Pubdate: Sat, 28 May 2005 Source: Patriot Ledger, The (MA) Copyright: 2005 The Patriot Ledger Contact: http://ledger.southofboston.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1619 Author: Lane Lambert Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) BEATING the BEAST Narcotics Anonymous Offers Ways To Put Addiction In Past By 7:30 on a Thursday night, the Quincy District Court session room is filled - not with court officers, defendants and lawyers, but dozens of silent, solemn men and women gathered for a weekly Narcotics Anonymous meeting. Up at the judge's bench, a stocky man in his early 30s named Richie is earnestly telling his life story - how he watched his mother and uncles shoot heroin when he was a boy in Lynn, how he started smoking crack cocaine, became a drug runner and spent years in and out of jail and treatment centers before he joined NA. "Your disease got you, man," he says, his voice tight and urgent. "You want to get out, and you can't." A handful of his listeners nod. They've all been there. For months, years or decades, they have attended NA meetings with one aim: to avoid falling back into the drug use that ruined their health, wrecked careers and marriages and anguished their family and friends. At a time heroin use in Massachusetts is rising and the state is spending millions more for drug treatment, hundreds of South Shore residents are going to meetings like Quincy's 'Just For Tuesday" group. From week to week and town to town, weathered ex-junkies take a seat beside offenders still on probation, young moms who have lost custody of their children and sad-eyed men trying yet again to get clean. Most are male. Many have overdosed at least once. They range in age from early 20s to late 60s, and are laborers, salespeople, clerical and cleaning-service workers, and professionals, "people from all walks of life," says Ray, a Quincy financial services worker who is "20 years clean," as NA members term their drug-free time. Whatever their path to NA, they share an intense bond of old hurt and new hope, and they cling to NA and its 12-step support program like a life raft. 'Critical for recovery' Inspired by the older and better-known Alcoholics Anonymous, NA has grown steadily since the first groups met in California in the late 1940s. Millions of recovering addicts now attend 30,000 weekly meetings in more than 100 countries. The South Shore's first group started in 1981 in Quincy and later moved to Pilgrim Congregational Church in North Weymouth. NA now has 200 weekly groups throughout eastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island, with 30 in the south of Boston area, including several in Brockton and Bridgewater. Quincy District Court has provided meeting space for 20 years. Low-budget and all-volunteer, NA is highly-regarded by private counselors, state health officials and the state's district court probation departments, which supervise 50,000 offenders every year. "Support groups like NA are critical for recovery," said Dan Ryan, a substance-abuse trainer for the State Commission of Probation. "Addicts are all in denial, at least in the beginning, and the support groups won't let them deny their problems. They hit them right between the eyes." State officials say the extent of the drug problem - and the need for treatment and recovery - is even greater than it appears. In the 2004 fiscal year, Massachusetts paid for treatment for 102,226 alcohol and drug-abuse patients, including 2,100 teenagers. Almost 60 percent were treated for heroin and other drugs. Michael Botticelli, director of substance abuse services at the Department of Public Health, said those numbers do not include people who get private treatment, or others who enter 12-step programs. Under The Radar A private program for a public problem, NA operates out of the spotlight. Members devote their time and energy to getting the message to as many addicts as they can, mainly through word of mouth or visits to hospitals, jails and prisons. "We don't care where you're from. We just want to know if you want help," said Dennis, a Weymouth resident who is 36 and is four years clean. "You might still be using when you come to us, and that's OK. It's the desire to stop using that's important." As they pledge to surrender their addiction to the "higher power" that's a part of all 12-step programs, NA members also follow the tradition of identifying themselves by first name only. They say this emphasizes their identity as recovering addicts, and guarantees that meetings will always be a haven where members can say anything they need to say. Those interviewed for this story asked that their real first names not be used. Nearly every NA meeting has at least one first-time visitor. Every gathering is punctuated by the familiar greeting - "I'm John, and I'm an addict" - and by testimonials from members like Bobby, who was released from prison six months earlier. "You're family," he told the Quincy group. "I'm grateful to you all. I'm grateful to be clean one more day." Such accounts have been confirmed by a clinical study published earlier this year that suggests that recovering cocaine addicts are less likely to resume drug use if they're active with their groups - working on the 12 steps, doing volunteer activities - instead of simply showing up for meetings. One of the authors of that study, Dr. Roger Weiss of McLean Hospital in Belmont, said 12-step groups offer a range of practical and spiritual help - the sympathy and encouragement of veteran members; simple guidelines