Saturday, February 09, 2013

Four Years Later

Life goes on. Doesn't it?

One day, you might look back, and somehow, some way, you're here, and OxyHell is way, way back "there" somewhere. When you are in the bowels of OxyHell, it's hard to believe that there could ever come a day when you are able to look back at it as way back anywhere. When you are in the jaws of OxyHell, it's up in your face, and it's hard enough to imagine living through even the next five minutes.

But those next five minutes will come, whether you like it or not. They surely will. And you will probably be there, one way or another.

Today, I checked an old email account that I hadn't logged onto in years, four and a half years to be exact. The inbox was packed with hundreds of solicitations for the usual spam: get rich quick schemes, dating services, the latest scams, and of course, predators selling pills from God knows where. What stood out the most though were the many notifications informing me that people had been commenting on this OxyContin blog for several years, and I hadn't even known it. There was a time though, when I was neck-deep in OxyHell, unable to envision that a day would come when I would revisit this blog, amazed that I'd somehow lived through the hazy memories of it all.

So I'm still alive. The stories about my romance with Oxy, her iron grip, my futile attempts at escape, and how I kissed her Oompa-Loompa-colored sister, Suboxone, are all still here. What amazes me right now is that, every day there are people who have found themselves in OxyHell, discovering those old stories of mine and adding stories of their own. However, I've come to the realization that "my stories" on this blog aren't really my stories at all. Instead, they seem to be much the same as everybody's else's. My stories are identical to anyone who's found themselves in one chapter or another of what seems to be a collective OxyContin saga.

For now, I'll spare you the details of the past four and a half years, but because the world seems to measure a person's success by how long it has been since they have been high, I'll give you the obligatory report. Before I do though, I hope you understand what I meant by what I just said. If I've learned anything about getting out of OxyHell, it isn't about measuring how long it has been since you last got high. In fact, that has nothing to do with it.

Getting out of OxyHell is about figuring out how to live, really live, right now. It's about realizing that, despite how many minutes, hours, days, months, or years it has been since you were last high, there will never be some single moment when suddenly everything is going to be alright. Life goes on, and on, and on. There will be new challenges, new demons, and twists and changes and turns you simply can't imagine. And really, many of those challenges, eventually, and hopefully, won't have a lot to do with Oxy. For that reason alone, you've got to ask yourself, "Am I living life, really living it, right now?"

If you don't die because of it, there may come a time when you're going to look back at OxyHell and feel like it's mostly behind you. But until, or if, that day arrives, you've got to figure out how to live right now, how to be happy right now, and how to turn this crazy trip called "life" into a meaningful thing that will someday be  worth looking back upon.

As of February 2013, I haven't been high or needed Suboxone for a year and ten months. I had to think about it for a couple of minutes just to figure out that meaningless statistic. There wasn't some particular day that I can recall as "my last day," like some sort of ridiculous end point. There were no wondrous epiphanies along the way, no astounding miracles, and no magic moments that marked where my OxyHell began or ended. Life just went on. Sometimes life was better. Rarely was it worse. I'm just in a different place now; however, it's just a place that's a year and ten months later. I'm still learning how to live. I always will be. That's the way life is. That's the way it is for everybody.

Your life will go on too. Won't it? Make the best of it.

15 comments:

JD said...

Wow!!!its so great to know you are ok!!! I had sadly assumed that you had either slipped back intothe arms of oxylady....or you had died...looking forward to your wonderful blogging about this fascinating and tragic thing thats so permeatingour society...JD

Sarah Bullock said...

Just wanted to say thanks for sharing your experience. I am doing some research for writing my blog...and I wanted to write about the problem Oxy is on our nation. I have seen far too many people let their lives become consumed by this drug..and it is like heroin and I feel it does not need to be used (not even for pain management). It is too addictive and then becomes to dibilitating to the individual. So thank you for sharing.

Unknown said...

I cried reading this. I felt your pain. I was there four years ago. See two of my blogs, one on my OxyContin struggle
our-little-devil-brat.weebly.com
and one about how I'm now addicted, for life, to f&^*ing methadone.
http://lulubelle7537.livejournal.com/
I would love to talk to you more about this, my personal email is lulubelle7537@yahoo.com and if you want my cell number I would love to talk or text. I truly believe, despite my good attitude about it, that OxyContin fucking ruined my life in many ways, yet it made me stronger and better and I've just come out so much further ahead after all I went through ya know? I hope to hear back from you. My name is Jen

JD said...

C'mon Gus.....please blog some more...we miss ya out here in computerland JD

Unknown said...

My good friend struggled with this very thing as well. It was so hard to watch him go through it. I was so glad when he found oxycontin detox las vegas. It helped him get his life back.

Anonymous said...

I know roxycodone up the nose hell and back.Yes having landed back on earth there are times I miss the paradoxical reaction I experienced on oxy. I felt like the energizer bunny in euphoria land. My energy and focus was quite pleasant, however my need for more of the drug than I had access to made for many unpleasant withdrawal.\, lasting anywhere from a few days to a few weeks and the mood swing that replaced the euphoria was pretty nasty. Well it's over and while I sometime wish I could take 1 and than leave it alone for a month, but from experience if they were in my home they were sure to go up my nose. So controlled use for me is a completely unrealistic goal.

The nightmare or roller coaster ride can end with a great deal of desire, I do not have to have the oxy ball and chain on me any more

Anonymous

Kelly Lord said...

Wow. In 2007 i started experimenting and later that year i was hooked. I remember desperately looking for an answer online and finding this blog. Its 2014 amd im 14 days clean today and i couldnt say that for 7 years. Kicked 120mgs of methadone, oxy turned to heroin, I lost a lot of material items, but i am 100% clean and never have to feel that way again. This blog is part of my story. I referred to it many times over the years. Thank you for keeping it.

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About this Blog

For the past ten years I have been writing about my experience using oxycodone, the active ingredient in OxyContin, Percocet, and other prescription painkillers. I eventually developed a tolerance, then dependence, and became addicted. My archive covers my abuse of these drugs and my effors to quit using them.

I have tried to accurately report my experience without a sense of advocacy. It is my hope that you'll be able to make your own conclusions, as well as find my story factual, informative, and interesting.