Relapse at the Rubble Home
– written by Betty
Tuesday evening I went
to play BINGO with a fellow PSST mom who has been working hard at getting me
out for some fun. I am also trying to follow
the advice of Barney and Pebbles to "get a life", other than focusing
on Pebbles and her recovery. As you may know, Pebbles returned home recently from 10 months spent
in either Shuman, residential treatment centers, drug rehabs, or a few weeks
here and there of psychiatric hospitals. It has been a year of some major
accomplishments and setbacks, to say the least.
As I entered the front
door with no BINGO winnings, as usual, but feeling refreshed after spending a
relaxing evening with my friend, Pebbles was at the top of the steps looking
down with half-closed eyes. My first thought was, she looks high.
She asked me how my evening was, and I asked her how her NA meeting
was. She sounded funny to me and I asked her what was the
matter. She claimed she was really tired, and I knew she did not sleep
well the last two nights, so I told her to go right to sleep, because “if I
didn't know better, I would have thought you were high on something.”
I went into the kitchen
to talk to Barney and asked him if he noticed anything suspicious about
Pebbles. He said he picked her up from the NA meeting and she had
her 9 month key tag, which she offered to him. She said she was so proud
of herself and he was too. All seemed fine. But now, a little more than an hour later,
all did not seem fine. As we were discussing this, Pebbles came down
to the dining room to get a CD off the table to take back to her room to listen
to, and she was not walking steady. I asked her to walk into the kitchen,
and we knew as she concentrated hard on walking steady, and from the look on
her face, that she had taken something on her 9 month clean anniversary.
I told her, you have taken something. She
denied it, and I repeated – you have taken something, what is it, how much, and
are you safe? She started to cry and admitted she had taken some cough
medicine she bought while she was out looking for a job the day before.
My heart sank – Pebbles had relapsed.
My first response was
anger. My voice raised and I started to respond, “You told me to go have
fun, go out and get a life, and this is what I come home to???” I stopped
myself in mid-sentence. I was emotionally relapsing and falling back into
habits I was recovering from, just as Pebbles was relapsing into her drug
habit. I didn't want to react the same as I have in the past. Pebbles was already crying hard and saying, “I
relapsed and I just sabotaged my 9 months clean time. I hate myself and I
already regret it.” She didn't need me to make her feel any worse
than she already did. PSST kicked in and I told her, “Don’t beat
yourself up, relapse is part of recovery. As long as you are safe,
that's all that matters”.
In the past, Pebbles has
gotten so upset for letting herself and us down, that she has coped
with such disappointments with self-mutilating tactics that I did not want to
encourage. I said “Let's go to bed and we can discuss this in the
morning when you are more clear-headed.” I felt comfortable saying this
because she did not take such a large amount of cough medicine to show
signs of overdose. As a precaution, we
went through her room and personal belongings to make sure there wasn't any more
medicine on her. I slept in her room to keep an eye on her as
well.
She said, “Mom, please
forgive me”. I told her I already have. That is not the old me. Honestly,
I was devastated, angry, heartbroken, and disappointed, but I was trying to work my
own program and not emotionally relapse along with Pebbles. It would
not help her, and instead would only make her feel more upset. I have learned
from past regrets that it would only make a bad situation bone-crushingly
worse. We all needed to rest and prepare for the next step. Barney
left for work, and eventually Pebbles and I fell asleep.
The next morning,
Pebbles got up when she heard Barney return from work, and they talked
about what the options were. Pebbles suggested we all keep this to
ourselves and not share it with her P.O. or counselor, Rachael, and she
would just quit using drugs on her own. Barney told her we couldn't keep secrets from
them. He knew her use would not stop, but instead would only escalate and could be
life-threatening. We had to inform them. She cried – no, she
sobbed – which is what woke me up. I joined them and was grateful I
actually was able to miss out on the beginning of their conversation. She
asked if she could start calling rehabs and try to get herself admitted to one
prior to calling her P.O. and Rachael. We agreed.
Barney went to get some
sleep while Pebbles figured out the next step. I, by now, was wishing I
had a cigarette to smoke. I wanted to relapse back to smoking under the
stress of the situation. I don't know what the drug addict goes through
fighting the desire to use drugs, but I do know how difficult it is not to
revert back to smoking. Just how hard it is to simply "not pick
up". I hate it, I can't breathe, it stinks, it could kill me – but I
want it. I sat with my father as he took his last struggling, dying
breath from emphysema and I wanted a cigarette. I hate to admit this to
all of you. I am ashamed I ever started smoking (peer pressure to fit in
as a teen). How can I persecute Pebbles for relapsing? As hard as
I am struggling right now, I can't imagine how she copes with the struggle of
drug/alcohol addiction.
Pebbles was able to find
a rehab, inform her P.O., get his permission to go, and call Rachael and
Kathy. She was on her way by 5:00 p.m. Barney and I came home to an empty
house, without Pebbles, and I just sat down and cried. I sent out a text
to my fellow Nar Anon members who, as the kids say, "blew up" my cell
phone responding with support. There were a number of fellow members who
drove out of their way to attend our local Nar Anon on Thursday meeting to give me
a hug, bringing donuts and frozen coffee from Dunkin Donuts (because we
ladies grieve together eating sugary food). Nar Anon is another support
group I lean on, along with PSST. I need as much support as I can get to
cope with Pebbles’ and Dina's addiction and my addiction to them.
I've learned so much to help myself, as well as to understand this disease,
from both of my support programs.
Today as I was
straightening up the house, I noticed the CD that Pebbles came down to get
that evening she relapsed. It was a CD she bought while out with Barney
last week. When she came home, she called me to the kitchen, put it in
the CD player and said, "Mom, I bought this because there is a song on it
I want to dedicate to you”. She played it and sang along as we danced to
it, just 4 days before she relapsed. The
song is Hey Mama by Kanye West, and
you can listen to it at this You Tube link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OIZgJ4qYNvo
Pebbles has made so much
progress. Even though she has had a setback, we talked on the way to
rehab about all the progress she has made. Through reading the PSST blog,
attending PSST meetings, and counseling with Wesley Spectrum and Nar Anon, I have learned to
focus on the positives, and on our growth and blessings, rather than dwelling
on all the negatives and setbacks. We are all a work in progress at the
Rubble Home.
My daughter has such a
loving heart. Thank you for helping me to focus on that, and not on her
relapse.
Betty
3 comments:
Betty,
So sorry to hear about this most recent disappointment.
So impressed to hear how calmly you & Barney handled it – very strong & very loving reactions. So proud of how Pebbles handled it too – sounds like she is growing up. It’s all so hard for her, and hard for you too, because as parents we never want to see our children struggle so much.
I am not much of a Kanye West fan, but I listened to the music – Kanye’s admiration & love for his mother is so apparent in this song. How touching that Pebbles dedicated this song to you.
I loved your comment – we are all a work in progress. You applied that statement to your household, but I think it’s a great way to look at human beings in general. I hope that we are all works in progress – such a hopeful statement – we are moving forward & changing & growing, trying to be the best that we can be.
Jenn
Jenn,
I am not a Kayne West or rap music fan myself (although I have heard more than my share blasting from her room) but this one holds a special place in my heart. There are so many times I can go to a dark place and try to scrutinize our whole life and parenting and try to find the things I wish I had done differently and maybe if we would have been better parents.... So when she played and sang this to me I couldn't help but feel no matter what my mistakes may be she really knows without any doubt, regardless of the arguments, struggles and forcing her into treatments she wanted no part of, she knows we love her with our heart and souls. I will play this when my mind goes to that dark place. Thank you again for your kind support words and the time you dedicate to posting our blogs.
Betty
Betty,
When I read your post, I was struck by how many positives there were in this story. The fact that Pebbles stayed clean for 9 months is remarkable, considering that she has a history of severely impulsive behavior. Even more remarkable is that some of that time was spent living in your home with much less supervision than at a facility.
In addition, you and Barney maintained a very loving and quick response to her relapse; Pebbles is showing a willingness to get additional help; and you were able to skillfully recover from an angry response. Not to sound like a weird MasterCard commercial, but having the song she dedicated to you? Priceless.
I can imagine that this is an incredibly disappointing experience for you and Barney. However, I know you well enough by now to know that you are strong and resilient. I think Pebbles is starting to show signs of that as well.
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