Lifestyles

Momentary Relapse

relapse, beer, cold, mug, alcohol, abuse

One of life's simple pleasures for some; a devastating vice for others.


I enter in the familiar rehab lobby with my tail between my legs. Frank, the counselor with whom I shook hands and gave my good-byes just three weeks prior, saw me and did a double take. '
By Citizen Correspondent Scott Cooper
Date Posted: 01/19/07
Reader Rating: rating

I walked back into rehab three weeks after I'd left. Before that, I'd done so well... Awareness of my behavior was realized, understanding of my addiction was made clear. They even made me unit leader in an effort to propel me further out of my shell and onto the course of responsibility and recovery. I relished the job with Mussolinian flare and style, bringing order into a unit of chaos. On day 30, I went home.

As I drove across the state line from Oregon into Washington, I felt good. I'd hit a meeting that night, call some guys back in the unit and clean my apartment. And write. I wanted to do some more writing and try and kick the television habit.

By the time I stopped for gas in Longview, about halfway home, I figured a few beers couldn't hurt. I mean, with all that sober time clearing the head and getting the body back to respectable health levels, how could it hurt? Sure, it would be considered a "relapse," but all that talk about relapse being the beginning of the end was just rehab guilt. F*ck it. I'll work my program.

As I was enjoying a Whopper just south of Olympia, it seemed completely reasonable that I could go on a three to five day binge and be none the worse for wear. I was planning on going into outpatient treatment the following week, so why not enter on a roll? I really wanted to get shit-faced anyway, blow off a little steam, and this week long window before outpatient seemed the perfect time to have one last hurrah.

The closer I got to home, the faster I drove. I was averaging 70 mph in southern Washington and by the end of the drive, at least 80. I could feel the edges of the beer cap in my hand as I twisted it off with a pop. I could taste the first cold sip after the icy steam oozed out of the bottle. I stepped on the gas, hard. I screeched into the convenience store parking lot, grabbed a 12-pack and a bag of chips and bolted to the counter. I paid with a debit card and the machine was going so, so slow.


1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 next








Tags:

Comments

Excellent story Scott.

By Garry Crystal, January 21, 2007 at 02:51

Excellent story Scott. Although i've never yet gotten to the suicidal stage (maybe i have and just blanked it out)i know how it feels to want to erase the routine mundane boredom of everyday life sometimes by any means available. As Matt Dillon's character in Drugstore Cowboy said, "Just tying your shoelaces everyday becomes a chore" or near enough. Great writing style, keep going.

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <p><a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><span><div>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
5 + 8 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.