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Boy's Drug Addiction Started With Marijuana
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n568/a02.html
Newshawk: http://DrugPolicyCentral.com/bot/pot
Pubdate: Mon, 12 Apr 2004
Source: Post Review (North Branch, MN)
Copyright: 2004 ECM Publishers, Inc
Contact: editor.postreview@ecm-inc.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3325
Website: http://www.ecmpostreview.com/
Author: Danielle Strenke
Breaking the Cycle
BOY'S DRUG ADDICTION STARTED WITH MARIJUANA
Earnest ( not his real name ) grew up an average kid in an average
family in Chisago County. He played sports like hockey,
soccer, football and baseball. He hung out with friends as a
young teen. He went through the DARE program at school to
learn about the dangers of doing drugs.
Yet the program just made Earnest more curious about drugs.
Not soon after, he was invited over to a friend's house to hang
out. The friend's brother offered him something he called
"wacky tobbacy."
It all started with marijuana.
When Earnest smoked the pot, he thought it was cool. It
started Earnest down a road of several years of drug abuse that
included arrests and coming close to death.
Earnest said after his first experience with marijuana, he didn't
think much about it. But then he developed a regular routine
of visiting his friend to get high about once a month. Soon,
the seventh-grader was getting high with his friend three or four
times a week.
Because Earnest's parents trusted him and knew the friend's
family, they weren't concerned with the hours he spent with his
friend.
The feelings of getting high weren't even the best part for
Earnest. He had a free pass to experiment with marijuana.
"No one asked me to pay for it," he said. "I
was a little kid -- no one expected me to pay."
Earnest continued getting high after school and on weekends and
started struggling in school. Already taking medication for
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ( ADHD ) Earnest noticed
he was struggling even more in school.
"I was an average student in sixth grade," he said.
"I'd always wait and do things the last minute. The
drugs didn't help much. In seventh grade I started
failing."
Lies
Still, Earnest was able to keep the marijuana a secret from his
parents. The summer between seventh and eighth grades, he
took the deception a step further.
"I told my mom I was riding bike to sign up for
football," he said. Earnest did go to football sign
ups, but by then he needed the drugs to get him through.
"I had to get high first," he said.
When he started eighth grade, Earnest brought some pot to school,
trying to sell it for his friend. He was caught and kicked
out for one week.
When Earnest's parents found out about the expulsion, they were
shocked and upset. "I was immediately defensive,"
Earnest said. "I said it was someone else's and they
believed me when I said it was a one time thing."
His penalty outside of school was to attend a drug abuse program
through the Youth Service Bureau and complete community service.
"That didn't turn my life around," Earnest said.
He did stop using marijuana for a few months during his eighth
grade year, but the stigma of being a drug user continued to cause
problems for Earnest.
"Once you get labeled it's hard to get away from it," he
said. "Any bad situation that came up in school they'd
automatically look at me." He said it became easier to simply
take the blame.
Earnest didn't think the school officials cared about him.
He started skipping school to avoid other students who were
pressuring him to help them score some pot.
His mom noticed the change in his attitude toward school.
"It was hard to get him to go to school," she said.
"When the teachers stopped believing in him, he stopped
believing."
By now most of his friends were drug users. Earnest started
offering pot to the few sober friends that he had left.
Increased Use
Earnest's addiction was stronger than ever. His appearance
also changed from a preppy-looking teen to wearing his hair long
and dressing in black band T-shirts.
Also in eighth grade, Earnest dabbled in drinking alcohol that he
had stolen from his parent's house, but the experiments with
alcohol were short-lived when he experienced allergic reactions to
it. "I've only drank a few times in my life,"
Earnest said.
The pot use continued to increase and eventually he was getting
high every day. Earnest and his friends had a meeting place
near his home they called "the shack" where they would
get high. His dad found him there one day and called the
police.
"I was really high when he found us," Earnest said.
Earnest's dad asked the sheriff's deputy to take Earnest to jail
for at least 24 hours, hoping it would scare him enough to stop
using.
Because Earnest was only 13 years old at the time, the only option
for the deputy was to confiscate the drugs. Earnest was sent
back to the same community program that he had been through
before.
"It's bull," Earnest said of the program. "It
doesn't work because it's the same people teaching the same
classes."
Despite getting caught, Earnest didn't slow down his drug use.
By this time, the 14-year-old wasn't getting the drugs for free.
Things started disappearing from his parent's home. Earnest
was taking the items and selling them at pawn shops to pay for the
marijuana.
He was smoking five to six joints ( marijuana ) a day by the time
he started ninth grade and was on a continuous high. Another
dealer asked Earnest to try selling again, this time to make his
own money.
"Since I was using so much he said it would be better if I
just sold it myself," Earnest said. "He fronted me
the first bag."
Earnest's supplier gave him the first 1/4 pound of marijuana to
try and sell, with a street value of $350 to $400. Earnest
learned how to bring just a small amount with him to school to
sell -- 1/2 ounce at a time.
"I knew if I had more I could get busted for a felony,"
he said. It was easy to find customers at school to buy the
pot, he said.
He continued getting high several times a day, including before
school. Then Earnest met another kid at a party who passed
him a bubble ( meth ) pipe.
"I just took it and smoked it I didn't know what it was and I
didn't care," Earnest said. It was the first time
Earnest had tried methamphetamines and he was hooked.
"It made me jittery I felt it right away."
He started using meth on a regular basis. The erratic
changes in his behavior were sometimes obvious, both at home and
at school, where his grades continued to decline during his
freshman year.
"I was good at hiding it though," Earnest said.
"Certain people knew but they just didn't question it.
They didn't want to get involved."
The meth made Earnest stay awake for days at a time.
"My parents noticed that I would stay up all night," he
said. "I just told them I couldn't sleep."
By now the only friends Earnest had were other drug users.
One day, a friend asked Earnest if he wanted a new way to get
high. "We did Freon from the air conditioner,"
Earnest said.
Earnest had no idea what the chemical could do to his body, but
his friend did. "He knew it could cause death,"
Earnest said.
After inhaling the chemical, Earnest felt an instant high.
Then his body went numb. "I fell face down on the floor
and couldn't move. That was scary," Earnest said.
He recovered and was able to keep it from his parents.
Earnest also decided to never touch the chemical again, but still
couldn't see that pot and meth could potentially have just as
serious effects on his body and behavior.
He continued to struggle in school and his behavior was a concern
to school officials. Earnest was getting high each morning
near school grounds and again after school as a freshman.
He reeked of pot and everyone knew he was using it.
"All my teachers knew," he said. "Every time
they checked, the pot was gone so they couldn't do anything about
it."
He was again expelled, however and another round of anti-drug
classes followed.
When Earnest came back to school his freshman year he was sober
until attending a concert one day, he found comfort in getting
high before the performance.
After a great show, Earnest said a kid approached him to buy some
pot. "I had decided that once that pot was gone I would
be done selling," he said.
Earnest was caught doing the drug deal in the bathroom, handcuffed
and taken to jail.
He spent the night in jail and did some meth the next morning so
he could make it through a day of work at his part time job on
only three hours of sleep. "I was like a zombie,"
he said. "I had no guilt or remorse for what I was
doing."
Earnest continued smoking every couple of hours to keep the high,
but he wasn't getting the same high as before.
"I felt like I wasn't going to get any higher so I decided to
try a new drug," Earnest said. He went to his first
source and asked for some Opium. "I had heard it was
good. I tried it and liked it."
Trying to Stay Clean
He now knows that the drugs and partying he was doing could have
led to a deadly ending, but at the time Earnest didn't care.
During his freshman year, his mom found out he was getting high at
a party and came to pick him up. The next day, Earnest found
out that a friend at the party almost died from an overdose of
drugs and alcohol.
The friend was 12 years old. It wasn't a sudden epiphany
that led Earnest to finally seek help from his family during his
freshman year. "He told me he needed help because he
still liked doing drugs," his mom said.
Earnest checked himself into Fairview Recovery Services in Forest
Lake and started to deal with his addiction for the first time.
His two month treatment was early last year. The treatment
program included counseling sessions and being paired with a
sponsor.
Earnest said he relapsed twice during that time, including a
relapse during his last week of treatment. The final relapse
was a turning point for Earnest. "It was the first time
I felt remorse," he said. "I called my sponsor, I
called everybody. I felt bad." Earnest's mom said his
treatment counselors said a relapse was something Earnest almost
had to go through to stay clean.
His days were incredibly lonely during his time in treatment,
Earnest said. "I missed my old friends," he said.
Earnest tried to spend time with his old friends, but his
treatment counselors told him he needed to separate himself from
that lifestyle.
"They knew my old friends were still using, so they thought I
should branch out," he said.
It was difficult to leave those friends behind, Earnest said.
Earnest said he still runs into his old friends, but is careful to
not fall in with that crowd.
"I'll say hi to be friendly, but I don't want to hang out
with them," he said.
Earnest will reach the milestone of one year of sobriety this
month. He has made it through the first year in part by
attending Alcoholics Anonymous and Aftercare meetings regularly,
as well as going to church.
He still has the same part-time job but his circle of friends has
completely changed. He hangs out with sober friends and is a
member of a band with other drug-free teens.
He has tough days and said school is still a struggle.
As a sophomore, it is the first year since seventh grade that
Earnest has been clean. He said the drugs helped him stay
awake in class, and that is now the biggest challenge he has at
school.
Earnest feels a sense of accomplishment to hear from his teachers
that they know he has been putting in the extra effort in school.
"I'm passing all my classes," he said.
He has not been able to kick the cigarette habit, but is trying to
quit.
Earnest looks back on three years of drug abuse and is noticeably
disturbed by the realization that he deeply affected his family
and could have ended up in jail or worse.
The drugs are something that he thinks about every day. It
is difficult for him to sit still and concentrate for any length
of time. "I love being sober but I have my days,"
Earnest said.
Earnest tries to cope with it through Aftercare and AA classes.
He went through many counseling sessions when he was younger, but
Earnest said that's not what he needs now. "I have a
best friend for support now, who has been through the same things
I have," he said.
He talks with nervous laughter and is unable to make eye contact
with his family members when talking about the different person he
was when he was doing drugs.
His family is still hearing about some of the dangerous things he
did during that time and coming to grips with how deep Earnest's
addiction really was.
Emotionally, Earnest feels the effects of his drug addiction every
day.
"I feel like a part of me didn't get developed as a person
when I was on drugs," he said. "Now I have to deal
with those emotions and find comfort in talking about it."
He also knows that he should have asked for help a lot earlier.
"I never learned how to cope with my problems," he said.
"All these problems and I didn't know how to deal with it.
I also didn't want help."
As he talks about his addiction and the road to sobriety,
Earnest's emotions rise to the surface and he has difficulty
talking without getting choked up.
"I cried for the first time in a long time recently," he
said. "I started crying and couldn't stop. I told
my mom I was sorry for making it hard to love me."
As Earnest tried to work through his feelings that day, he started
banging his head against a wall. "I told my mom I'd
give anything for a joint right now," Earnest said.
Earnest knows there will still be struggles, but is now willing to
face them rather than escape by getting high.
"I choose every day not to do drugs," he said.
"I don't want to live that lifestyle anymore, but I do have
to work on better ways of dealing with my anger."
Sometimes the anger and other emotions are just too much to deal
with, even a year after his last drug use. Earnest said he
has cut himself several times to get through the pain.
Self-mutilation is common among former addicts. "I get
so stressed out," he said. "Instead of turning to
drugs the cutting takes away the feelings and I can concentrate on
the pain." Earnest said he also feels incredibly selfish and
the self-mutilation is a way of punishing himself for what he has
done to himself and his family.
Earnest works at regaining his parent's trust every day as well.
He volunteered to have a urinalysis once a week, and asked his
parents to drive him to the county jail to have it done there.
Earnest now looks forward to getting his driver's license.
Once he passes his driver's test, Earnest is hoping to buy his own
car. "I've been saving up," he said. "I
don't have to buy drugs so there's nothing else to do with my
money."
Next week, Earnest's family talks about the effects that his
addiction has had on the entire family.
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