he says. “Until then, I had not
been willing to admit that drugs were killing me.”
Finally, he agreed to get tested for HIV, with the
understanding that no one in his family could learn
of his results. Against his will, Chalk’s mother
learned of his status, causing heated conflict. Still
both he and Melanie agree that having family understand
their situation is better overall.
“The worst thing
is how differently they treat you,” says Chalk.
“Every time I sneeze or bang my finger, they’re
asking me if I’m all right.”
Melanie’s mother
had a different reaction. “I sat her down and
told her, and all she said was ‘is that it?’
I had wanted to keep it a secret, but after I told
her, it was like a weight was lifted.”
It has only been in
the last few years that Melanie has had any contact
with her family. She ran away from home when she was
fifteen, and it was her brother who recognized her
walking down the street. Her brother has since committed
suicide, but not before reuniting Melanie with her
mother. She says they are now quite close, and that
they see each other several times a year.
At first, Chalk was
resistant to the idea of getting help at Samaritan
House. “When Melanie went in to get an application
and take a tour the first time,” he says, “I
stayed outside. He was still struggling with his drug
addiction, although Melanie had been clean for a few
years.
“Now, I’m
much healthier,” he explains, “and I don’t
even have the urge to use anymore. Before, it was
the only way to live. Melanie would tell me I was
her second choice, and now, I understand what she
meant.”
Chalk has regained
his health, and he and Melanie work their recovery
programs together. They find pleasure in encouraging
new residents, and they find strength in one another
as they move toward their future as a married couple.
“I dream ten years ahead,” Chalk says,
smiling. Melanie likes to be a little more pragmatic,
living one day at time.
“First we are
going to work on getting our own apartment through
the Genesis Program (Samaritan House’s off-site
rental assistance program). Then we’ll see about
a house someday, and eventually we’d like to
offer my mother a place to stay with us.”
Chalk believes that
without Melanie’s love and encouragement, he
would not be alive. Instead, they are now one another’s
inspiration, leading each other toward a future filled
with hope and possibility. “I’ve learned
to hold on, to never give up hope,” says Chalk.
“I see people who come here, depressed and angry,
and I know what they are going through. But it can
be better. You just can’t give up.”
“This is my
dream come true,” Melanie says. “I’m
going to have the wedding I have always imagined.
It makes you realize that fairytales really can happen
in real life.”
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