
Violence ruined my life: Four months into recovery
When I was young, everything was chaotic. My father used to beat me for everything, even if it was not my fault. I could never relax at home, so school would be the only time that I was not on edge. I was drawn to negative people, such as children of divorced parents and children of alcoholics. Whatever I felt, I would let it out. I would leave the house as much as I could. I would even beat up the first person I saw when I left the house, without hesitation.
Then my teachers started hitting me, and I stopped going to school for seven months. However, I would not go home, either. Sometimes, I would tell my family I was going to pray, but I never did. I just did not want to be around them. I was living in anxiety and I couldn’t wait to grow older.
I started drinking at 14; I was constantly living in a state of fear and anxiety. I would get caught drinking, because of the smell of alcohol, and I would be beaten up. So I started searching for a substance that would give a similar kick, but without the smell.
At 16, I started smoking hashish. I continued to get beaten, often violently. I started using heroin, and soon enough, I was contemplating hanging myself. The culture we live in promotes the ideas that 'whatever you do, it is because you want to'. Drug abuse is not a disease, and there is no treatment. It happens because you are not a man'.
When my grandmother died, nobody told me. When I confronted them, they said I was an embarrassment and they didn’t want me around them. I was done, and tired. My brother was compassionate towards me and offered me help. When I was taken to the clinic, I decided I was going to take as many pills and leave. But I didn’t, and now I’m here. Because of the programme, I know my behaviour was because of my abusive childhood, and now I am a changed man.
I didn’t want my son to be like my father: Three months into recovery
My father was an alcoholic and was very violent. When I was around 15, I noticed that my father was having multiple affairs. I started drinking around that same age, and my family decided that getting me married would help. However, the seed had already been planted in my head.
I continued to drink and started cheating on my wife and beating her. I didn’t know what I was doing, and I would forget the things I had done the next morning. I would steal my wife's gold jewellery that I had bought for her, with my own money!
My brothers tried to intervene and would constantly beat me. I decided then that I couldn’t recover. I didn’t understand why I kept going back to using drugs. I had many personalities at that time, but none of them were mine. Even when I went to prison, I promised myself I would never go back to that life.
I never thought that treatment and recovery could be between two addicts. I started using drugs with addicts, and now I can get clean with them. One day, someone stood up for me in front of my family and said: ‘Don’t blame him, it’s not his fault.’ I thought I was the only one who felt that way. I didn’t understand why I was doing the things I did. I didn’t know why I had no control. Then I realised that the problem was not the drug, but me.
The centre and the programme made me confront myself. I was scared that my son would acquire the behaviour of my father. They were all learnt behaviours. I thank God that I am an addict because I care now, perhaps, more than I would if I had never gone through this journey. My brother used to beat me when I would tell him that I am an addict, but now I have solutions, thanks to the centre and the programme.
I couldn’t find love or God: Five months into recovery
I came from an average family, just like everybody else. When I was five, my father died but nobody told me until I was 11. They just said that he went away for a job. I suffered from emotional neglect. I had a void in my soul. I isolated myself from everyone, anywhere I went. I looked for a father's love from my uncle and everyone else, but never got it. There was no love and no God in my life.
I was beaten for everything, and even when I made a mistake I was violently smacked across the face. I was drawn to negativity. I had no drug of choice, I just took whatever was in front of me. I changed from being filled with fear and insecurities to being violent and enraged. Drugs really helped me deal with life at that time.
When it came to religion, I would attack anyone who mentioned that word. But it turns out that my problem was not religion, but was my insecurities since childhood. When I realised that, my mentality completed changed. I was sent to around 20 different rehabs, but it was all useless before this realisation.
I have a disease, and it is not something shameful. This is the first time I am getting clean in Oman, and it is right next to my house. Today, I pray because I want to. All I am looking for is inner peace. I think it is really important that recovering addicts help active addicts. After all, my own mother could not understand me.
Source: Timesofoman
GMT 14:29 2018 Friday ,31 August
Salvini probe dossier sent to PalermoGMT 14:22 2018 Friday ,31 August
Scholz plays down Italy-EU tensionsGMT 11:48 2018 Friday ,31 August
Situation on maritime and land borders is stableGMT 18:27 2018 Thursday ,30 August
Veteran UK Labour MP quits over anti-Semitism rowGMT 18:22 2018 Thursday ,30 August
France's Macron proposes EU collective defence planGMT 17:16 2018 Wednesday ,29 August
CGEM Head Calls for Better Training to Support Youth IntegrationGMT 16:32 2018 Wednesday ,29 August
HM the King Appoints New Walis and Governors at TerritorialGMT 12:35 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
All according to Munro plan as New Zealand sinks Pakistan
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor