I remember it vividly from when I stopped using heroin: that slow surge back to life of passions dropped on the journey. I'd been too busy keeping up with my addiction to notice them go - my sex drive, my love of food, my love of music, my trustworthiness, the characters and stories in my head, my dreams, my capacity to give a shit about other people. All I'd held onto was a love of books (portable, easy to steal and useful because dealers always make you wait around with your thumb up your arse for hours) and my beloved obligation to my dog (which was all that saved me, in the end). Everything else got pissed away without me noticing or caring.

I quit by wangling myself a methadone prescription that we reduced by an infinitesimal weekly amount over eight months. People have told me it's admirable that I resisted using any extracurricular opiates during this time, but I don't feel that. For one thing, I'd exaggerated my addiction to the point where my initial methadone dose was WAY higher than I actually needed; there was no chance of any withdrawal symptoms leaking through and that made it very easy not to want heroin. For another, although I was going through treatment while at liberty on the streets, I was still being drug-tested twice weekly. Any fails would have shot the whole thing down, and I badly didn't want that. I was just so fucking sick of the whole addict thing. It's living your life like a zombie in a hamster wheel on Groundhog Day. Nothing new ever happens, and nothing GOOD ever happens; the best luck you can ever hope to get is only good for putting a slightly longer distance between you and the pain. I wanted out so very badly, and here I was being given a painfree pass. I wouldn't have risked that for all the poppies in Afghanistan.

OH LOOK I AM WANDERING OFF THE POINT I WAS ATTEMPTING TO MAKE. Here it is. I'm 23 days into thyroxine and the journey is taking on a spooky familiarity. I didn't carry deathtired around nearly as long as I did heroin addiction, but it was long enough to get used to it: to not expect to be able to think, or walk more than a couple of hundred yards, etc etc. Nor am I anything like back to normal yet, but I'm having more good days than bad ones. IT'S SO DAMN GOOD. I'm writing again. The dogs are back to getting at least two park romps a week and I hardly ever have to write off the rest of the day afterwards. I've started having vivid, interesting dreams again. The other day a brief TV show swimming pool scene sparked the realisation that I'll be able to go swimming again in this lifetime. I wanted to dance for joy.

From: [identity profile] madshutterbug.livejournal.com


Good on you.

Life. It's what's happening while we ... do things. *G*
ext_15855: (Chiana Yay: 2)

From: [identity profile] lizblackdog.livejournal.com


YES THAT. It's awesome. Kiss Houdini on his nose for me pls.
ext_15855: (Spike: I Has A Ball)

From: [identity profile] lizblackdog.livejournal.com


SALLY ICON LOVE <3

it's so good to FEEL better. mostly. I am having freaky mood swings and this may actually be one, but hey, I'll ride it as far as I can.

From: [identity profile] collie222.livejournal.com


More good days than bad ones = cause for celebration!!! I am very happy for you! May it only get better from here!

From: [identity profile] yesididit.livejournal.com


but I'm having more good days than bad ones.

this is so wonderful!
ext_15855: (Default)

From: [identity profile] lizblackdog.livejournal.com


Ha. I will never be you, raising kids and fostering dogs with one hand while you write 437-chapter fics with the other and volunteer to organise parades in your spare time. But it's very good to feel less like a zombie.

ETA: by which I mean, awesome. <3
Edited Date: 2010-12-15 03:26 am (UTC)

From: (Anonymous)


LOL! Feeling not like the undead is a fantastic place to be, indeed!

Interestingly, when they switched my meds and I ended up swinging hypo (rather than hyper) for a short time, I felt like I was going to melt into a pool of sludge and crapped out hormones every day, so I think I got a tiny taste of what that's like. My heart so goes out to you, and, again, I'm so happy you're feeling better.

From: [identity profile] crysania4.livejournal.com


I am SO glad you're feeling better! Soon you'll be able to do whatever you want to! I'm so excited for you.

From: [identity profile] rozae.livejournal.com


I'm glad you're feeling better. <3 from me and the spotty duo!

From: [identity profile] mbif.livejournal.com


I seem to have missed something big. D:

From: [identity profile] purplewaxhand.livejournal.com


I'm having more good days than bad ones.

Just keep hanging in there. :)

From: [identity profile] baranduyn.livejournal.com


It's like coming back to life, isn't it? The rebirth of interest and hope and it's beautiful. Enjoy it.

From: [identity profile] thenetwork.livejournal.com

A happy song for a happy thing


Dogs In the Morning Light


Responsive to the tune of lawns and trees
Dogs sally forth
In whiskery mongrel innocence; all over town
The irresistible rumour of the day
Prickles their hides and sets their bladders singing
Of doggy derring-do beyond their dreams.
No street but has its canine tributary
- Confluent in lanes,
They swirl about in bright-eyed vortices,
Whirlpools of snap and sniff and pink-tongued grin.

Quizzical howdies done, the world's a labyrinth
Of tortuous delight through which his nose
Leads on each quivering Theseus.
Dazed, dazed they go
Into the maze of history where the sharpest
Barkers fall silent...
O humble retrospection, whose sole means
Lies in the bleached unanswerable
Excreta of the past, the spicy airs
Rising from every spot where dogs have paused,
And, pausing, thrown a bridge across Time's stream!

Let the bells swing low, their clappers muffled be,
All over town, in many a public place,
Dogs are having their first one for the day,
Rapt vacuity on each raffish face.

-- Bruce Dawe
.

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