Reply to Ginger

    Gestalt Therapy (O'Neill)
    • Gestalt Therapy and Mental Health Care: Part 1 by Brian O'Neill, 11/3/96
      • (...)
        • Drug users recover on the edge of forever... by ginger, 5/16/98


    Reply to Ginger
    by Dale R. Smith, 5/16/98

    Hello Ginger,

    Good to meet you. I understand your point about me playing with words, and it is one I have heard before many times. Take heart though Ginger, it is still a good point anyways, and I offer you this in response:

    When I say that I love drugs I mean my addiction loves drugs, and that is true today. Although I am sober since 1981, my addiction is not cured. I can simply prove this by walking into a bar and having a nice, cold beer. Once the alcohol made contact with me I would within just a few hours revert back to my old addictive self. Nothing else would matter then, and I would resume drinking and drugging myself to death in my own way. I would love it and call it life, but it would be death. I would believe then that the lie of my loving drugs was indeed now the truth, and my life would be forfeit.

    I will not pick up that cold beer though, so I now can see that the truth is that I do love drugs but that it is making contact with me NOW as I lie AS LONG AS I do my program and stay sober and clean. A real paradox. Make for good, solid gestalting :)

    To sum up then ... I DO love drugs and getting high...but since I do a program of recovery I can see the lie in that truth...the drunken addict in me really loves drugs...the sober addict in me loves sobriety...working the program keeps me sober...and that means I don't get drunk anymore. It is a simple choice I make each day. A good choice. A happy choice. A free choice.

    Ya know Ginger why I quit drugs? Let me tell you a bit. Of all the experiences I had with drugs, the most and best was the total freedom and clarity I achieved with myself and the world I lived in then. I was quite serious about my using for over 11 years. Some of those experiences I still treasure today. Some of them I do not at all, and I am still spitting out garbage and toxic waste from myself. In the end I became very sick and defeated. I lost the will to play the game because I could not win anymore.

    I loved drugs back then because I had a freedom inside me that really turned my crank. In the end, the crank was turning me. It always was really. I got fooled, but the way I was fooled was sooo real, that even today I look back and shake my head. I still remember loving it most earnestly.

    Anyways, I quit drugs not because of consequences, like that it put me in hospital many times, or destroyed a promising formal education, or that life was just becomming a bummer:

    I quit drugs for the simple reason that I could no longer experience freedom of choice in even the most simple and mundane things. Really basic and simple things. Like thinking. And feeling. And awareness. And contact. Let me tell you Ginger, I have been to the edge of forever. I would have jumped off if I could have taken my freedom with me, but the price was just to much, so I backed away and turned around and have not looked back since. I am still a slave, but I am a free slave now. Anyways, that edge is just behind me for the rest of my life Ginger. After awhile you learn to love and hate your own private little taste of heaven, earth and hell. You learn to pay a lesser price and move on.

    I will not lie to myself today that I didn't love being at the edge when I was stoned and drunk. I also love being here today straight and sober. I gave up drugs for one reason only Ginger: to get back my freedom of choice. It has cost me dearly to get it back, but I can live with it.

    I still face my consequences and I still have my problems, just like you do sister. And like you I have learned a few things. Have a nice day.

    warmly, Dale


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