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BRATTLEBORO

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Your support powers every story we tell. Please help us reach our year-end goal.

Donate Now

Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Voices

Survival

A young woman recounts her difficult journey through drug addiction and recovery

JACKSONVILLE — Getting clean wasn't just an option - it was the only choice I had if I wanted to survive.

I may have been only 14 at the time, but addiction sees no age, and so there I was.

The cold truth was that I was a little girl, a child in most eyes, who had been swept up by addiction. Drugs had consumed me, changed me, and tried to kill me.

I spent nights on park benches and days in the shadows. My parents existed, but that didn't matter to me.

I liked being on the run until I got taken away. The state picked me up off the side of the street and rushed me away. I didn't get to say goodbye to anyone that day.

I rode in the back of a cop car with a heavy chain around my waist that followed another, smaller, chain to the cold steel around my wrists. As I struggled in the back seat my ankles slowly started to bleed as the shackles tore at my skin.

It was a long ride, and I eventually fell asleep. A hospital gown was draped over me, and my long hair was all in knots.

When we arrived, I stumbled in and sat down. They took my picture, and they were nice. I didn't realize I was in rehab at the Brattleboro Retreat until later that night. All that really mattered to me was that I was somewhere warm and safe.

* * *

Then I prepared to get clean. I did well there for the first couple of weeks, and then they moved me to a different floor, where there were more rules and where it was all girls.

I can't say that I don't like women, but I can say that living with 11 of them is a bit different when you never know what to expect. I managed to do it without much conflict.

I did well in treatment, I have to say, but I realize that I should have tried harder while I was there. After I left eight months later, I relapsed quite quickly and was back to where I started.

I had moved back in with my parents and I quickly fell apart, but thank God it only lasted a couple of months because I got sick, really sick, and my life was almost gone.

One day, as I lay in my bed, I wondered: What would life be like if I wasn't so sick? What would it be like if I quit drugs again?

I sat up really straight and I stuck my index finger in the air and yelled “Aha! I've got it!”

I didn't have to get high every day if I got some help.

It never occurred to me that I knew how and where I could go; I was just so consumed with getting high that returning to rehab seemed like a long stretch. But I knew I was ready to get clean again.

* * *

I got up and went to school and found myself help. I made phone calls and had meetings with the state, hoping for a way out. My social worker found me a bed at the Retreat.

I knew I would be all right as soon as everything was set; I had a chance now to do what's best. I went home right away and started to pack my bags; it was emotional to think how sick I was and the fact that I could get better was the greatest feeling of all.

Waking up the next day was almost a breeze. I threw my bags in the car and my mother and I were off very quickly.

We were due to check in at 11 o'clock and we got there just in time. As I got signed in and they took a bunch of tests, my new room was being cleaned. I felt like the luckiest person to be back.

The best part was that I never died like I thought that I would. I was actually feeling better before anyone thought I could. It felt so good to be back that I couldn't help but smile. I was safe and getting better.

I did my detox and made a pact.

I promised myself that I never had to get high again if I didn't want to.

With that, I stayed at the Retreat a long time - 10 months, to be exact.

I loved it there so much. I treated the floor I was on like my permanent home; I held back no emotions while I stayed there.

One thing that I did differently than the first time around was I didn't hold back how I was feeling, ever. If I was angry, I would throw things, and if I was sad I would cry.

When I was happy, I would spend time with my friends that I had made there. I had my 15th birthday while locked up in rehab; they made me a cake and it was great. I couldn't have asked for much more.

But I had been there so long that I couldn't imagine life outside of the Retreat. I had become institutionalized because my stay had been much, much longer than anyone had planned. I had never thought about leaving while I was there and so when it came time for me to go I had no clue where I was going to go.

When it came to leaving the Brattleboro Retreat, I still wanted more. I wanted more recovery and maybe more treatment, but I knew one thing for sure, I wanted to stay in Brattleboro.

I knew I had gotten clean here and I found the town safe, but I found most off all that the town catered to my needs in more than one way. We've got 12-step programs, rehabs, halfway houses, and Turning Point.

Now I had a chance to stay far away from the people whom I used with and, most importantly of all, their drugs.

I chose to stay in Brattleboro and build my life here.

* * *

Telling my parents was one of the most difficult conversations I've ever had to partake in. I love my parents to death and I will all my life, but when it comes to my recovery I don't like to risk things. I've made that mistake before.

I knew that the town of Brattleboro is a special place, and I knew that I belonged here. The only problem was my parents and how sad they would be to hear that I couldn't live with them due to this disease of addiction that was once wrapped around my throat.

When I made my choice, my parents were hurt but they also understood that addiction isn't a joke. It took a little, but they agreed and I could move on with my life, living in Brattleboro where I felt I belonged.

With all the treatment in this town, my team chose one that really fit. I participated in a year-long residential treatment program that was really focused on change, where I would learn all about myself and what I would have to do to keep the gift of recovery that I have worked so hard for.

The people in my program brought me to my 12-step meetings and I did really great: I made it to a year, and I got to celebrate. I never thought I could do it, but somehow I did. Everyone signed a card and gave me a one-year medallion for me to hold tight.

* * *

I kept going to meetings and doing as I was told. Then I turned 16, and I felt old. I started to struggle being in high school and remaining clean.

I felt like an outcast and it seemed as if everyone did drugs, but after a while I found a group of friends who were clean. What a relief to know that I wasn't alone.

I was still in the state's custody, and I was still happy with my choice. I was still in love with the town, and everything was good. I visited my parents on the weekends and all went well there, but when I returned to Brattleboro, my home town just couldn't compare.

After a year had gone by and my time was done at the house, I moved into my first foster home and did it without doubts. Things went pretty well and I started making a life of my own until one day we got into a fight and I stormed out of the house.

With nowhere to go and tears in my eyes, I called a friend in the program and asked for help. He came and picked me up and brought me to a safe place.

We went to the Northeastern Family Institute office and they searched for a place for me to go. There wasn't a place anywhere, and away to a lockdown I went. I was there for three weeks until they finally found a home.

I had almost two years clean, and I wanted to get back out in time to celebrate. It happened, just barely. The state found me a home, it was a little farther from Brattleboro than I had wanted, but I moved in and everything was great. I was back in time to celebrate and everything was as back to normal as it was going to get. I live in this home today, and I'm happy about that.

* * *

Since I've been in custody, I've moved seven times, I've attended six high schools, and I've had four social workers. My life is hard, but I deal with it. I'm clean, and that's what I wanted. I didn't exactly ask to move so many times but I'm still clean.

I asked my higher power to take my will and my life, to guide me in my recovery, and to show me how to live. As long as I have the basic principles of my recovery, I can make it anywhere I go.

If someone asked me today if it was worth it, I would tell them that, yes, it was worth it, and I'm proud to be where I am today.

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