|
|
|
Stories of Those Affected |
 Print
The following story is taken from The Rebecca Project on Human Rights website:
Rosetta's first experience with drugs occurred at the age of 14. A year later, her drug addiction intensified after being raped. She graduated from alcohol to heroin. Rosetta's addiction to heroine continued for twenty-one years. She was nevertheless able to function throughout most of her addiction to heroine, holding down jobs, paying her bills, and caring for her family. But, once Rosetta started to use crack cocaine and heroine, she lost everything. She lost her home and the relationship with her family deteriorated. She was incarcerated on a drug possession misdemeanor, but never offered treatment.
Treatment came, finally, when she begged for help to get clean. "I wanted to stop. I had hit bottom." Rosetta went into a detox program and after detox she was referred to a family treatment program. In family treatment, she received the support to heal from her addiction. Rosetta's son also received support and, together, they were able to repair their relationship.
As with most family treatment programs, the family treatment program Rosetta attended was extremely comprehensive. Rosetta's treatment program is broken into four phases: in the first phase Rosetta was encouraged, for a period of three months, to identify the places of her damage; the second phase extended to seven months and Rosetta worked on healing her damage through individual and group therapy; phase three placed Rosetta for three months in a job training class; and phase four, lasting up to another three months, focused on job placement and continued a context of support in Rosetta's recovery process. Throughout, Rosetta and her son received the care and services to heal together. Read more...
|
|