Pubdate: Mon, 03 May 2004 Source: Charleston Gazette (WV) Copyright: 2004 Charleston Gazette Contact: http://www.wvgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77 Author: Sandy Wells Sandy Wells: Innerviews 'I FEEL I'VE BEEN REBORN' He was the quintessential golden boy. Prominent family. Idyllic childhood. All-American teenager. Blond. Handsome. Popular. A tennis star. Behind the poster boy façade was a drug-addicted alcoholic. Today, classmates probably wouldn't know him. Booze and drugs damaged him. At 54, sober and drug-free, Chick Maddox reflects ruefully on squandered possibilities, a bright future blighted by addiction. He tells his story to students at area schools. Maybe he can keep just one from making the same mistakes. "Dad was a dentist. They built a house across from what was to be the new Holz Elementary School on Loudon Heights Road. I started playing tennis when I was about 8 or 10. I won the Charleston city tournament for the 16-and-under division. "Everything was fine. I didn't anticipate anything going wrong. But from the minute I took that first hit off that joint or that first drink off that bottle of beer, I was doomed. "For a while, nobody noticed anything unusual. I was in the top quarter of my class at GW. I had more girlfriends than anybody, and the fellows liked me, too. And my teachers and coaches. "Behind their backs, I was drinking and drugging. They didn't catch up to me until I got to college. Then my classmates didn't want much to do with me because I acted funny, different from people who didn't take drugs or drink liquor. They didn't know how to take me. "I was about 15 when it started. When there was a dance, I would take a bottle. I had seen my father take a flask. All my crowd was doing it. I just didn't know when to say 'when.' When everybody else went away to school and got serious about wanting to do something with their lives, they gave it up. My friends are all doctors and lawyers and architects and stuff. "I remember saying how much fun we had, but I don't remember having any fun. The next day, after I'd wrecked the car and finished throwing up, 'Wasn't that fun?' we'd say. "I had lots of car wrecks, bad wrecks where I went through the windshield and totaled the car, drunk on liquor. You could drive around on marijuana and get away with it as long as the cops didn't catch you. But liquor was different. I went through the windshield about every time. Nobody ever got hurt, not even me. My parents would ground me, but after being without the car for a couple of weeks, I would go back to drinking and driving too fast. "Occasionally, I would see my mother walk through the commons area at GW toward the principal's office. I would hear about it that night at dinner: 'I've talked to the principal. You're going to have to straighten up. You can do better than this.' "I went to Hampden-Sydney my freshman year in college. I was drinking beer and fell off a roof and broke all the bones in my heels. I ended up in a wheelchair for six months. I had to learn to walk again. "I moved to Morris Harvey [University of Charleston] the next year. I studied hard. Then on weekends, I let it all hang out. Everybody did. We were college students. It just so happens that the things I did affected me differently than a lot of them. I had problems understanding things and had to work extra hard at my studies. "My tennis was very important. I had to practice twice as hard to be as good as I wanted to be. It all paid off. I won the conference championship for my division when I was a senior. "The Malibu in Kanawha City had all the beer you could drink for $2. I got drunk and got in my little hummingbird yellow Opal GT and took off down MacCorkle Avenue. I didn't make the curve at 39th Street. I knocked the lamppost out of the ground, went through the windshield and totaled the car. "The police took us to jail. I spent the night in the drunk tank. The next morning, I went to dad's office and said, 'Dad, I'm sorry, but I totaled the car last night, and we're going to have to get a new car.' He said, 'Don't you have a tennis match this morning? Get your tennis clothes on and get your mom's car.' That's what I mean by enabling. So I got my mom's car and went over and won the conference championship. "I spent every bit I had. When I started smoking grass, it was $15 for a lid. Now it's $250 for a lid. Somebody would score some LSD or mescaline or something, and whenever it hit, I was on top of it. They knew who to come to. I was eager to buy. "Hallucinogens. Psychedelics. Uppers. Downers. Speed. Barbiturates. Marijuana. I would take a bottle to a dance and drink the whole bottle. I was doing it all for a while. Then I realized if I was going to do anything with my life, I was going to have to start right then. "I gave up the drugs, but I still drank. My friends wouldn't leave me alone. They'd say, 'C'mon, let's go have a beer.' Or, 'We're getting together down at the forest with a keg. You're not going to miss out on that, are you?' Peer pressure. I couldn't give it up. "My parents were in denial. 'He couldn't be an alcoholic. Look who we are.' A doctor friend of my dad's told him about a doctor in behavioral medicine and psychiatry at [CAMC] General. I was one of the first patients to go through that program. I visited that place 13 times in 10 years about something bizarre I had done. I think I threatened my mother a couple of times. My little sister was just a child, and she didn't feel safe. I felt terrible when I had these episodes. "The alcohol and drugs affected my brain and caused me to act the way I did. They put me on some medicine. I still take it. I haven't been back to the hospital or had any episodes for 20 years. They said I had a chemical imbalance in my brain. Since I have this chemical imbalance, when I take a drink or take drugs, I want more, like morphine. "The reason I didn't get well when I kept going for treatment is, I kept drinking. So I kept pouring gasoline on the fire. I had to quit so I wouldn't stimulate that chemical in the brain. "I'm not healthy. I have arthritis and glaucoma and emphysema. That's a terminal disease. I smoked for 30 or 40 years. But I feel safe. I feel serene. I feel at peace. I wouldn't hurt a fly. "I don't touch alcohol, not a drop. The least bit will cause me to be intoxicated. I worked the 12 steps and got sponsored. From what I was to what I am now, I feel I've been reborn. "I'm a certified dental technician. I've worked in several labs. I've worked at Shawnee Hills. I've worked at the Red Cross in blood services for three or four years. I do volunteer work at the church. "About three years ago, I decided I had a story to tell. I had to give back what I had learned to keep others from having to go through what I went through. I wrote to the Kanawha County Board of Education asking to let me do this program. I have a partner, Paul Frampton, a lawyer. He runs the PowerPoint presentation, and we have a question-and-answer period. "We've been to about every high school in the county. I think the kids are listening. I see it in their faces. A couple of schools have decided their kids don't have drug or alcohol problems. I feel sorry for them. They just don't know what's going on. "My dad died in 1974 of cancer. My mother is my best advocate. My stepdad is Bob Silverstein, a county commissioner and city councilman for many years. They're both 100 percent behind me. "If I had entered the medical doctor dentistry program over in Pennsylvania like my dad, if I had come back here and taken over my dad's practice and joined Edgewood Country Club, I don't know if I would have been any happier than I am right now, having overcome such a seemingly hopeless state of mind and body. That means all the world to me." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart