Pubdate: Tue, 25 Mar 2008 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Maria Rantanen ADDICTS HUG WAY OUT OF THE SPIRAL It's not about the drugs -- it's about a lack of hugs. With a house constantly full of 60 male hardcore addicts, Mark Goheen, clinical addictions specialist with the Maple Ridge Treatment Centre, said a lack of emotional connection with other people, as well as a lack of meaning, belonging and purpose in the world are what usually drive people to drug and alcohol abuse. "The drugs aren't necessarily...the main issue -- it's a way of coping with issues," said MRTC alumnus Jeff, who didn't want to give his surname. The MRTC has a five-week core program for addicts, where they learn to deal with the issues that drove them to use, and learn about connecting and hugging and giving up traditional masculine attitudes about expressing emotions. Jeff had a good life -- he had loving parents growing up in Kelowna as the youngest of five children. As a young adult, he was living with his girlfriend. They had bought a house and everything seemed to be fine -- until one day, she came home from booking the hall for their wedding and announced it was over. Jeff spiralled downward into the merciless world of a crack-cocaine addiction. "I was raised with a great family -- I was taught the difference between right and wrong," Jeff said. "All of that disappeared when I started using drugs." He started missing work and lying to his mother and got creative about ways to fund his addiction. He was also borrowing money from five different payday loan companies, and then needed to go to a payday loan company outside his community to get money to pay the other companies. His life revolved around using drugs, thinking about drugs or thinking about how to con some money to get drugs, Jeff said. He would go three to four days without eating, and then eat half a hamburger and drink some water so that he could continue using drugs. "You're eating...to keep using," Jeff said. One day Jeff looked in the mirror and didn't like what he saw. Not only had he physically wasted away, but morally, he was doing things he could no longer accept -- lying to his mother and conning people for money. "I made up my mind to stop because I felt like s#&%," he said. His first step was to tell his mother -- previously he had told her he had a gambling problem -- the weight loss he put down to stress of trying to avoid creditors. "It was the hardest thing I had to do in my life," he said. But four hours later he was calling his dealer. He started seeing an addictions counsellor in Kelowna -- after six months he started blaming his counsellor for his lack of success, saying he was still using and accused his counsellor of not noticing. His counsellor told him he wasn't a babysitter -- he said Jeff needed to take steps himself to deal with his addiction. Addictions are a very complex thing, Goheen said, and many addicts start negotiating with themselves, making deals with themselves and often blaming others for their failures. Although Jeff told his counsellor he wanted to quit using drugs, what he really wanted was to get his addiction under control and use drugs casually. Finally, his counsellor pulled out a list of treatment centres and Jeff closed his eyes and pointed at one -- it was Miracle Valley -- the name above it was Maple Ridge Treatment Centre. "I'm not ready for a miracle yet," Jeff told his counsellor. "I'll go to Maple Ridge." Within a few weeks he had a bus ticket to Maple Ridge. He then called up his dealer and said he was being sent to Vancouver for a videogame project -- a convoluted story he had used before to get drugs from his dealer -- so he needed enough dope to get him there. He arrived at MRTC at 7 a.m. on a Saturday morning and 15 minutes later walked into the auditorium where it said House of Miracles. "Wow -- I found the right place," he said -- perhaps he was ready for a miracle. Through counselling, Jeff said he had to alter his perception of being a man as the provider, the head of the family, someone who can't show emotion - "suck it up and bury it in the pit of my stomach." Through addictions counselling, he learned that these were false beliefs. "Where I am now, I am a man -- where I was then, I was a child," Jeff said. Goheen said a natural reaction for men when things go wrong is to say "F* it - let's get a beer." "That compulsion to use drugs is gone," Jeff said. But that's not the experience of every addict, Goheen said. While some get rid of their craving for drugs and alcohol through rehab, for others it's with them for the rest of their lives. And while for some addicts, jail will help them get clean, others go downhill while incarcerated. "The only thing jail taught me was don't get caught," said MRTC alumnus Lee, who also didn't want to give his surname. Lee spent 45 years abusing drugs and alcohol -- 10 of those as a heroin addict, 10 years drunk and the rest smoking pot and using other substances. His youth in the 1960s was spent on chemical row in Vancouver's Kitsilano, and his addictions took him around the province. Highlights included waking up in a car he didn't recognize -- which he assumed he had stolen -- in Vancouver while the last place he remembered being was in Vernon. In the late 1990s, after spending a year at the Miracle Valley Treatment Centre, first in treatment and then as an employee, he thought he was ready to move on. He bought a trapline in Kamloops to be near his elderly mother, and smoked pot daily. But when he injured his knee in a car accident, he was put on prescription pain medication and this led him to reconnect with heroin. "It woke the beast," Lee said. "Once I started using I was right back to where I was. I went downhill very fast." In December, 2005, he ended up in St. Paul's hospital in the psychiatric ward -- from there he took a cab straight to the Maple Ridge Treatment Centre. Finally, after 45 years and an eight-week program at MRTC, he finally feels he's in a space where he can move on with his life. He's currently planning to become a drug and alcohol counsellor, and would like to work with seniors' addictions problems. Jeff calls Maple Ridge a "great recovery town" with support groups available to him twice a week. Jeff, Lee and Goheen all laugh when asked whether the men at the treatment centre are clean and whether there are drugs in the building. "You've got 60 addicts (here) -- it's a no brainer," Goheen said. "In any of the treatment centres, there's going to be drug and alcohol use." But Goheen said there is a zero tolerance. "These are people with serious histories of substance abuse," Goheen said. "If someone brings any substance into the building, they're gone." Not everyone who's comes to MRTC is in the right headspace for treatment and about eight clients leave the centre monthly, Goheen said. MRTC is a treatment centre solely for men, but Goheen points out that most women who are addicts and prostitute themselves for drugs have been sexually abused. One heroin addict told Goheen that when she was a child, she'd cry herself to sleep every night and hope that no one would crawl into bed with her. When she started using heroin, it felt like someone was wrapping their arms around her and was protecting her. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek