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An article written about Narcotics Anonymous in Honolulu,
Hawaii, USA.
Honolulu Advertiser Tuesday, May 23, 2003
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com
Self-esteem helped her stay clean
By Lee Cataluna
Advertiser Columnist
You would never look at Cathy and think "drug addict."
She looks like the president of the PTA, the soccer mom who
always makes the best snacks, the chairwoman of the big charity
ball.
Cathy used for 13 years. For most of that time, she tried not
to. She tried everything to quit: religion, medicine,
psychiatry. She tried being married. She tried being married
again. Each time she tried anew, she'd start with the best
intentions. Then she'd slip, and she'd be gone.
"I even tried the ultimate: motherhood," Cathy says. "I remember
having this incredibly beautiful child ... and then using. It
felt like losing your soul — like, oh, my God, I'm losing
everything again."
She calls herself a "protected addict." Family was there to help
pick up the pieces and give her one more chance.
"I'm not what you might think of as 'the usual' in that I came
from a family who loved and adored me. There was no addiction in
my family. My parents were educated. They supported me and told
me I could be anything I wanted to be.
"I had every excuse in the world. My marriage is a wreck. My
husband's not nice to me. I have low self-esteem. Give me
drugs."
When there was nothing left to try, Cathy tried Narcotics
Anonymous.
"It's difficult to put into words how lucky I am," she says. "It
was just by chance I rolled into the meeting and the right
people were there to meet me. They smiled at me. They welcomed
me. If not for them, I'd be dead."
The Narcotics Anonymous program talks of being "in service" as
part of recovery. It was this idea put into action that helped
Cathy get clean and stay clean the last 24 years.
"It started with my first meeting setting up seats. Then making
coffee. Then working with my sponsor; she said to greet women as
they came in. With each little thing, my self-esteem grew."
Over time, Cathy started to apply the same principles to all of
her life.
"Ten years ago, my mom was diagnosed with cancer," she says. "I
was able to move in and take care of her.
"The program talks about making amends. It was my parents' wish
to die at home. It was a phenomenal gift when the time came to
have them call on me. It was the first time in my life when I
knew I had the ... right love to be of service. And it all
started with setting up chairs."
Narcotics Anonymous is a nonprofit fellowship of recovering
addicts who meet regularly to help each other stay clean. The
program is not run by "professionals" but by members. There are
no dues or fees and NA is not affiliated with any religion.
NA doesn't claim to be the solution for every addict in every
situation. The only requirement for membership is the desire to
stop using.
In this column on Sunday, an addict who got clean and stayed
clean through incredible stress shares her story. For more
information on Narcotics Anonymous, call 734-4357.
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