Addict Seeks Help to Restore Pride and Dignity – Video

by Salvation Army
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He thought it was the only way out. “I believed disappearing would solve my problems,” says 43-year-old Rory. “I was foolish enough to think a new life would be waiting for me.”

Rory was an alcoholic in denial when his marriage of 15 years disintegrated. After the mother of his two sons divorced him he was lonely, depressed, sad and regretful. A functional addict, he hid his problem with alcohol and continued to operate his business as a journeyman mechanic, building custom-made vehicles for clients.

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4KFfnIoTPE

The accident
Late one rainy night, after drinking several bottles of beer, Rory’s truck veered off a country road and struck a 100-foot-tall spruce tree. He was on the brink of death as the air ambulance transported him from small-town Lacombe to the University of Alberta Hospital in Edmonton.

“The doctors told my family I may not live the night,” says Rory. “I was in a coma and a tracheotomy was inserted into my neck to open an airway and prevent suffocation. Tubes in my rib cage kept my collapsed lungs inflated. I had 10 broken ribs, my left cheek required 120 stitches and all my teeth on the left side were knocked out.”

To the doctors amazement Rory woke four days after the crash. He had no recollection of the accident. Nine days later he went home to his apartment.

Substance abuse
“For months I was unable to work,” says Rory. “I received financial support from various sources of disability. I had time and money, which was my downfall. Although alcohol was my drug of choice for more than 20 years, I started using crack cocaine. It was mind-numbing and allowed me to temporarily forget my problems.

“But the drug progressively took over my life,” continues Rory. “At the height of my addiction I spent $1,000 a day on crack and used for as many days as I could stay awake. Sometimes this would be two weeks. At first, money wasn’t a factor. Then my bills started piling up.

“I didn’t care about anything but the drug. I soon lost my home, my business and custody of my teenage sons. When I moved into my parents’ basement I carried unbearable feelings of shame and embarrassment.”

Rory was raised in a Christian home with supportive parents. They wanted nothing more than to see him sober up and make better choices. His father approached him about The Salvation Army’s six-month residential drug-treatment program (Anchorage) in Edmonton. Rory laughed and shrugged it off. “I denied I had an issue,” says Rory. Weeks later, beaten and broke down, Rory called his father and said ‘let’s look at going to Edmonton’.

Although he knew he needed help, the thought of committing to something long-term and leaving his friends was overwhelming and frightening. Rory hopped in his truck and disappeared. He was more than 500 kilometres from home when his cell phone rang. “It was The Salvation Army,” says Rory. “I chose to give recovery a chance.”

Recovery
”The process of moving beyond fear and addiction isn’t easy,” says Rory. “Over time Anchorage taught me how to manage my anger and sadness. It changed my thought patterns and taught me how to deal with issues. I underwent a major transformation personally, emotionally, spiritually and behaviourally.

Rory has been clean and sober since June 2009. He works full-time in food services at the Addictions Centre and has a healthy relationship with his sons.

Says Rory: “Coming to The Salvation Army, cleaning up and learning how to stay clean, has made me feel worthwhile. I walk down the street with my head held high. Hopelessness is not part of my vocabulary any more.”