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I lost a great friend today to crack

Outpost4

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One of my closest friends has been battling addiction to crack over the past three years. His other drug of choice is alcohol. Bill has been in and out of rehab and has been unable to remain sober for longer than 90 days. Mostly he manages four to six weeks sober between multi-day binges. It has been a progressive spiral downward.

On Saturday, I got a phone call from his sister. She was with the extended family for Thanksgiving. Bill was threatening suicide. He hadn't made it to the gathering, binging on crack that weekend instead. The family was three hours away and Bill's sister asked me to make sure he checked into a local hospital's psych ward, something he'd agreed to do over the phone. I went over to his house, and without much difficulty, we went to the hospital.

By Tuesday, he was out, with a change of his anti-depressant medication and a great attitude. That afternoon he was my friend of old. I bought him a tank of gas and a shopping cart of food - he's completely broke - and thought maybe there was hope. Before the night was up, he was back on crack, going off the radar until this morning. He resurfaced, depressed.

This afternoon he called me, furious. His ex-wife had received sole custody of their five children. Three of them are under six years old. There is no question Bill is currently an unfit parent and his ex-wife needs to take care of the kids. When sober, he's a great dad, but not now. Through the phone calls, he just spit venom, mostly toward himself, his ex-wife and the world in general. He hung up on me twice. In one of the phone calls, I didn't get to say a single word. He is completely out of control.

I'm done. I see now that I was an enabler of his addiction on Tuesday, helping him not take responsibility for his life for another day. I can't talk to him. The stress on me is just too much. Bill and his addiction has dominated my life recently and I need to stay away to keep myself healthy.

I may not see him alive again. I hope he finds the bottom of his addiction and gets help before he kills himself, most likely because of the drug use. In the past three years he has had testicular cancer, Bell's palsy and meningitis, among other ailments. I know it's his body giving up. He says he can hear his heart racing when he's on crack. There is also the chance he will intentionally kill himself first, but my intervention Saturday did no good. It's less than a week later and he's in worse shape than before.

I have resigned myself to speaking fondly of Bill at his funeral.
 
Everyone has their limits and we can only do so much. And if someone keeps doing the same thing, that limit will be reached, no matter what we do. I'm sorry and i hope he manages to somehow straighten his life around, but it looks like that's not gonna happen.
 
my condolences.

as a friend of a recovering crack addict, this is especially heavy for me.
 
Sorry to hear this. I know some of what you've been through with him. It's obvious you care for him deeply and love him.

But, damnit, the good guys are supposed to win.

I'm sure you will remember Bill at the funeral as the friend and person he was, not what the crack made him into.
 
That really sucks, Outpost. It always tough to watch a good friend self destruct like what you're describing. I hope something changes soon for him, otherwise, I wish you well in hanging in there. :(
 
Thanks, folks, each one of you. I appreciate the support, and frankly, tonight, I need it. It's a very sad day for me.

I think I'll go read the Blue Nacelle thread once again. I could use the change of pace. :)
 
Yeah, you've done what you can. All you can do is walkka way, watch from a distance.

Maybe down the track an intervention? I dunno how it would work in a case like this.

be strong.
 
I'm sorry I Want A Pony. You have a huge heart but you're right, there's only so far you can help someone.

I've run across that in my own life. One relative responded successfully to treatment but my brother does not. He's an alcoholic and just today was diagnosed with pancreatitis in his latest journey to the hospital.

I hope you can be at peace with this. And I'm only a PM away.
 
Gregg, I wish I knew what to say to make this better for you, but sometimes there just isn't any good advice to give in a situation. All I know is that I love you and that you are a fine man. I am sure that you have been a good friend to Bill and perhaps you will have that opportunity again. I hope and pray so. May God bless you in the interim. David
 
Sorry to hear all this, Outpost. Sometimes the best thing you can do for somebody is walk away, even though it's also the hardest thing to do. And some people just really can't be helped. I hope this serves as a wake-up call to your friend and he turns himself around.
 
I'm sorry to hear this, Outpost. I remember you mentioning Bill once before in another post. I've know several people that have struggled with addiction, be it drugs or alcohol. Unfortunately, there is only so much you can do for the one who has the addiction. In the end it is up to that person to want to make the change necessary to turn their life around. Hopefully, your friend will realize before it is too late to take the first step to recovery.
 
This sucks, Outpost. I'm really sorry.

The biological mother of my little sisters has an addictive personality. While she readily gave up my little sister Molly, who's the oldest, for adoption, she was trying to keep Leila, who is a year and a half younger. All throughout the pregnancy she kept saying how she was going to get "better," and my stepmom even tried to help her - lend her Molly's old baby furniture and baby clothes, buy furniture, etc. The mother also said that she was staying clean this whole time. But the mother was supporting an addicted "friend" and ended up selling a lot of her stuff.

Three days before the mother was scheduled to be induced to labor, she partied hard, and Leila was born with five drugs in her system. It took her a full month to detox.

So even though the mother wanted to keep Leila, and was trying to stay clean/etc to keep her own child, she still succumbed to her addictive personality, regardless of the support system she could have had.
 
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