for sobriety; and a social structure that addicts can use to rebuild shattered lives. "Not everyone likes it," said Weiss, who's director of McLean's alcohol and drug abuse treatment program, "but for those who do, it makes recovery a lot easier." "Nothing worked' Those who commit themselves to NA seldom go just halfway. For the first few months or a year, they attend as many meetings as they can reach. They plunge into "service," speaking to addicts in hospitals and jails. Every new member is assigned a sponsor-adviser, who has at least a year of clean time, and many forge lifelong friendships. Ray, who is 54, started shooting heroin when he was 18. Over the following 16 years, he tried born-again Christianity, therapy, detox and methadone. "Nothing worked," he said. He drifted in and out of NA, and turned to the group for good in 1985. When he checked out of long-term treatment and promptly sought a fresh fix, only to discover that the old high wasn't there anymore. "I'd had the experience of being 10 months clean, and now I knew there was something better," he said. He called his NA sponsor then and there. They went to four meetings that day. Now one of the South Shore's best-known and respected members, Ray been a sponsor for more than 30 other addicts. Dennis, who works for a Boston-area chemical company, started drinking as a teenager and graduated to cocaine. By the time he reached his early 20s, he said, 'I'd done pretty much everything." It didn't take a court order for him to seek a meeting, either. "I just decided to stop using, and the only thing I hadn't tried was NA," he said. Heather, 21, a Braintree resident, also took to NA from the start. Unlike many first-time visitors, "I loved it," she said. "I had always felt like I was crazy and different, and when I got to NA I realized I wasn't. Every time someone would speak, they were speaking my story." Blonde and waif-like, Heather seems too young to have lived the extremes she describes. A marijuana user at 13, she had tried cocaine, Ecstasy and angel dust before her first overdose at 15. When her parents kicked her out of their Newburyport home, she crashed at cheap motels and crack houses, turning tricks as a prostitute to pay for her drugs. She drifted to New York City, returned home and was kicked out of a boarding school. She checked herself into detox and was living in a halfway house on the Cape when that program's staff took her to an NA meeting. She met her husband there. Ben, 33, left home as a teenager, too. Cocaine was his worst addiction, and he spent years 'up and down," trying to stay clean on his own. 'I'd get clean and I'd feel better," he said. 'Then I'd go back to using, and I'd hit bottom again." He broke that cycle for good almost 10 years ago. Now a construction worker, he has reconciled with his parents and sister and is trying to coax his brother away from using. While Heather goes to the Quincy meeting and a women's group in Hingham, Ben is in a Monday night group at Pilgrim Congregational in North Weymouth. 'NA did that' On a recent night, Ben joined 10 other men and three women around a long table in the church's sparsely-furnished basement social hall. Three had attended the Quincy meeting a few nights earlier. Two were there for the first time - a young man ordered to NA as part of his probation, and a 39-year-old Weymouth woman, who had been ordered to NA in the past but said this time 'I'm here for me." "I've got to learn my life all over again," she said. "I know it's possible, but I don't know how." The young man admitted it was hard for him to be there, too, after only two weeks of detox, "but I don't want to get high anymore," he said. "I need to stay away from my old friends ... or it will come and find me." He told them he'll be moving from the South Shore to New Bedford, where he'd gotten a job away from those friends. That draws a handful of knowing nods. It's his first step toward the second chance for which he and every other NA addict prays and works their 12 steps to reach. A few nights earlier in Quincy, guest speaker Richie had talked about how his own prayers had been answered. After years of crack addiction, jail and sleeping outdoors, he told the courthouse group that he's still struggling every day, "still working on my steps." But he has a good job now as a salesman for a Dorchester company. He and his wife just celebrated their second anniversary, and they're getting ready to close on their first house. He paused. "NA did that, man," he said. "NA did that." The 12 steps 1. We admitted that we were powerless over our addiction, that our lives had become unmanageable. 2. We came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity. 3. We made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him. 4. We made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. 5. We admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs. 6. We were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character. 7. We humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings. 8. We made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all. 9. We made direct amends to such people wherever possible except when to do so would injure them or others. 10. We continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it. 11. We sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out. 12. Having had a spiritual awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to addicts, and to practice these principles in all our affairs. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth