Pubdate: Mon, 13 Aug 2001 Source: The Express-Times (PA) Copyright: 2001 The Express-Times Contact: http://www.pennlive.com/expresstimes/today/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1489 Author: Rudy Miller A MASON'S FOUNDATION: RECOVERY IS A LONG TRIP Xavier Mendoza was setting cinder blocks in place one day when he looked up and had a revelation. It dawned on the 34-year-old mason from Reading that the juvenile center addition he was building sits in the shadow of the imposing walls of the Northampton County Prison. Mendoza may live in Berks County, but he's got a special connection with Northampton County. This is where he got clean from cocaine. And this is where he counseled other people to join him in being drug free, right at the prison on the hill above him. Mendoza blames peer pressure for his decision to try smoking pot when he was 13. He moved to cocaine at 15, and started going "downhill" by 18. He helped bring drugs from New York City to Hudson County, N.J. He had to support his habit. "I'd steal where I could," Mendoza said. He said he used $150 to $200 worth of cocaine a day. The former high school football fullback and tackle weighed 143 pounds at the peak of his addiction, which is more than 100 pounds less than the strapping bricklayer's current weight. A few prison stays convinced Mendoza to get serious about getting clean and on Aug. 28, 1989, he moved to Hogar Crea rehabilitation facility in Bethlehem. "It's like my new date of birth," Mendoza said. He's pleased his father saw his son's life get turned around before he died in May. No amount of reform can make up for what he put his family through, Mendoza admits. The best he can do is to counsel prisoners and addicts about the dangers of drug use. He does it regularly in different states. He plans, while vacationing this December in the Dominican Republic, to talk to addicts there. Laying block in the shadow of the prison for six weeks this summer brought back memories of the early days of his recovery, when he counseled at Northampton County Prison. It wasn't easy, and he wasn't sure he was making a difference. "In there, these inmates, they know the song a lot of people want to hear so they sing it," Mendoza said. He still counsels because it helps him reaffirm his beliefs that the life of a drug user usually ends in one of three ways: death, prison or recovery. Even if only a small percentage of addicts take what he says to heart, it's worth the effort in Mendoza's mind. Life is a lot different for the husband and father of a 2-year-old than it was for the man just trying to turn his life around more than 10 years ago. "I went to see the Phillies on Sunday (July 22) instead of going on Saturday night and getting drunk and feeling awful on Sunday," Mendoza said. "I went to sleep Saturday, instead of being at a club and getting drunk and worrying about being shot at. Then I went to church on Sunday morning." Laying blocks may be a lot less lucrative or glamorous than being a dope peddler, but there's a much smaller chance of a mason being shot at by a rival gang. "An honest living is a hard living," Mendoza said. Drug dealers "feel, they believe in power, money, women. (The drug culture) is far from that. The humbler you are, the further you're going to get." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager