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WHO IS A COCAINE ADDICT?
Some of us can
answer without hesitation, "I am!" Others aren't so sure. Cocaine Anonymous
believes that no one can decide for another whether he or she is addicted. One
thing is sure, though: every single one of us has denied being an addict. For
months, for years, we who now freely admit that we are cocaine addicts thought
that we could control cocaine when in fact it was controlling us.
"I only use on weekends," or
"it hardly
ever interferes with work," or
"I can quit, it's only
psychologically addicting, right?" or
"I only snort, I
don't base or shoot," or
"It's this relationship that's
messing me up."
Many of us are still perplexed to realize how
long we went on, never getting the same high we got in the beginning. Yet still
insisting and believing-- so distorted was our reality--that we were getting
from cocaine what actually always eluded us.
We went to any lengths to
get away from being ourselves. The lines got fatter, the grams went faster, the
week's stash was all used up today. We found ourselves scraping envelopes and
baggies with razor blades, scratching the last flakes from the corners of brown
bottles, snorting or smoking any white speck from the floor when we ran out.
We, who prided ourselves on our fine-tuned state of mind! Nothing mattered more
to us than the straw, the pipe, the needle. Even if it made us feel miserable,
we had to have it.
Some of us mixed cocaine with alcohol or pills, and
found temporary relief in the change, but in the end, it only added to our
problems. We tried quitting by ourselves, finally, and sometimes managed to do
so for periods of time. After a month, we imagined we were in control. We
thought our system was cleaned out and we could get the old high again, using
half as much. This time, we'd be careful not to go overboard. But we only found
ourselves back where we were before, and worse.
We never left the house
without using first. We didn't make love without using. We didn't talk on the
phone without coke. We couldn't fall asleep; sometimes it seemed we couldn't
even breathe without cocaine. We tried changing jobs, apartments, cities,
lovers--believing that our lives were being screwed up by circumstances,
places, people. Perhaps we even saw a cocaine friend die of respiratory arrest
and still we went on using! But eventually we had to face facts. We had to
admit that cocaine was a serious problem in our lives, that we were addicts.

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