Interviews

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“Workplace Substance Abuse”

Workplace Substance Abuse

Joe Herzanek interviews Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens, Peer Assistance Services on Recovery Television

Peer Assistance Service

Jennifer Place, MA
EAP and workplace coordinator

Sean stevens, ba
Drug-free workplace program coordinator

Host: Joe herzanek

 

Workplace Substance Abuse

Joe’s interview with Sean and Jennifer
from Peer Assistance Services

dispels the myth that most addicts and alcoholics
are unemployable.

Clearly, what we learn is that 70% to 80%
of people with an alcohol or drug problem do in fact have jobs.

• How does this affect their work?

• What can employers be looking for and do
about an addiction problem?

• What resources are available
to small companies as well as large?

. . . and much more.

(Playing time: 28:30 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US


______________________________________________________________
Workplace Substance Abuse Workplace Substance Abuse Workplace Substance

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“The Haven, Moms and Meth:
Breaking the Cycle of Addiction”

The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle of Addiction

Joe Herzanek interviews Julie Krow, with Melanie and Evangelina on Recovery Television



The Haven
Julie Miller/Former Director
With Melanie and Evangelina
Host: Joe Herzanek

In “The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle of Addiction”,
Joe interviews Julie Krow, former Director of The Haven.

The Haven treats pregnant women and women with babies.

This show dispels the myth
that treatment for meth addiction is not effective.

A young mother and her daughter are interviewed
and give a powerful testimony
—that change and recovery are available
to anyone who truly wants it.

(Playing time: 28:30 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US


________________________________________________________________
Moms and Meth Breaking the Cycle meth addiction meth babies Moms and Meth

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The Journey of Recovery

Joe Herzanek interviews Mike Richards Jr. on this edition of Recovery Television

 

“The Journey of Recovery”


Mike Richards Jr./a2r (Addiction 2 Recovery)
Host: Joe Herzanek

 

The Journey of Recovery
Joe Herzanek interviews Mike Richards from addiction2recovery.

This show answers some of the tough questions
concerning addiction and the Christian community.

• How difficult is it to make these big changes?
• Can the Bible and step programs work together?
• Is there a conflict between these two subjects?
• Is addiction a disease or a “moral failing”?

These are just a few of the things that are discussed.
Some of the answers may surprise you.

(Playing time: 28:30 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US


______________________________________________________________
Journey of Recovery step programs addiction Christian moral failing addiction

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Women in Recovery

Joe Herzanek interviews Rebecca Flood and Helena Rouhe on Recovery Television

“Women in Recovery”

New Directions for Women
Rebecca J. Flood, Executive Director / CEO
and Helena Rouhe, Clinical Director
Host: Joe Herzanek

 

What are the unique challenges for
Women in Recovery?

Joe’s interview with Rebecca Flood and Helena Rouhe
From New Directions for Women
gives great insight into unique issues facing recovering women,
moms and pregnant women — from the stigma
and shame, to the advantages of
including children in treatment with their mothers.

This two-part series
addresses these topics and more!

(Playing time: 57 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US


______________________________________________________________
Women in Recovery recovering women recovering mom children in treatment

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What is Addiction

Joe Herzanek interviews Michael Connelly on “Eye On Addiction”

“What is Addiction?”

“What is Addiction?”
Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training Center
Host: Joe Herzanek

This show explores all the basics of Addiction
and answers the question “Why Don’t They Just Quit?”

Michael Connelly speaks about the human brain, “triggers”, and why addicts continue
in spite of negative consequences.

Michael’s 25 years of experience in the recovery field
helps to answer these difficult questions.

People can and do recover every day.

(Playing time: 29:58 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle, with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace, with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US


___________________________________________________________________
What is Addiction triggers Michael Connelly Chemical Dependency What is Addiction
triggers Michael Connelly Chemical Dependency

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“Meth . . . The Devil’s Drug”

“Meth . . . The Devil’s Drug”
Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor
Host: Joe Herzanek

Meth, The Devil's Drug

Joe Herzanek interviews Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor on Recovery Television

In “Methamphetamine . . . the Devil’s Drug”
guests Dr. Nicholas Taylor

and Tonya Wheeler
share powerful insights on America’s deadliest drug.

Dr. Taylor lectures nationally on the clinical components of Meth.

Tonya Wheeler, a person with long-term recovery from this drug,
gives valuable insights on this addiction and also
heartfelt testimony about recovery.

A “must watch” for those interested in this topic!
(2-part series)

(Playing time: 57 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US

_______________________________________________________________
Meth Methamphetamine The Devil’s Drug Meth Addiction Advocates for Recovery

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Michael Connelly

Joe Herzanek interviews Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training Center on Recovery Television

“The Addicted Brain”

Michael Connelly
Owner/Odyssey Training
Host: Joe Herzanek

This show explores the biological component of addiction.

Joe’s interview with Michael Connelly covers the three categories
of drugs: stimulants, depressants and hallucinogens.

How do they affect the brain?
Why do some people become dependent while others don’t?
What must a person be willing to do to quit?

Michael’s 25 years of experience in the recovery field
helps to answer these difficult questions.

People can and do recover every day.

(Playing time: 28:30 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.

(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US

______________________________________________________________
The Addicted Brain stimulants depressants hallucinogens The Addicted Brain


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Joe Herzanek interviews James B. Nelson, Author: Thirst, on Recovery Television

“God and the Alcoholic Experience”

with author, James B. Nelson
Host: Joe Herzanek

Joe’s interview with author James Nelson, God and the Alcoholic Experience,
is a powerful testimony to the importance of God
in the life of a recovering person.

Jim’s inspiring book “Thirst: God and the Alcoholic Experience”
is the focus of their discussion.

James Nelson, a retired seminary professor and also a recovering person,
gives a deep, yet practical insight into the spiritual component of recovery.

Challenging questions are answered
and his responses give clarity to the “disease vs. sin” issue
(is addiction a disease or a moral failing)?

What role does God play in the life of an alcoholic?

(Playing time: 40 Minutes)

Changing Lives Foundation Logoto order your copy of this DVD, please donate (below) to our
Book Scholarship Fund:

For as little as $10 you can make a difference
for someone without the means to pay.
(Choose from 10 different DVD topics)


DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:


Thanks!

READ MORE ABOUT EACH OF THE 10 DVD CHOICES:

(click each title for more detailed info on each DVD)

1) God and the Alcoholic Experience, with author James B. Nelson

2) The Addicted Brain, with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

3) Meth, The Devil’s Drug, with Tonya Wheeler and Dr. Nicolas Taylor

4) What is Addiction? with Michael Connelly/Odyssey Training

5) Women in Recovery, with Rebecca J. Flood and Helena Routhe

6) The Journey of Recovery, with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

7) Teens Under the Influence, with Don Williams/Clearbrook Lodge

8) The Haven, Moms and Meth: Breaking the Cycle,
with Julie Krow/The Haven

9) Substance Use and The Workplace,
with Jennifer Place and Sean Stevens/Peer Assistance

10) Pornography, The Hidden Epidemic,
with Mike Richards/addiction2recovery

CONTACT US

DVD Choice:
Gift Amount:

___________________________________________________
God and the Alcoholic Alcoholic Experience Recovery Television


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Surviving Meth

Justin Misner, 48, left, and Todd Meyer, 38, met in a Salvation Army program for meth addicts about three years ago and now are best friends and neighbors.

From the Colorado Springs Gazette, March 7, 2010
Barbara Cotter
Photo by Kevin Kreck

Surviving Meth:
On a recent day in the late afternoon, Todd Meyer is deep in conversation with a visitor, and his two young children are hungry. Because he wants to finish the train of thought, he turns to a third adult in the room — his next-door neighbor Justin Misner — for help.

“Justin, will you make ’em a quesadilla?” Meyer asks.

Without a word, Misner gets up, herds 7-year-old Brooklynn and 4-year-old Lain into the kitchen and starts making dinner. Misner doesn’t have to ask where anything is or try to persuade the kids to stay with him and leave Dad alone.


Misner is like family; Meyer and his two kids see Misner and his three young children almost daily, and they move easily between one apartment and the other for quick visits. It’s the kind of close bond that can form when next-door neighbors have a lot in common, and Meyer, 38, and Misner, 48, have more in common than most.

Both are single fathers raising their children.

Both do house-painting and handyman work and are struggling to make ends meet in an economy that has hit their trade hard.

And both are recovering methamphetamine
addicts who also made and sold the drug, accumulating a string of felonies and several stays in jail along the way.

When Meyer and Misner met at a Colorado Springs drug rehab program in 2006, it brought together two souls who understood each other’s demons.

They also share an intense commitment to staying clean. Their motivation to sober up? Their kids.

“If these two hadn’t come along,” Meyer says, nodding at Brooklynn and Lain, “I’d probably still be doing meth.”

Misner echoes a similar commitment to his own children, ages 4, 6 and 7.

For almost three years, Meyer and Misner have been each other’s support system as they navigate the challenging road of being single dads, making it in a tough economy and living drug-free. It’s a struggle but worth it, the men say, because of their children.

Surviving Meth: Change for the worse

For as much as they have in common, Meyer and Misner got into drugs in strikingly different ways.

Meyer spent his early years in Fort Collins with his mother and a stepfather who he says tried to straighten him out with “three-quarter-inch plywood.” When he was about 13, he moved in with his father and stepmother, and got his first job, working as a dishwasher at a Fort Collins sports bar.

He also got his first taste of drugs. A co-worker in his 30s gave him cocaine. Waitresses brought him mixed drinks. A cook gave him a Christmas present of homegrown pot, which he divided and sold.

At 15, he tried meth and found nirvana.

“Meth mixed with me real well,” Meyer says.


By high school, he was using and selling meth, coke, acid, pot and mushrooms at school and parties.

The more he got into drugs, the less time he spent with his family. He’d be gone days, even weeks, without checking in. The family tried counseling. His father and stepmother tried using the gift of a car as incentive for Todd to clean up. Nothing worked.

“Eventually, it was time to pack his bags and throw him out,” says his father, Bob Meyer.

Todd Meyer was 16.

Misner was more than twice that age when he acquired his meth habit. He had started smoking pot in his teens, but gave it up to take a job at a Colorado Springs sheet metal company. By the time he was in his early 30s, he was married, working in management and living the American dream.

“Me and my ex-wife were making $70,000 a year. We owned our house,” he says. “Life was good.”

But the couple eventually got into the party scene, and he became a meth addict at the not-so-young age of 37. In quick succession, he quit his job, his wife of 14 years divorced him and he started manufacturing and selling the drug.

“We had a life — and we got into drugs, and life went down the drain,” Misner says.

Surviving Meth: Convergence

For both men, the years leading up to 2006 are different verses of the same song. They’d get clean for a time, then go back to the only life they knew: using, cooking and selling meth. They were arrested on various charges tied to their drug use, and spent time in jail, all of which did little to stop their involvement with the drug.

Both men also were arrested on charges of domestic violence, which Meyer blames on meth’s ability to fuel rage and distort reality.

“It’s illusions and delusions,” Meyer says.

And they got involved with women who they say were also meth heads, nursing a habit so bad that they used the drug when they were pregnant.

By 2006, both men were fathers several times over, and a life immersed in meth was catching up with them.

Misner failed a drug test, and his probation officer gave him a choice: prison or rehab.

“I was days away from going to prison,” Misner says. “I had to get into a program. I needed help.”

Meyer, meanwhile, was so defeated after spending more than half his life as a drug addict that he tried to kill himself by taking an overdose of antidepressants that a doctor had given him.

“I couldn’t live the life any more. I couldn’t do it,” Meyer says. “I wrote a note to my children, saying it’s not their fault, and put it in one boot. I wrote another to their mother.”

It was 26 hours before someone found him, but he survived — an “act of God,” he says — and quit using drugs.

“After the suicide attempt — whatever it did to him — he said, ‘I don’t have any craving for that stuff anymore,’” Bob Meyer recalls.


Todd Meyer felt he needed support but it was hard to find. A free rehab program through the Salvation Army in Denver was co-ed, which ruled Meyer out because of his domestic violence record. His search led him to the Colorado Springs Salvation Army program, for men only.

Five months after trying to kill himself and four months into being drug-free, he entered the program.

Surviving Meth: The road back

Meyer entered the Salvation Army program about a month before Misner, who recalls a bad first day. It was Aug. 28, 2006, and he got paperwork telling him the mother of his three children was taking them away. He found it hard to care about rehab.

“I was angry,” Misner says. “I wanted to kill my kids’ mother.”

Then Misner met Meyer and told him how distraught he was over his kids.

“That probably sealed our friendship,” Meyer says. “We talked. I told him: ‘You’ve gotta fight for your kids.’”

Misner got it. He let his anger go, he says, and it helped him physically, emotionally and spiritually. With Meyer’s support, he focused on sobriety, motivated by the thought of his three children.

“I told the judge, ‘I’m going through the Salvation Army because I want to change my life,” Misner says. “Their mother doesn’t.”

A month before graduating from the six-month program, Misner went to court and got custody of his children.

Meyer didn’t graduate from the program. He left to have knee surgery. But he stayed clean, went back to Fort Collins and got a job.

Then it was Misner’s turn to help Meyer, whose children had become wards of the state because their mother was using drugs again. Meyer’s dad and stepmother took custody of Brooklynn and Lain. Meanwhile, Meyer fought to prove to the courts he deserved custody and would be a good father.

Though Misner was still in Colorado Springs, the two talked by phone. A lot.

“Todd and I called each other every day,” Misner says. “Sometimes 10 times a day,” Meyer jokes. “There are countless things between the two of us that we’ve been through.”

Lucky break

While Meyer fought for custody in Fort Collins, Misner caught a break in Colorado Springs. He started working for his landlord, painting and fixing up vacant units in the apartment complex where he lived.

He called Meyer to come down and work with him.

Even better, he told Meyer the neighboring apartment was available.

Meyer and his children moved in next to Misner in July, and the two men worked together until business slowed around Christmas. Misner is still working, but barely making ends meet. Meyer is living on unemployment and food stamps, “making it work off $850 a month.”

He’s been looking for work — he worked in cultured marble for 10 years — but has several strikes against him. Jobs in the building trades are scarce, he says, and even though he’ll be clean three years on March 5, his criminal record won’t be.

“Where does a four-time convicted felon go to get a job?” Misner says in his friend’s defense. “You can’t get a job.”

Hindering his job search is the fact that Meyer has no car or driver’s license — a result, he says, of a series of traffic offenses committed while he was on meth. It will cost him $2,000 to get a license, he says.

“I’ve dug such a hole for myself with my driver’s license, with the felonies I have,” Meyer says. “That’s something that’s going to hinder me for the rest of my life.”

Surviving Meth: The road ahead

Besides their current struggles, both Misner and Meyer worry about the future.

For example, they fear the long-term health effects of their meth use. Already, Misner has lost his top teeth.

And will they be able to stay sober?

“They say you always have another relapse in you,” Misner says.

Meyer says he once gave up drugs for three-and-a-half years before giving in to temptation.

Both say this time, sobriety is permanent. That’s because they are doing it for the right reasons.

“You have to get to the point where you’re doing it for yourself,” Meyer said. “You have to want to change. If you’re doing it for anybody else, you’re going to fail.”

It helps that both Meyer and Misner have reconciled with family members after years of being estranged.

