I Believe
On a January morning, I woke up naked and alone, covered only by my coat, on a couch in an unfamiliar apartment. I sat up and fumbled for my glasses on the coffee table. My head was aching and my stomach was queasy. Gradually, I remembered the events of the previous day.
My lawyer and I had met with an assistant district attorney and worked out the details of my plea bargain. I was going to spend at least a couple of years in prison.
When I got home from the meeting, I had called my friend Linda, and told her about the deal. She suggested that I needed to get out and do some partying before I began my sentence. I agreed and we made plans to meet that evening.
We drove to the city and hit two or three bars. My memory of the later part of the evening was hazy, but I remembered meeting a couple of guys, and I remembered the four of us pooling our cash to buy an eight ball of cocaine. After that, it all grew blurry.
I could hear someone snoring in the next room and figured Linda and one of the guys must be sleeping there. My man had evidently left.
There was an inch of Southern Comfort in a bottle on the table. I picked it up and took a sip. When I set it back down, I noticed the empty glassine bag that had contained the coke, alongside a torn condom wrapper.
I picked up the little bag, and did something I had done many times before. I licked the tip of my finger and ran it around inside the bag. I lifted the finger to my mouth and rubbed the few specks of powder on my gums. I felt only the slightest tingle. I looked up and my eyes met those of a reflection in the dark screen of the television. The face I saw was not mine, not my face as it was, but my face as it had once been.
My mother kept my high school yearbook picture in a frame on the mantle. I saw it nearly every day, but I never looked at it. That was the face I saw gazing back at me. I stared at that young girl. She was so much prettier than me. Her eyes were bright. Her skin was clear and unlined. She was eager to get on with her life, to have a career, to meet a wonderful man, to hold their children. She was not anticipating a life of drug abuse, of overdose and miscarriage and imprisonment. She could not imagine the pain she would inflict on those who loved her.
Many times, I had thought I had fallen as far as I could go, but there was always further to fall. Now, I was going to prison. The only place lower was the grave, and I had begun to give that option serious consideration. At one point, shortly after my arrest, I had gone to a nautical supply store and bought a coil of heavy rope. I had even chosen the tree in the woods behind our house from which I would hang myself.
That pretty young girl was going to die kicking at the end of a rope, or covered in her own vomit on a bathroom floor, or at the hands of some abusive man. Unless I chose to save her.
I decided that she deserved a chance to live.
I could not count the number of times I walked in the front door to see my mother waiting at the dining room table to talk to me. This time, the roles were reversed, and I was waiting for her when she came in from work.
"Can you sit down, Mama? We need to talk."
She sat down, looking at me quizzically.
I pushed my phone across the table towards her. "I want you to take this," I said, "Hide it somewhere and don't let me have it, no matter what. And I want you to go in my room and change the log in password on my computer."
"Okay, but..."
I stopped her with a raised finger. "Mama, if I don't go into prison drug free, I don't think I will ever come out. There will be drugs in there, and if I'm using I'll either get in trouble and get more time added to my sentence, or I'll get my hands on something bad that will kill me."
"Alright, sweetheart. What do you need from me?"
"I'm going to be the bitch from hell for the next couple of weeks. I apologize in advance for anything I might say or do, okay?"
She nodded.
"Mama, I want you to make me a promise."
"Anything, baby."
"From now until I go in, don't let me leave the house, unless I am going somewhere with you. And if I do, if I run off or sneak out or something, I want you to call the court and tell them that you want to revoke my bail."
"They will put you in jail."
"They will. So, I better not leave, right? Promise me you will call them."
"I promise," she said, not looking very happy about it.
As it turned out, getting up the courage to make the decision was the hardest part of quitting drugs. I was fine for a couple of days, then I crashed into depression. I would lay on the couch all day, weary to the bone, but unable to sleep. When the fatigue finally caught up with me, I slept a full day around the clock. After that, there came a week of listless irritability. But, no matter what I said or did, my mother never lost her patience. I had a ravenous appetite, and she would cook anything I wanted, but when she did so, I couldn't take any pleasure in the food, eating it begrudgingly. Gradually,I began to feel better.
I could not have done it without my mother by my side. I would wake in the middle of the night to find her sitting by my bedside, her hand holding mine, or resting on my head. I felt like I was her baby girl again. When I started to feel better, we would stay up late, sitting together on the couch, bingeing on Netflix and coffee ice cream.
The day I was processed into prison was one of the worst of my life, but it did hold one small moment of triumph. I pissed in a bottle, and it tested clean.
Drugs were available in prison, if you were willing to take the risk. I was not. I went in clean and I came out clean.
There were times, inside, and when I got out, when I contemplated relieving my boredom, my loneliness, my guilt, through self medication. Occasionally, a reference in a song or movie would cause me to pine for cocaine like a long lost lover. But I stayed clean.
When I moved to Michigan, I felt like I had entered a new life, one where abuse and addiction had no part. I forgot the truth that there are recovering addicts, but none who have recovered.
Life was good. My grandmother and I had a comfortable, mutually supportive relationship. I began to consider the idea of going to college, and she encouraged me in that ambition. I was not paying her any rent, and she refused my help with household expenses, so I was able to start saving money. But even if I attended community college, which would be relatively inexpensive, it would mean cutting back on time I could work, so it was important that I get further ahead financially.