Guest guest Posted March 20, 2004 Report Share Posted March 20, 2004 Staring Back at Me By Ben When I was fifteen years old, I packed as many of my personal belongings as I could fit into two small backpacks and headed for the easy life. My only goals were to avoid responsibility and have as much fun as possible. It was the beginning of summer, and I was sitting in my bedroom at my mom's house. We got into an argument over the usual teenage stuff. I didn't want to abide by my mom's rules, and I was feeling frustrated that " nothing ever went my way. " When I left my house that day, I left with a feeling of liberation. I had won the battle with my mom. I was now in charge of my life. I didn't know exactly where I was going, but I figured anywhere was an improvement. I spent the next few months couch-surfing from friend's house to friend's house. I would stay at each place until I had worn out my welcome. In less than a year, no one wanted me at their house, and people were starting to talk. See, I had a little secret, or what I thought was a secret. I had been using drugs quite heavily and supporting myself by stealing and selling my friends' material possessions. I was a sixteen-year-old with no friends, no home, no self-esteem and no self-respect. I was sleeping in bank-machine booths and cardboard dumpsters to stay warm and dry in the winter. I considered suicide. I was overwhelmed by the feelings of hopelessness and despair that I felt on a daily basis. I lost a lot of weight. I hardly ever slept because of the drugs. The longer I was awake, the more desperate I would get. It became a vicious cycle. I remember vividly the night I ended up at my sister's house. It was the middle of winter, and I had been living in another city in a speed lab - an abandoned house with torn-up plywood floors littered with garbage, dirt and bugs. I hadn't slept for thirteen days. I went back to my hometown intending to do some laundry, then leave. I don't remember how I got there, but I ended up at my sister's house where I was asked to " please stay. " I was so confused. I hadn't had anyone want me around for so long that I was suspicious. But it wasn't a difficult decision. Either I went back to the streets, or I had a warm place to stay for a night. She gave me her bed, and I fell asleep. When I woke up, I looked around until I found my sister. I was kind of in a daze. " What time is it? " I asked her. " It's 9:30 p.m., " my sister told me. " Oh, okay, then I've only been asleep for a couple hours, " I replied. " Well, no, Ben. Actually, it's Thursday, and you got here on Sunday, " she informed me. " You've been sleeping for four days. " My sister, knowing that something wasn't right, told me I could stay with her for as long as I wanted to. I unpacked all my clothes the next day. I stayed with her and her boyfriend for almost a year and continued to use drugs. Unfortunately, my problem progressed and got worse. I was using every day, and I hated the person I had become. I wrote in my journal that I had a problem and wasn't able to stop. Pain was the only emotion I ever felt. I had been stuffing my feelings down with drugs for so long that I didn't know what feelings were anymore. I wasn't afraid of anything anymore. I prayed that I would die. I was depressed, and I had no motivation, dignity or ambition left whatsoever. One night I jumped as the phone rang. I picked it up, and my mom was on the other end. I was scared to talk to her. She said she knew I was having a hard time dealing with what my life had become, and she wanted to read me a poem called Footprints in the Sand. Instead of using the words " the Lord " she used herself. She told me that she would always be there for me if I needed her and that she would " carry " me through the toughest times of my life if I would let her. I finally understood the madness I had created. I had shut her out for so long because of a stupid decision I had made on an impulse one day over a year ago. But with her love that day, she broke through my walls of insecurity and pain. I just sat there and cried. I finally knew that someone cared. When I hung up the phone, I felt incredibly guilty for what I had done to myself and the pain I had caused others. I was completely overwhelmed. I didn't know what to do. I was happy one moment because my mom still loved me, yet absolutely terrified the next. Through the tears I saw a knife on the dresser in front of me. Crying hysterically, I picked it up, and a feeling of calm and release came over me. I woke up in the hospital bandaged and surrounded by people - my mom, my sister, my friend and the nurses. I spent another month in the hospital, only this time I made a conscious effort to get help for my drug addiction. I started going to a twelve-step fellowship and met some people like me who were getting clean but had a while to go before they could rebuild any kind of life. On their recommendation, I decided to move into a recovery house. I lived there for ten months and now live on my own. I am finishing high school and enjoying life. A lot has changed for me. The biggest change is that I feel good about myself and what I'm doing, and I have lost the desire to use drugs. My self-esteem is growing, and I have a huge group of friends. I have a relationship with my mom again. We talk almost every day. I have a job and people who love me. I spent my nineteenth birthday clean, with my family and friends. Today I can finally look in the mirror and be grateful for the person I see staring back at me. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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