Recovery: Help Me Help You
by David L. Hertz, Ed.D, Chief Development Officer
The recent tragedy of Michael Jackson’s sudden death has led to public knowledge of his private battle with addiction. Even with his superstar status, it appears he had access to treatment but had no real supports to get him through his struggle. As actress Jamie Lee Curtis noted in a recent piece for The Huffington Post, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jamie-lee-curtis/king-of-pain_b_240998.html “recovery from drug addiction is the single greatest accomplishment of my life… but it takes work — hard, painful work — but the help is there, in every town and career, drug/drink freed members of society, from every single walk and talk of life to help and guide.”
One thing about treatment is that it’s hard to get when you don’t have a phone or a place to live. This means the most vulnerable and susceptible can easily be ignored or passed over for help. SUS consumers who were recent graduates of the SUS Peer Counseling program were previously homeless and diagnosed with a mental illness before coming to SUS. Many were substance abusers or incarcerated.
“The emotional high I feel today is only matched by the emotional depths I sank to when my wife and twin daughters died in a car crash and I began years of homelessness and drug addiction.”
“I’m 62 years old. My mother is 90 and sitting in the audience. I say to her, in front of all of you, ‘I’m sorry. So sorry, for the years of hell I put you through. I promise in what ever years are left to me, to make you as proud of me as I possibly can.”
“The last thing I graduated was jump school before going to Viet Nam.”
“For years I called myself a ‘psych-veggie’ and now I call myself a man in full recovery.”
These remarks were made by some of the recent graduates of the SUS Peer Counseling program; sixteen-weeks of intensive engagement with the core principles and methods of listening, empathy, trust, and conflict resolution.
Beyond the treatment, we know that recovery is more than just not drinking or using drugs; it is about putting together a new and meaningful life in which alcohol and drugs no longer have a place. Now, some graduates will be employed by SUS as counselors in our wellness programs, many will be similarly employed in other agencies, and some will simply utilize the valuable lessons learned as they pursue their individual goals.
Whatever path they take, each will experience, in the words of Donna Colonna, SUS’ CEO, “the recovery power of giving back.” By achieving their own greater independence, they will demonstrate a multiplier-effect upon the lives of others still struggling to manage mental illness and achieve self-fulfillment.
In the year ahead, SUS will be sharing more about its’ Peer Counseling program. We invite you to stay tuned and learn how this program serves the mission of independence and gives rise to personal success stories that can inspire us all.
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http://none Alkesh Patel, MD
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http://signal.org Thian Anderson

