Pubdate: Tue, 02 Sep 2003 Source: Daily Times, The (TN) Copyright: 2003 Horvitz Newspapers Contact: http://www.thedailytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1455 Author: Steve Wildsmith ADDICT IN HOSPITAL STIRS UP EMOTIONS I meant to do some research over the last week. I wanted to present some statistics from local hospitals on overdoses and drug-related emergency room visits. How ironic, then, that I wasn't able to, because most of my free time was spent in the Cardiac Care Unit waiting room at a Knoxville hospital. One of the guys I sponsor, Mark, has been there since Sunday, when he was taken by ambulance to the ER because of an overdose. It's been an exhausting week of watching and waiting and praying and soul-searching. I've embraced his mother while she stood over Mark's bedside, weeping softly while a row of machines and computers registered every feeble heartbeat, every labored breath. We've waited for word from doctors who always seem too busy to sit and talk and too uncertain to explain what, exactly, might be wrong and what the prognosis is. Most troubling of all, I've watched Mark. I've watched him, just below the horizon of consciousness, struggle against restraints binding his wrists and ankles, crying out in pain. Watched his body spasm in withdrawal, soaked with sweat, unexplained injuries swelling and receding over the course of the past five days. I've watched. I've prayed, and I've dealt with a turmoil of my own emotions. I've sought answers where there are none and reassurance when there isn't any. And almost a week later, the answers haven't come, and the conclusions I've drawn aren't reassuring in the least. I feel guilty, although logic tells me I shouldn't. I'm his sponsor, but the 12-step recovery program of which we're both members teaches us that a sponsor -- a guide through the recovery process, someone who's been off drugs for a significant amount of time and has experience working the 12 Steps -- is of no use at all unless we reach out. I feel anger, although my heart tells me I need to focus on compassion. I want to grab the friend who lies in that hospital bed and shake him. I want to scream into his face, ``Look at what you've done to yourself!'' I want to smack him upside the head with a copy of our literature and tell him this is what happens to addicts who don't stop getting high. I want to act out, to find the bastards who sold him this poison and go to work on them with a pair of pliers and a blowtorch. My mind is a maelstrom, those thoughts swirling around and around like debris trying to wash down a too-small storm drain. My own internal demons, those that my own addiction plots and colludes with, rise up and make me question myself. If only I'd done this ... if only I'd done that. If only. Beneath it all, the part of my mind recovering from my own addiction seeks to restore order. When I sit and focus and pray, I feel the presence of God. I hear the voice of my sponsor. And these things I know: I am powerless over other people, places and things. I can guide the men I sponsor and make suggestions that, based on ones suggested to me, might help them in their recovery. But I can't do the work for them, and I can't control their actions. As I'm powerless over Mark, so I am over everyone in active addiction -- including those who sell drugs. Many of my friends in recovery were those who sold drugs at various times in their past, and I can no more be angry at those who sold to Mark as I can my friends who sold to others, no matter how many years ago it was. Recovery is more than just a hobby, or a momentary distraction, or a fad. For me, it's a new way of life, one I'm grateful to have found. But even though I've embraced it, I can't beat it into the heads of those who haven't. They must come to it in their own time and in their own way. And ultimately, I know this: Mark made a choice. Nothing forced him to pick up and use -- no situation, no problem, no personal or financial setback. Mark wanted to get high, and so he did. And now he fights for his life. It's a sobering reminder that I face a similar choice, every single day. And it reminds me that, if I choose to get high again, I face a similar hell that my dear friend is enduring as I write this. A similar one, or worse. Just for today, that's enough to keep me clean. And one day, hopefully sooner rather than later, I pray Mark will find the clarity of mind and peace and acceptance to make the same decision. Steve Wildsmith is the Weekend editor for The Daily Times and a recovering drug addict. His weekly entertainment stories and column appear every Friday in the Weekend section. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh