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Who Is A Cocaine Addict?
Some of us can answer without hesitation, "I am!" Others aren't
so sure. Cocaine Anonymous believes that no one can decide for another
whether he or she is addicted. One thing is sure, though; every single
one of us has denied being an addict. For months, for years, we who now
freely admit that we are cocaine addicts thought that we could control
cocaine when in fact it was controlling us.
"I only use on weekends,"
or
"It hardly ever interferes with work," or
"I can quit, it's only psychologically addicting, right?" or
"I only snort, I don't base or shoot," or
"It's this marriage that's messing me up."
Many of us are still perplexed to realize how long we went on, never
getting the same high we got at the beginning, yet still insisting, and
believing -- so distorted was our reality -- that we were getting from
cocaine what actually always eluded us.
We went to any lengths to get away from being ourselves. The lines
got fatter; the grams went faster; the week's stash was all used up
today. We found ourselves scraping envelopes and baggies with razor
blades, scratching the last flakes from the corners of brown bottles,
snorting or smoking any white speck from the floor when we ran out. We,
who prided ourselves on our fine-tuned state of mind! Nothing mattered
more to us than the straw, the pipe, the needle. Even if it made us feel
miserable, we had to have it.
Some of us mixed cocaine with alcohol or other drugs, and found
temporary relief in the change, but in the end it only compounded our
problems. We tried quitting by ourselves, finally, and sometimes managed
to do so for periods of time. After a month we imagined we were in
control. We thought our system was cleaned out and we could get the old
high again, using half as much. This time, we'd be careful not to go
overboard. But we only found ourselves back where we were before, and
worse.
We never left the house without using first. We didn't make love
without using. We didn't talk on the phone without coke. We couldn't
fall asleep, sometimes it seemed we couldn't even breathe without
cocaine. We tried changing jobs, apartments, cities, lovers -- believing
that our lives were being screwed up by circumstances, places, people.
Perhaps we saw a cocaine friend die of respiratory arrest, and still we
went on using! But eventually we had to face facts. We had to admit that
cocaine was a serious problem in our lives, that we were addicts.
What Brought Us To Cocaine Anonymous?
Some of us hit a physical bottom. It may have been anything from a
nosebleed which frightened us, to sexual impotence, to loss of sensation
or temporary paralysis of a limb, to a loss of consciousness and a trip
to an emergency room, to a cocaine induced stroke leaving us disabled.
Maybe it was finally our gaunt reflection in the mirror.
Others of us hit an emotional or spiritual bottom. The good times
were gone, the coke life was over. No matter how much we used, we
nevermore achieved elation, only a temporary release from the depression
of coming down, and often not even that. We suffered violent mood
swings. Perhaps we awoke to our predicament after threatening or
actually harming a loved one, desperately demanding imagined hidden
money. We were overcome by feelings of alienation from friends, loved
ones, parents, children, from society, from the sky, from everything
wholesome. Even the dealer we thought was our friend turned into a
stranger when we came to him without money. Perhaps we awoke in dread of
the isolation we had created for ourselves, using alone, suffocated by
our self-centered fear and our paranoia. We were spiritually and
emotionally deadened. Perhaps we thought of suicide, or tried.
Still others of us reached a different sort of bottom, where our
spending and lying lost us our jobs, credit and possessions. Some of us
reached the point where we couldn't even deal -- we consumed everything
we touched before we could sell it. We simply could no longer afford to
use. Sometimes the law intervened.
Most of us were brought down by a medley of financial, physical,
social and spiritual problems.
When we found Cocaine Anonymous, we learned that cocaine addiction is
a progressive disease, chronic and potentially fatal. It fit our own
experience when we heard that contrary to popular myths about cocaine,
it is possibly the most addictive substance known to man. And we were
relieved to be told that addiction is not simply a moral problem, that
it is a true disease over which the will alone is usually powerless. All
the same, each of us must take responsibility for our own recovery.
There is no secret, no magic. We each have to quit and stay sober; but
we don't have to do it alone!
What Is Cocaine Anonymous?
We are a fellowship of cocaine addicts who meet together to share our
experience, strength and hope for the purpose of staying sober and
helping others achieve the same freedom. Everything heard at our
meetings is to be treated as confidential. There are no dues or fees of
any kind. To be a member, you only have to want to quit, and show up. We
also exchange phone numbers, and give and seek support from one another
between meetings.
We are all on equal footing here. There are no professional
therapists offering treatment, and no one "runs" the group. Everyone in
these rooms is here because he or she has a desire to stop using
cocaine. We are men and women of all ages, races, and social
backgrounds, with a common bond of affliction. Our program, called the
Twelve Steps of Recovery, is gratefully borrowed from Alcoholics
Anonymous, whose more than 60 years of experience with substance abuse
teaches us that the best human help an addict can receive is from
another addict. Some of us may first come to C.A. while in a treatment
program or seeking individual psychotherapy. We say, "Fine, do whatever
works for you." We don't pretend to have all the answers. But experience
teaches that a recovering addict will almost certainly relapse without
the ongoing support of fellow addicts.
We welcome newcomers to C.A. with more genuine warmth and acceptance
in our hearts than you can probably now imagine. For you are the life
blood of our program. In great part it is by carrying the message of
recovery to others like ourselves that we keep our own sobriety. We are
all helping ourselves by helping each other.
What Is The First Thing?
To the newcomer who wonders what the first thing he or she must do to
achieve sobriety, we say that you have already done the first thing; you
have admitted to yourself, and now to others, that you need help by the
very act of coming to a meeting or seeking information about the C.A.
program.
You are also, at this very moment doing the next thing to stay
straight; you are not taking the next hit. Ours is a one-day-at-a-time
program. We suggest that you should not dwell on wanting to stay sober
for the rest of your life, or the year, or even the week. Once you have
decided you want to quit, let tomorrow take care of itself. Just for
today, you don't have to use. But sometimes it is too much for us to
project even one whole day drug free. That's okay. Just for the next ten
minutes, you don't have to use. It's okay to want it, but you don't have
to use it, just for ten minutes. After ten minutes, see where you are.
You can repeat this simple process as often as necessary, using whatever
span of time feels comfortable. JUST FOR TODAY, I DON'T HAVE TO USE!
In the C.A. fellowship, you are among recovering cocaine abusers who
are living without drugs. Make use of us! Take phone numbers. Between
meetings you may not be able to avoid contact with drugs and druggies.
Some of us had no sober friends at all when we first came in. You have
sober friends now! When you begin to feel squirrelly, don't wait, give
one of us a call. And don't be surprised if one of us calls you when we
need help.
It may surprise you that we discourage any use of mind-altering
substances, including alcohol and marijuana. It is the common experience
of addicts in this and other programs that any drug use leads to relapse
or substitute addiction. If you're addicted to another substance, you'd
better take care of it. If you're not, then you don't need it, so why
mess with it. We urge you to heed this sound advice drawn from the
bitter experience of other addicts. Is it likely you're different?
We thought we were happiest with our cocaine! But we were not. In
C.A. we learn to live a new way of life. We say that it is a spiritual
but not a religious program -- our spiritual values are accessible to
the atheist as well as to the devout theist.
We who are grateful recovering cocaine addicts ask you to listen
closely to our stories. That is the main thing: Listen! We know where
you're coming from, because we've been there ourselves. Yet we are now
living drug-free, and not only that but living happily; many of us
happier than we have been before. Few of us would trade all our years of
addiction for the last six months or year of living the C.A. program of
sobriety.
No one says that it is easy to arrest addiction. We had to give up
old ways of thinking and behaving. We had to be willing to change. But
we are doing it, gratefully, one day at a time.
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