Pubdate: Sun, 30 Dec 2001 Source: Contra Costa Times (CA) Copyright: 2001 Contra Costa Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.contracostatimes.com/contact_us/letters.htm Website: http://www.contracostatimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/96 Author: Theresa Keegan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) FROM ADDICTION TO RECOVERY -- A DAY AT A TIME Looking At The Face Of Recovery From Drug And Alcohol Abuse. Tom Aswad: Personal Struggle Makes Him An Advocate For The Addict When Helping To Develop Drug Policy FOR MANY, the faces of addiction reflect the faces of loss. Missed opportunities, broken dreams, criminal records and cycles of destruction mark lives that are scarred by drugs and alcohol. But hidden among the faces, amid the failures that grip headlines, are people who wage a successful battle against addiction. People who turn their lives around and defy the odds, those who take control and will no longer be controlled by the substances that once ruled their destinies. People in recovery, just like addicts, are found in all walks of life, in all neighborhoods and in all cultures. But unlike addicts, those in recovery display a strength of inner character that would leave others quaking. They'll never fully conquer their addictions, but they've learned recovery means not giving in. Addiction is a way of their life, and if they don't want to get sucked into its deadly vortex they must fight that battle every time it surfaces. "You need to put as much effort into your recovery as you did in using," says Tom Aswad of Walnut Creek, who has been in recovery for 11 years. There are nights when he's tempted to ignore the support systems of recovery, to go on as if everything is just fine. But then he remembers an earlier time, a time when he'd move heaven and earth just to quench his addictions, and so he puts the same effort into his recovery. "No one has more will power than addicts," he explains. But while the negative effects of that willpower is well documented, when it is devoted to recovery, it isn't publicized, ironically because many recovery programs succeed because of anonymity. "Our successes are anonymous," says Aswad, "our faces are failures." It's the Richard Downey Jr.'s of the world who get the media attention, but their failures are but one aspect of a complex situation. "I know a lot of people in this county that are in recovery that very visible, successful people," says Aswad. "(However) The recovery community is not organized to advocate for itself." As an active member and former chairman of Contra Costa's Alcohol and Other Drugs Advisory Board, Aswad personally knows how hard it is to get help for treatment and recovery programs. Part of the challenge is that addiction is too often viewed, both by society and government officials, as a moral and social issue, rather than a physical problem. It's been 45 years since the American Medical Association classified alcoholism as a disease, explains Aswad, yet stigmas still remain. And those stigmas are part of the reason assistance has been slow in delivery. Officials estimate that 80 percent of alcoholics and 70 percent of drug addicts are gainfully employed, but people still equate abuse with the homeless man living near the railroad tracks. "Denial is a big factor in all this," says Harold Parsley, current chair of the county's advisory board. And it's not only the addicts who are in denial. "There are so many people who don't think there's a drug and alcohol issue in their community, that it will affect their children" says Parsley. "In the more affluent parts of the county, the denial is there. There's no area in the county that the people should be in that state of denial. There's no community that is not susceptible to this type of thing." Yet even while he is explaining the problem of denial, Parsley won't identify for a newspaper article specific communities where he'd been told there are problems. When pressed, the most he'll says is there are several areas, including some in south Contra Costa, where drugs and alcohol are being abused by youth. He admits that cloak of secrecy is incongruous to people talking about the problems, but doesn't quite know how to address the situation. "You'd be surprised at the number of kids who come home at night, both parents work, the kids come home, the parents are in bed, they have no idea what their kids were doing that night. It isn't only the poverty stricken that are the ones afflicted. When there's more money ... the kids have access to drugs and alcohol." Aswad knows first hand the difference between being an addict with money and being an addict without money. "If you come from a family that has money, you get treatment," he says. It's an inequity he's battling, because he knows that although law enforcement may treat the wealthier better, and more treatment options exist, addiction is a disease that strikes equally hard, whether you're rich or poor. "This disease will pick you up wherever you are in life and drop you off at the bottom," says Aswad. For him, the bottom came when he was 31 years old. His successful real estate business, beautiful house and beautiful cars portrayed a fulfilled life by all traditional measures. "But I had nothing. My life was ruled by things that weren't healthy for me," he says. "It was out of control." It had been almost 20 years since he started partying in junior high, and he was determined to change the path he was traveling down. His 11 years in successful recovery, using the 12-step programs, have given him a perspective that many people developing policies don't possess, and it's made him an advocate for all addicts in the county. Aswad was outraged that it's taken three years to finally get a commitment to place a bathroom in a building that houses a support program for pregnant addicts, so their children can be born drug free. When a 1997 study revealed that only 99 children were receiving treatment with county-subsidized funds, he fought to redirect priorities. For 2000-2001, that number increased to 421 youth, but he's frustrated there's still a 200-person waiting list for adults seeking treatment beds. "Where better can we spend our money?" queries Aswad. He explains that alcohol and drug abuse are the root of many problems our government addresses, including homelessness, domestic violence, criminal activity. He hopes that at some point, more effort will go into prevention and treatment, as well as recovery, because a life without drug abuse is a life worth living. "I'm inspired by the lives, I see changed. It's a blessing to be part of that." Veronica King: After Years Of Denial, Her Healing Began With Honesty VERONICA KING knows all about denial. She knows all the symptoms, all the drawbacks, all the end-runs around this most basic emotion. "I didn't consider myself an addict," she says. "I was functioning. ... I had all the 'look goods,' the things that made me socially acceptable." For almost 20 years, since she was 14, she'd been using drugs. Her teen-age experiment with smoking weed evolved until cocaine became her drug of choice. "I was basically a shy person and coke gave me that extra courage to be outgoing -- that's what coke did for me originally," she said. "In the end it gave me isolation." By the time she had her first encounter with the law, at age 34, King had stolen from her family, sold herself on the streets, dropped from 180 to 102 pounds in a year, and hurt the people she loved. But still she thought everything was under control "I was too far gone to see I wasn't OK," she said. "We see things one way and that's how we believe things are. Everyone I was surrounded by was doing the same thing." King's first encounter with the law landed her in jail for three months. She emerged an unchanged woman. "I was too scared to reach out," she said. But four months later she was arrested again and something finally snapped. "That's when I'd seen what I'd become. Maybe it was the idea of going back to jail, the isolation. Maybe I was just tired." Whatever the reason, in 1992, at age 34, King knew something had to change. "Prior to that, there were so many times I cried, saying I wanted something different, but I didn't know what to do." The answer was painful, but she discovered the crucial first step to recovery: honesty. Deep-rooted honesty not only with herself, but also with someone who could help her. King's probation officer was the key. "I just got honest and she kind of guided me in the right direction. That's when I started right in the program." Her intensive, residential treatment program was a painful process. Not only was it a challenge to do the daily tasks, to conform, to follow rules, to get up every morning and fix breakfast, but the personal journey was also difficult. "When I started to open up and started feeling things, it wasn't fun," recalls King. "It didn't feel good, looking at the people you'd hurt, the things you'd done. A lot of times I didn't know what I was feeling, I just knew I was feeling uneasy." There were times she wanted to stop the treatment and recovery process, but, thankfully, her support network had become too strong. "I had women around me, telling me that it was going to be OK. Those are things I'd done, but that wasn't what I was." Despite the pain, King remained in the treatment program for more than six months. "I started to believe it would get better, and yes, it got better." When she finally left the program, King knew she couldn't move back to her Richmond neighborhood. Entering that environment was just too tempting, too dangerous. Instead, she moved to East Contra Costa and spent two years rebuilding her life, but it was lonely and she was in turmoil. And then, finally, one day while riding BART to visit her mother in Richmond, she had a revelation. She admits it sounds wacky, but it was a moment that changed her life. "A voice told me it was OK to go back to Richmond," she says. The insight proved to her what was already obvious to the people who'd helped King through recovery. "You're not the same person going back who you were when you left." She moved back to Richmond and immediately surrounded herself with a support network that would be there, should she be tempted to use drugs again. "It's so important to reach out and feel OK to who I'm reaching out to," says King. "A lot of times I feel guilty and, on the other hand, I feel blessed." Her life experiences have brought her from a role as an assistant in the Ojima treatment program to her current position as a counselor at the methadone drug clinic. "I bring understanding and compassion," King says of her job. "I care. I sincerely, honestly care about the quality of people's lives. ... And most important, I try to make them see they're somebody and they're important and they do count." It's a message that fell deafly on King's ears for years, which is why she is now so adamant about compassionately, but deliberately, delivering it to the people she counsels. "When I was down, I just felt like no one cared about me," she says, choking up at the memories. "I think they did, but when you feel like that, even when people do (care) you don't see it. "One of the biggest things I had to do was make amends to my family. Because of the damage I did, I feared they wouldn't accept me back. ... (But) over time I earned their love and their trust back." And being a counselor in her hometown has its own rewards. "It's more meaningful for me," says King. "I feel like I'm giving back to the community I took from." But even though she now guides others through treatment, King knows her own addictions, experiences and vulnerabilities don't go away. "I'll be in recovery the rest of my life." Shayne Kaleo: After Past Failures, She Now Has A Better Understanding Of Addiction And Recovery. WHEN SHAYNE KALEO'S boyfriend called the cops on her, just one emotion surfaced: anger. How dare the man she loved, whose child she had borne, betray her in such a manner? "Believe it or not, it was the best thing," admits Kaleo. The arrest hurled her on the road to recovery, a route she'd traveled down -- but unsuccessfully -- before. This time, with her two youngest children placed in protective custody, Kaleo finally pursued recovery with newfound fervor. "I thought I could do it by myself," she says. "I had a lot of mistaken beliefs." In fact, when the 90 days of her treatment program were completed, Kaleo asked to stay an additional month. This time around, she wants to get it right. The mother of five (the three oldest live with family members in Hawaii) never wants to risk losing her children, now ages 6 and 2, to the foster care system again. "It's not like things are hunky-dory, but I'm working toward getting it there." Like most addicts, Kaleo, 32, was able to hold down a job and therefore assumed she didn't have an addiction problem. "I thought as long as everybody was provided for, it was cool, it was OK." The residential treatment program in Bay Point taught her that wasn't the only misconception she harbored. "My biggest mistaken belief was that abstinence was just it, that's all it was to recovery." The treatment program helped her get to acknowledge her denial. "I started to understand what my addiction is about." Kaleo's childhood was guided by a mother who'd serve her children a Flintstone vitamin, a teaspoon of castor oil and a shot of beer. "I can't ever remember not drinking," says Kaleo. As a teen-ager she started smoking pot, but quit years ago. However, she turned to crank after the birth of each child, as a fast way to lose weight. The combination of alcohol and drug abuse took its toll. "I really think I was slowly trying to kill myself," she now admits. Since graduating from the treatment program she and her boyfriend are working on getting their family together. He's also in treatment, and although her temporary job as a delivery person will expire after the holidays, in January she'll join him at the local community college, taking classes toward an associate's degree. "We just know, right now, to take it one day at a time." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake