Pubdate: Sun, 15 Jun 2014 Source: News Journal, The (Wilmington, DE) Copyright: 2014 The News Journal Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/1c6Xgdq3 Website: http://www.delawareonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/822 Author: Adam Taylor DELAWARE'S NEW FACES OF ADDICTION RECOVERY FOR THESE YOUNG HEROIN ADDICTS REQUIRES A UNIQUELY DIFFICULT PATH. Like many young addicts, Nola Parcells is part conformist, part eccentric. On Wednesday nights, she plays second base and catcher on her softball team. After the game, though, she lets Cash, her albino checkered garter snake, crawl through her platinum blonde hair with lavender highlights to help her relax. Nola is the new face of heroin addiction in Delaware. A student at the University of Delaware, where her dad is a professor, she's white, charming and solidly upper-middle class. She's 21 years old, part of a growing number of heroin addicts getting clean before they're legally allowed to have their first drink. The young addicts say this brings additional challenges to getting clean, and drug counselors say new strategies are required to help them navigate the minefield that awaits them in their first year of abstinence. A study last month published in the JAMA Psychiatry found heroin is appealing to a more diverse group, with a spike over the past decade among white, suburban users. The average age of today's heroin user is 22.9 years old. In Delaware last year, 2,750 adults who identified heroin as their drug of choice sought state-funded treatment, the highest number since at least 1987. State Health and Human Services Secretary Rita Landgraf said kids have gotten into the juvenile treatment system for heroin as young as 12. Recovery for these young addicts requires a uniquely difficult path. Heroin is a powerful drug, with a particularly hard bottom that comes quickly for the addict. While some alcoholics can function for decades before they finally seek help in their 50s or 60s, defeated heroin addicts are walking into rehabilitation centers in droves in their teens or early 20s. The dynamic of a young addict and such a serious drug creates tricky obstacles to getting clean. For a heroin addict, there's no going back to alcohol or marijuana. Eventually, they'll go back to their deadly drug of choice, experts say. Nola began using heroin when she was 18. She has been heroin-free since August and a patient for several months at ARGO Institute, an intensive-outpatient treatment facility for young adults in Price's Corner that she credits with saving her life. "I never, never, never thought I would live until I was 21," she said. "This place saved me." Technically, Nola has been clean for only 52 days. She had one drink at a wedding reception last September, then another at a cabin during a getaway in the woods on April 25, just four days after her 21st birthday, a trigger-event for many young addicts. "There was a sign there that says, 'What happens at the cabin, stays at the cabin,' " she said. At the time, Nola was guilty of the flawed thinking of some who, fragile in early recovery, believe that not getting caught sneaking a drink is all that matters. Eventually, she knows she has to get to the point where the person staring back in the mirror knows what she did. She's working on that. To her credit, she returned to ARGO and confessed. Mandell Much, ARGO's clinical director, said the drinking setback is obviously not optimal, but the fact she immediately returned to treatment is a good sign. "Is that ideal? No," Much said. "But we see that as progression toward a life of abstinence." In her addiction, Nola used her charm to manipulate police and avoid arrests in North Philadelphia with heroin in her car. "It was easy," she said. "I just started crying and told them I had an eating disorder. I was such a scumbag." Now she uses her charm in a positive way, expressing gratitude toward her softball coach, Alfred E. Jay III, himself a recovering alcoholic with 25 years sobriety. He offers Nola guidance on and off the diamond. "She's a good kid, a very caring and loving person," Jay said. "She's like that with everybody but herself." Nola's working on that, too. A hard sell It's hard for a 20-year-old leaving rehab to think of living the rest of their life in complete abstinence. Tim Miller knows that more than anyone. His opiate use, like many heroin addicts, started when he took prescription painkillers from a relative's medicine cabinet when he was a teenager growing up in Fairfax. Counselors tried to help him when he was a Brandywine High School student. Miller didn't want to hear it. "I guess I needed more pain," he said. And more pain he got. Years after high school, then with a full-blown heroin habit, he caught a burglary charge in the middle of a scorching hot summer and landed in Wilmington's Howard Young prison. That meant he was going to be dopesick in jail. For several days, he suffered through it: profuse sweating, diarrhea, fatigue, throwing up. His muscles ached, his body twitched. The only silver lining was that the physical pain distracted him from the reality that heroin had broken his spirit as well. "Really bad, awful," he said. "I never wanted anything more than how bad I wanted to be clean and sober in that moment." He's been clean ever since. Now, he's 30, working as a counselor at Gaudenzia House, a rehab facility in Delaware City, helping young men avoid the same fate. It's not easy making the young addicts see what living drug-free looks like. "I used to think that recovery meant going to an AA meeting in a church basement with a bunch of old people who talked about how great things were back in the day, and how miserable things are now," he said. Not a great sell to a young kid who still harbors dreams that he might be able to go to Las Vegas with his friends at 21 and live the "Hangover" movie, as long as he avoids opiates, and limits his indulgence to alcohol or pot. More people get high after leaving rehabs than those who get clean. Yet hope abounds in recovery. Much of it can be found in sober living houses, where relapse-prevention experts such as Jessica Cirillo of Mirmont Treatment Center in Media, Pennsylvania, send young men and women after they leave in-patient treatment. "A sober-living environment is particularly beneficial for a young adult," Cirillo said. "It helps them get established right out of the gate. They're welcomed with unconditional regard and with open arms. It does for them what they can't do for themselves." They're not anonymous They are young, stubbon addicts, these men in their late teens and early 20s at Independence Lodge, a series of three recovery houses in Bucks County, Pa., that serve men fresh out of rehab from Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. They don't like taking directions from counselors like Miller. They are the young turks of the recovery movement, part of a new breed who feel no negative stigma about having been a heroin addict. While respectful of the traditions of the 12-step support groups they attend daily, they're proud of having put their addictions in a state of arrest, with an eye toward long-term remission. They're happy to talk about their past. Mostly, though, they're thrilled to have their names in the paper for something other than the police blotter. While the men all came from different walks of life, their paths in addiction and recovery are remarkably similar. They began with prescription opiates, then graduated to heroin because it was stronger, cheaper and easier to get. Their lives spun out of control. Chad Golt, 19, from Mullica Hill, New Jersey, had to drop out of high school last year because he was shivering from heroin withdrawal 90 minutes into class every day. He first did heroin at 15, hated it, then swore it off for a year. He got a job at a restaurant, began popping Percocet and eventually was buying heroin in the Badlands section of Philadelphia. George Brooke, 23, was an elementary school aide in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, who got quietly fired for stealing an employee's credit card to support his heroin habit. Soon after, he stood and watched his grandfather crying, pleading with him to stop doing drugs. He was living in his van and didn't understand what all the fuss was about. Jack Grauer, 22, of Horsham, Pennsylvania, began a three-year descent into heroin the day before his senior prom and ended it the day he called his mother from his apartment that no longer had electricity. He had relapsed - again. He needed rehab - again. Ethan Cirko, 20, of Hatboro, Pennsylvania, started doing Percocet in 10th grade. He tried being like his friends, who just drank and smoked pot, but always returned to the isolation of opiate use. Eventually, he got arrested for stealing money from work and kicked out of a recovery house in Florida for getting high. Illusions of social use After their stints in rehab, each harbored illusions they could be like their social-using, weekend-warrior buddies. In all cases, it didn't work out. Their buddies had fun, made it to work Monday morning and didn't drink or smoke pot again until the next weekend. The guys in recovery at the lodge, meanwhile, all wound up shooting heroin in a room by themselves, and eventually back in rehab. Golt, for example, thought he could have a "straight party rage," meaning he would drink, smoke pot and try to meet women. "It just doesn't work that way for me," he said. He wound up back in Kensington, the notorious heroin market in Philadelphia. "Now I know I'm not normal," he said. "I'm 19, but I can't ever drink again. Because if I do, I might end up in an alley with a needle in my arm. That's the truth and I understand that today." Golt knows that because one of his friends from his first stint in rehab asked him to go to South Street in Philadelphia. Golt had to work, so he declined. His friend relapsed and died in an alley off South Street that night. "Honestly, if I would have gone with him, I probably would have OD'd that night too," Golt said. There's nothing like the pain of a relapse to educate an addict and hasten moments of clarity. The men were humbled, and began to listen to the intensive relapse-prevention training offered in rehabs such as Mirmont, where Golt has been twice. Today, the young men are doing well. Golt just attended the prom with a girl who is a senior at the high school he left as a dropout. Brooke has a job building cabinets, happier than he ever was working with kids at an elementary school. Grauer is the manager of one of the Independence Lodge houses and the mother whose heart he broke not long ago comes to visit to see how well he's doing. Cirko just celebrated one year clean and plans to attend school for radiology or something in the medical field, something he didn't dare dream of a year ago. He said he no longer wishes he could be a social drinker. He'll be 21 soon and happy to hang out with his roommates at the lodge. "I've been relieved from the obsession of using," Cirko said. "Why would I ever want to test the waters again?" Band of brothers More than four years clean, Bryan Kennedy started his recovery at Mirmont after winding up living in his parents' unfinished basement in his 30s, throwing back massive amounts of vodka and opiates every day, and neglecting his beloved American Bulldog, Stella. Kennedy's addiction was much like those of the men in the house. It just happened a decade earlier. He was raised in Chester County, a popular high school athlete, active in the student council. But he was socially awkward. Alcohol helped with that. Then marijuana. Then Valium and Xanax. When he went to college, he found his "dream job" at a bar, where they tipped him with cocaine. All of it worked. Until it didn't. While his primary drug of choice was vodka, at the end, he was in Florida, with a needle full of heroin in his arm. The social butterfly was finally alone. Kennedy's transformation has been remarkable. Any young heroin addict who might share the fear Miller once had - that getting clean young means a life doomed to diners with crusty AARP members after AA meetings - would do well to follow Bryan Kennedy on Facebook. Simply scrolling through his posts of a single three-day weekend can be exhausting. He hops from visits to rehabs, motorcycle rides that benefit treatment centers, sober dances at private recovery clubs, midnight 12-step meetings, quick jaunts to Sea Isle City. And, yes, there are stops at diners, but not with older, retired people. He's a seasoned 36 years old in comparison to the men who live in his houses, but he doesn't show it. He's lives in one of the houses and routinely takes some of the lodge residents on his adventures. Those who don't travel with him can share his life in his social media posts, offering the life in recovery that drugs promised, but never delivered. Stella comes, too. Today, Kennedy inspires hope. His name, picture and bio appears on a website titled, "I Am Not Anonymous," designed to remove the stigma of addiction and help people get the help they need. A born networker, his Facebook page includes pictures of him with Phillies first baseman Ryan Howard and New Jersey Gov. Cris Christie. His biggest problem used to be that he couldn't get out of his parents' basement. His biggest problem today? "Not enough hours in the day," he said. "At the end of my addiction, I burned every bridge I had and no one would talk to me. Today, I look at my phone before I go to bed and realize I haven't gotten back to 10 people because there wasn't enough time." Resources: Where to get help Rebuilding relationships Kennedy prides himself in having multiple common areas in the houses. He knows he could renovate them for more bedrooms and make more money, but he won't do it. More common areas mean the residents are less likely to isolate themselves in their bedrooms. Isolation can doom an addict in early recovery, he said. Kennedy says the first 24 to 48 hours makes or breaks the experience at one of his houses. The men are just as nervous coming into the houses as they were a month earlier entering rehab, he said. "You can see their anxiety and fear," he said. "But within a few hours, they're hanging out, playing cards or X-box, and laughing with the guys. The older guys are helping the next guy, giving what was freely given to them." Then, weeks later, things get even better. They get jobs, and, for once, keep them. They have money and, for once, keep it in their pocket to spend on everyday things, not a bag of dope. "They've done a lot of damage to the relationships with their mothers and fathers," he said. "Their parents visit and relationships get rebuilt. Their moms and dads see that they're doing OK. Their parents go home and can sleep again. That's what gives me goosebumps." Grauer, who is very close with his family, said he doesn't know if he'd be clean without his housemates. "We share a bond I can't share with my mom or my sister," he said. "The bond is that I'm able to help them as much as they are helping me to get another day clean and sober." Grauer now manages one of the Independence Lodge Houses. He's not only having fun these days, he's had an epiphany as a young addict that he hopes will guide him for the rest of his life. "I don't have a heroin problem. I have a 'me problem,' " he said. "I have an illness of the mind that tells me when I have one, I need another one immediately, whether it's a drink, a joint, heroin or cocaine. I cannot control it once it's in my body." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt