I was having a conversation with [livejournal.com profile] captain_lila this morning, and I told her some of the things I don't usually tell anybody. And I've been thinking ever since, and perhaps it's time to open myself up a little more.

I don't like talking about the junkie days. My priorities, my motivations, have changed so much that it mostly doesn't seem relevant. And I particularly dislike the thought of people seeing me and immediately thinking "oh, that's the ex-junkie". If I'm going to be known I want it to be for my big arse, my dogs, my awesome blowjob skills, my complete inability to meet deadlines, my capacity for self-delusion, the fact that I can put my ankles behind my ears - anything except the junkie thing.

So why am I writing about it now? Because I'm a masochist and I loathe Sunday afternoons with a burning passion, partly, but also because I have a few things I wanted to point out about people.

People suck. People are capable of the worst sorts of cruelty, selfishness and thoughtlessness. People are vermin on the face of the Earth. They're all hateful and it's futile to expect anything from them except to be kicked when you're down, right?

Actually, not. I love people. I love just about all of them, and if anything's taught me how worthy they are of love, it was the junkie years.

The thing I haven't told most of you is that when I was homeless, addicted and living rough, after Mike and I had exhausted shoplifting as a way to make our daily drug money, we took to begging. Most of you have seen homeless people sitting on street corners, sometimes with dogs, asking passers-by for their spare change. For over two years, with my dog Scampi, I was one of them. I had a regular shop doorway I used to sit in on Firvale Road, and I used to turn up there every evening at sevenish with my dog, his cushion and blanket and water bowl, and stay till 3am while the Bournemouth nightclubbing crowd streamed, danced, lurched and staggered past me.

And let me tell you something - that crowd were awesome. I've never in my life, before or since, seen so much kindness and compassion as I did in those years. For every person who made a snotty noise or walked past studiously looking away, there was at least one who gave me money, bought me food, bought my dog food, brought me hot tea, went back to their flats and fetched me new blankets, jackets, gloves or shoes, or, perhaps most importantly, sat down and had a conversation with me. On a good night, my doorway would turn into a spontaneous sitting-down party, with four or five total strangers laughing and joking and drinking together. Or sometimes there'd be just one person pouring his heart out and asking me for advice - that happened too, more often than you'd think.

See, this is a tricky thing to explain, and I'm a little scared of it being taken the wrong way. I wasn't happy with my life, obviously. Being addicted to heroin was one great big ball of no fun, being homeless with an elderly dog was a massive pain in the arse, and there's nothing on earth that would persuade me to go back to that life.

But my evenings on Firvale Road were a lot of fun, all the same. Every night there were kind people and lovely surprises. And I had friends - the stripper who always bought Scampi and I a burger each, the bouncer at the strip club who looked out for me and swapped dog stories with me when business was slack, the staff at the fish and chip shop who gave us all the hot food they had left at the end of every evening, the Iranian gambler who always gave me money on his way to the casino because I apparently brought him luck, Candy who went round the nightclubs and bars collecting for charity and who always spent half an hour sitting chatting with me... there were more, but my memory of those times is mercifully blurred and distant. There were the memorable one-offs, too - the guy who sat with me for two hours and then gave me £150 when he left; the veterinary chiropractor who spent an hour feeling and adjusting my dog and complimented me on his general good health before he left; the guys who, when someone kicked my dog, chased him down, brought him back and asked me if I wanted the shit kicked out of him; the guy who gave me an ounce of cocaine out of the blue; the guy who kissed me.

Obviously it wasn't all good. There were fights, there were insults, there were rainy nights when no one met my eye, there were drunken arseholes who thought throwing their leftover takeaway cartons at me was funny. The thing is, though, the goodness and the kindness far, far outweighed the nastiness, both in quality and in quantity. And this is why I'll never be a true cynic, despite all the bad shit in the world. I've seen too much human kindness at close quarters when I really needed it, and I will never, ever let myself forget it.

From: [identity profile] welshred.livejournal.com


I'm so glad you shared that Liz, you truely are an inspiration. What a heart warming post. *hugs*
ext_15855: (Default)

From: [identity profile] lizblackdog.livejournal.com


I've been wanting to say it for a while. Most of the stuff from those times is far behind me and I never look at it any more. But the good parts were worth remembering.

From: [identity profile] welshred.livejournal.com


Yeah and I think they are always the bits that stand out, in my case anyway.

From: [identity profile] grave-medicine.livejournal.com


Okay, now I'll know you for your dogs and for being a sap.

Oh, and for your taste in sci-fi.

From: [identity profile] sleepwalks.livejournal.com


that was the most amazing thing i have ever read on lj. i'm so proud of you and i'm so glad you're on my friends list.

From: [identity profile] hellfire82.livejournal.com


*hugs and snuggles*

and i think that that is what makes you so lovely; you've been through all of that and seen how people can treat other people and are still as sweet and wondiferous as you are.

From: [identity profile] lady-alethea.livejournal.com


I don't mind, usually, talking about my meth days... The ones I remember, anyway. They are so much a part of who I am that its hard not to talk about them.

But I understand the desire to bury it, pray that nobody finds out, wish it'd never happened... And I think that it took a great deal of strength and courage to post what you did.

Although I don't post much in your journal, I do read it and I'm very glad to have you on my FL...

From: [identity profile] manicitalian.livejournal.com


So i wish that i could hear from you more. I have actually been worried about you from not hearing from you. Are you still trying to help out that friend you were talking about?

From: [identity profile] bulletslc.livejournal.com


Nice post! Thanks for the story and for reminding us that even when we are at our lowest points there is beauty in the world and people around us.

I never actually think of you as an ex-junkie except when you say something that reminds me...so if I ever say something about drugs or such that sounds insensitive...I don't mean it and its probably because I've forgotten again....I'm a Sag...I'm really good at putting my foot in my mouth....(can't quite get them behind my ears yet, though).


From: [identity profile] ulva.livejournal.com


You know, I have sensed that you don't like to talk about these things but surprise surprise, from the little you have told this was actually what I pieced together. Thanks for sharing it Liz. *hugs*

This seems to be the summer of revelations, doesn't it?

From: [identity profile] relevantpink.livejournal.com


wow, this made me tear up. not in a bad way, really, but just because of your wonderful description of the goodness of people. that, and i'm a mushpot who cries a lot at touching things. ;P thank you so much for sharing. though they may be connected with a bad time, these are still important memories.

From: [identity profile] myrystyr.livejournal.com


There's a lot of life in that anecdote, a lot of love in spite of the darkness... and if nothing else, something I can point to as justification for my belief in, and general optimism concerning, fellow humanity ;)

From: [identity profile] indranee.livejournal.com


thanks for sharing this.

*hugs*..
indrani.
.

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