Pubdate: Mon, 27 Feb 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: A9 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Laura Mecoy, Bee Los Angeles Bureau Cited: Proposition 36 http://www.prop36.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) A LIFE REBUILT Yuba City Man Gets Treatment - and Beats His Demons Peter Kosinski had just $4 in his pocket and a monkey on his back when he arrived at the sober-living house on Madison Avenue. His methamphetamine addiction had left him homeless, but not hopeless. "The moment of truth came when I was pulled out of a car and forced to the blacktop," the 46-year-old father of three recalled. "The cop had his foot on my back, and his gun drawn on me. At that moment it dawned on me that this is getting really old." Sell It Yourself He'd been in and out of jail on drug-related charges for nine years. But this time, he would qualify for treatment instead of prison because voters had just approved Proposition 36. He was one of the first in Sacramento County to qualify for the program, and while three out of four have failed to graduate, Kosinski's success shows this voter-approved departure from the war on drugs can turn lives around. He said he's been drug-free for nearly five years and working as the corporate salesman for American Underlayment Systems, Inc., a Wheatland construction services firm, for more than three years. He's built a $500,000 Yuba City home and lives there with his partner and their 2-year-old son. "I am very grateful for what I have and what I have been through," Kosinski said. "Life isn't always rosy. But I have come a long way from where I was." He started with marijuana and alcohol at the age of 11 and moved to harder drugs as he grew up. He married, fathered two children, worked in construction and became a computer consultant. His descent into homelessness began at age 34, when he discovered methamphetamine. Under the influence of this addictive stimulant, he left his family, his job and the life he'd known. "I lived out of my car," Kosinski said. "I lived on park benches. I slept in places most people wouldn't even want to walk through. It has that ability to take you to where you never, ever thought you would be." By the time of his arrest seven years later, he was sick and tired of being sick and tired. So he persuaded a judge to sentence him to treatment under Proposition 36. "Proposition 36 helped add some rigidity to my program," Kosinski said. "I had to attend so many meetings per week ... report to my probation officer once a month, and be randomly drug-tested. It helped me to keep from swaying or wandering off." He also moved into the Clean and Sober Transitional Living Center on Madison Avenue. "He came here as a scraggly, beat-up guy without a lot of self-esteem," recalled Don Troutman, the sober-living center's chief executive officer. The facility Troutman runs is one of the only sober-living homes in the state to qualify for Proposition 36 funds. It is a cluster of six houses on Madison Avenue where recovering addicts and alcoholics promise to live sober lives while sharing rooms, meals and chores. Kosinski became a house manager, which he said put additional pressure on him to stay drug-free because he was responsible for others. He stayed there until he was certain he could live drug-free in a less-controlled environment. "You have to learn how to live clean and sober," Kosinski said. "It's a lifestyle. Drugs are a lifestyle. You have to change your lifestyle." Today, he exhibits no signs of the homeless addict he once was. He is a tidily dressed, outgoing sales rep who easily engages others with his confidence. During a recent visit to the Fair Oaks sober living house, he served as an example of what could happen for those still struggling to beat their addictions. He encouraged newcomers and urged longtime residents to take the next step by moving out. "This isn't a permanent address; this is a place to learn how to live," he told them. "I am proof you can build something out of nothing." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake