Sheila Nevins | 10/03/2009 6:00 am
Jeremy Hit Rock Bottom, by Sheila Nevins
What do you do with a child, relative or friend who is an addict?
Is addiction a moral failure?
Is it a treatable disease?
Is addiction a moral failure?
Is it a treatable disease?

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I went to a funeral today. The dead person was a 19-year-old boy. He had overdosed on cocaine and alcohol. He fell against a bathroom sink during a cocaine seizure, lapsed into a coma and died in the hospital four days later. Someone had dialed 9-1-1 too late and disappeared. The sink detail was in the police report. All names are changed in this sad story for obvious reasons. This beautiful child was dead forever. We’ll call him Jeremy.
His mother, my good friend, wept uncontrollably. Six months earlier, after seven rehabs, AA, NA* and CA* meetings all to no avail, my friend Marcie had decided to throw Jeremy out of the house. She told me that he had exhausted her patience as well as her finances. She had been advised to let him hit rock bottom. She wept, curled up on my lap sobbing, whispering hoarsely that she had herself been overdosed on the prevailing diagnosis of being unduly complicit in her son’s addiction. She had been advised that by sheltering him, she had been an enabler – allowing her son to continue his abuse. "I’m letting him go," she said one day, surprising me. "That’s what I’ve learned to do." She now blamed herself.
Marcie said she was left with one child, her daughter, Mandy. Mandy turned 17 three days before her brother’s funeral. I had known Mandy since she was 6 lb. 3 oz. – a perfect baby girl. Then Mandy started having seizures and was later diagnosed at five as epileptic. Marcie and I went to many neurologists together. Finally Mandy was put on some seven various medications and they seemed to mostly work. Her seizures were milder and, though slightly tremulous at times, Mandy led a relatively normal life. She was high school valedictorian, had a solicitous boyfriend, lots of girlfriends and bragged outrageously over her Ivy stripes – with early admission to Radcliffe.
Jeremy was another story. He had always been a difficult child. Handsome, funny and – in spite of it all – sweet. At an early age he was diagnosed with ADD*. Jeremy had tantrums, was completely disorganized and totally unpredictable. Little things would set him off. At 13 he was smoking and drinking and lying about it. By 15 he was doing illegal drugs – alcohol, cigarettes, then ecstasy and soon speed. Nothing helped. Jeremy’s father was remarried and Marcie was unable to get her ex to help her with their only son. She tried. A single parent, a working mom, she went to Al-Anon where she found like-minded mothers that had successfully taken a hard- line with their kids.
She decided to follow their m.o. She changed the locks and tossed Jeremy out of the house. "If you can’t come home clean," she said, "don’t come back!" And when she slammed the door she felt uneasy but correct in her behavior.
Marcie hadn’t heard from Jeremy for the six months. She was worried sick, sleepless and fearful. And then one evening, the tragic phone call … "Mrs. Hanratty?" "Yes, this is she." "This is Sergeant Adams and I’m sorry …"
I held her hand at the cemetery. Jeremy was buried next to his adoring grandmother and grandfather. They had lived to 80 and 85. Long lives. I wondered in my heart if Jeremy was responsible for his addiction? Was it treatable? Had Marcie given up too soon? Was enabling a bad thing if it brought more time to live life and more time for hope? Was addiction Jeremy’s moral failure? Did he suffer some mental disorder? Mandy’s epilepsy was deemed neurological and not her fault. Was addiction a disease, possibly genetic, a mental illness, treatable?
I don’t know – but what I do know was that tough love had allowed Jeremy to hit rock bottom and in this case it meant no more.
*NA = Narcotics Anonymous
*CA = Cocaine Anonymous
*ADD = Attention Deficit Disorder
His mother, my good friend, wept uncontrollably. Six months earlier, after seven rehabs, AA, NA* and CA* meetings all to no avail, my friend Marcie had decided to throw Jeremy out of the house. She told me that he had exhausted her patience as well as her finances. She had been advised to let him hit rock bottom. She wept, curled up on my lap sobbing, whispering hoarsely that she had herself been overdosed on the prevailing diagnosis of being unduly complicit in her son’s addiction. She had been advised that by sheltering him, she had been an enabler – allowing her son to continue his abuse. "I’m letting him go," she said one day, surprising me. "That’s what I’ve learned to do." She now blamed herself.
Marcie said she was left with one child, her daughter, Mandy. Mandy turned 17 three days before her brother’s funeral. I had known Mandy since she was 6 lb. 3 oz. – a perfect baby girl. Then Mandy started having seizures and was later diagnosed at five as epileptic. Marcie and I went to many neurologists together. Finally Mandy was put on some seven various medications and they seemed to mostly work. Her seizures were milder and, though slightly tremulous at times, Mandy led a relatively normal life. She was high school valedictorian, had a solicitous boyfriend, lots of girlfriends and bragged outrageously over her Ivy stripes – with early admission to Radcliffe.
Jeremy was another story. He had always been a difficult child. Handsome, funny and – in spite of it all – sweet. At an early age he was diagnosed with ADD*. Jeremy had tantrums, was completely disorganized and totally unpredictable. Little things would set him off. At 13 he was smoking and drinking and lying about it. By 15 he was doing illegal drugs – alcohol, cigarettes, then ecstasy and soon speed. Nothing helped. Jeremy’s father was remarried and Marcie was unable to get her ex to help her with their only son. She tried. A single parent, a working mom, she went to Al-Anon where she found like-minded mothers that had successfully taken a hard- line with their kids.
She decided to follow their m.o. She changed the locks and tossed Jeremy out of the house. "If you can’t come home clean," she said, "don’t come back!" And when she slammed the door she felt uneasy but correct in her behavior.
Marcie hadn’t heard from Jeremy for the six months. She was worried sick, sleepless and fearful. And then one evening, the tragic phone call … "Mrs. Hanratty?" "Yes, this is she." "This is Sergeant Adams and I’m sorry …"
I held her hand at the cemetery. Jeremy was buried next to his adoring grandmother and grandfather. They had lived to 80 and 85. Long lives. I wondered in my heart if Jeremy was responsible for his addiction? Was it treatable? Had Marcie given up too soon? Was enabling a bad thing if it brought more time to live life and more time for hope? Was addiction Jeremy’s moral failure? Did he suffer some mental disorder? Mandy’s epilepsy was deemed neurological and not her fault. Was addiction a disease, possibly genetic, a mental illness, treatable?
I don’t know – but what I do know was that tough love had allowed Jeremy to hit rock bottom and in this case it meant no more.
*NA = Narcotics Anonymous
*CA = Cocaine Anonymous
*ADD = Attention Deficit Disorder
Read more about: Addiction, Al-Anon, Alcoholics Anonymous, Death, Drugs, Family, Health, Narcotics Anonymous, Parenting, Relationships
























132 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Some of us survive life. Some of us don’t. And none of us, really, can understand why some of us do and some of us don’t and the tragedies become even more tragic when we try to understand.
Been there, done that, survived that. By the grace of god. So many friends through the years didn’t. I just remember the smiles and the happy times now. No judgements. No attempts at understanding. Just acceptance. And rememberance of the smiles. All you can do.
But it is important to have a kindred spirit who’s been there, done it, survived it. Even with that, however, some of us don’t.
Well said, Baby Snooks- short and sweet and very much to the point.
"Life is not the way it’s supposed to be. It is the way it is."
It is hard at times. I think of someone I lost long ago and am overwhelmed by the memory. We share so much of our lives with friends. And so much of mine wasn’t shared with so many. And occasionally the "I wish I hads" do tear at the heart. I wish I had called them. I wish they had called me. I wish so many things. It is hard at times.
I think the reason people overdose is because they think they are invinsible and don’t see death as a possibility - especially younger people. Add into the equation that they may be high already when they keep taking and taking, or if they’ve never done it before, and it makes overdosing that much easier.
Ignoring or denying death probably also leads to the other plagues of our culture (American): eating bad foods, eating the wrong foods, not exercising, smoking cigarettes, polluting our planet to no end.
An old teacher told me the best advice when I was younger… and I didn’t even like her that much ;) - "Do not assume immortality"
Tragic. Once again, Sheila encapsulates all of the emotions and ironies of the situation. The daughter with an “excusable” illness, the mother who was over-medicated to deal with the overwhelming grief, the delicate line between enabling and saving … it’s all too much to bear. Which is worse? Letting your son hit true rock bottom or losing yourself trying to keep him from doing it? There are no easy answers to these tough questions. There is only “what if?” and choose your own adventure alternatives that will drive you mad. We must live with the choices we’ve made, unless, like Jeremy, our choices have irreversible consequences. Marcie did the best she could with the options she had. I’m sorry for her loss and hope that she can forgive herself.
she will never forgive herself….she originally wrote she felt ”uneasy”closing the door one him to begin with. She didn’t listen to her heart and will never know the answer to ”what if” because he was on his own for 6 months with no contact with her.
children do not ask to be brought into this world—we bring them—so if that means I have to ”lose myself” too save him I will. I too was a single parent which makes it harder as there is noone to lean on.
Those meetings? I don’t like them. A bunch of people telling you to ”let go””only your life matters”
NO I would NEVER let go of my child.
I have seen more people hurt by thinking if they just closed the door they will come back ok in time-
-in the meantine you need to have a life and be happy.
How am I to be happy and have my own life when my child is sick?and I haven’t seen nor heard from him in 6 months.???
I am sorry this women listened to others instead of herself.
My group became viscious when I mentioned trying medicine and alternative treatments-they were wild! Only AA they told me.
I went to visit them a year or so ago—still the same people sitting in the same room crying the same stories…..I shared about my son and they were still angry—I wanted to tell everyone to help them maybe. Finally I just said—my son has been sober for 4 years now what about yours? and I left.
Lynn Marie, some of the drugs (now 3 of them) are working on the majority who take them; however, the major addiction programs refute them based on their 12-Step Program importance. There was an incredible program on this on PBS this summer, in fact.
The day will come, soon, when medications will be used more extensively, and Hazelton, et al can provide ongoing support for the damaged psyches of all harmed by addiction.
check out the HBO series online called ADDICTION……my feeling is—
get the info out there…
.maybe you will be the one the medication works for—
maybe not-
-but my God wouldn’t you just want to try everything you could?
Addicts are desperate we have to have what they need to stop drinking and then years of psych to heal their minds and bodies.
Addicts also have the negative images in their heads of things they did while they were using—I have heard many horror stories—
they have to live with that.
I was going to write and apologise today thinking maybe I had been too rough here—it is so nice to meet intelligent women to share with.
Sorry I hogged the page so much -it is just something close to my heart—I remember the pain.
she will never forgive herself….she originally wrote she felt ”uneasy”closing the door one him to begin with. She didn’t listen to her heart and will never know the answer to ”what if” because he was on his own for 6 months with no contact with her.
children do not ask to be brought into this world—we bring them—so if that means I have to ”lose myself” too save him I will. I too was a single parent which makes it harder as there is noone to lean on.
Those meetings? I don’t like them. A bunch of people telling you to ”let go””only your life matters”
NO I would NEVER let go of my child.
I have seen more people hurt by thinking if they just closed the door they will come back ok in time-
-in the meantine you need to have a life and be happy.
How am I to be happy and have my own life when my child is sick?and I haven’t seen nor heard from him in 6 months.???
I am sorry this women listened to others instead of herself.
My group became viscious when I mentioned trying medicine and alternative treatments-they were wild! Only AA they told me.
I went to visit them a year or so ago—still the same people sitting in the same room crying the same stories…..I shared about my son and they were still angry—I wanted to tell everyone to help them maybe. Finally I just said—my son has been sober for 4 years now what about yours? and I left.
Tough love as they call it is a conditional love. Love cannot be conditional. Personally I could never toss a child out on the streets. But if they got arrested because of their alcohol or drug abuse, well, I would be there for them. And I would probably ask the judge to send them to jail because nothing else had worked. A friend of mine in high school found herself in front ofa judge and found her parents informing the judge that he had three choices. Send her to jail, send her to a hospital, or find new parents for her. The judge allowed my friend to make the decision. She chose the hospital. And like your son, she survived. That is tough love but unconditional love just the same. I would never condemn someone who tossed their child out on the street, however, because none of us have that right. None of us really knows whether our decisions are the correct ones. We have trust that they are.
I have found through the years that "pop psychology" simply doesn’t work. Common sense and unconditional love does.
I never meant to come across as bad mouthing alanon or AA—I know they have been around a long time and helped many people.
I live in a big city so many the meetingshere are a little more diverse than others.
14 months is great for your daughter-has she remained sober? I sure hope so.
I just think not everyone is made for AA or alanon—there are other options and people need to be aware of them/