Mostly, they’re grateful and relieved that their children are OK, given that they were born to parents who were using meth, and spent their earliest years in what was, without a doubt, a dysfunctional environment.

“My kids were all conceived and raised in the madness of it,” Misner says. “The amazing thing is, our kids are happy. They’re stable. They still play and act like children.”

Perhaps the scariest thing about the future is the inevitable conversations they will have with their children.

One day, Misner and Meyer say they will open up to their kids about their past, as painful and embarrassing as it may be.

“When the time comes for them to know what I went through, they’ll know,” Meyer said. “The only thing I can tell them is, ‘Look, you come from two addicts — me and your mother. That’s a strike against you, and it probably means you’re going to have an addictive personality. You think it starts as fun and games — it does. But at the drop of a hat, it goes bad.”

It’s the same reason they are willing to tell the world about their lives and their mistakes.

“I don’t want anybody to go down this road like I did,” Meyer says. “It’s loneliness, despair and headache.”

Read more: Program that saved them now shuttered.

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Surviving Meth Surviving Meth Surviving Meth

 

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(Eminem addiction)

We met up with Eminem in a VIP lounge, and he talked about his new album, “Recovery” – which hits stores next Monday – and also really opened up about the trials he’s faced over the past several years.

This latest disc, he said, reflects a healthier place in his life.

“Recovery feels better than ever,” the Detroit rapper said. “Feels like I’m me again.”

But it wasn’t easy facing his drug addiction demons. Read more about Eminem addiction. . .

* Have you “tried everything?” To learn about individual counseling with Joe Herzanek (in person or by phone) click here.

READ MORE INFO ABOUT STEP ONE:
“We admitted that we were powerless over alcohol
and that our lives had become unmanageable.”
~Step One, AA 12-Steps

Step One: What’s the big deal about Step One?

NEED HELP NOW?
Drug Addiction Phone Counseling for Families Dealing with Substance Abuse

____________________________
Eminem addiction Eminem addiction

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STEP 7: Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings.

LISTEN TO JOE NOW (CLICK HERE)
Removing defects of character. Joe Herzanek, author of “Why Don’t They Just Quit?“,
discusses Step 7, (Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings) this week on Recovery Now!…

NEED HELP NOW?
Drug Addiction Phone Counseling for Families Dealing with Substance Abuse

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STEP 6: Became entirely ready to have God remove all our defects of character.

LISTEN TO JOE NOW (CLICK HERE)
Removing defects of character. Joe Herzanek, author of “Why Don’t They Just Quit?“,
discusses Step 6, this week on Recovery Now!…

NEED HELP NOW?
Drug Addiction Phone Counseling for Families Dealing with Substance Abuse

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This post is thanks to my friend Holly Jo!

There is an old Hotel/Pub in Marble Arch, London which used to have gallows adjacent. Prisoners were taken to the gallows (after a fair trial of course) to be hung. The horse drawn dray, carting the prisoner was accompanied by an armed guard, who would stop the dray outside the pub and ask the prisoner if he would like ”ONE LAST DRINK”.

If he said YES it was referred to as “ONE FOR THE ROAD

If he declined, that prisoner was “ON THE WAGON

So there you go.

Have a great weekend!

Also:
Most people seem to have some idea of what “Watch your P’s and Q’s” means, but I didn’t know where it came from for most of my life.

In pubs, they had chalkboards where they would keep track of how many Pints and Quarts of ale each patron consumed!

NEED HELP NOW?
Drug Addiction Phone Counseling for Families Dealing with Substance Abuse

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Gary Williams
Age 28
Crawfordsville, IN

What Made Me Try It
I started meth one day while I was down on my luck, in a bad mood, and had home problems. I ran into a friend who said to try meth, and that it would make things better. I thought to myself, “sure I’ll try it.”

Moments of Truth
I realized that I had a problem while I was sitting in my empty home with no food in the refrigerator, no money, no family, and no more meth. The worst part of all of that was that all I cared about was getting more meth. It was then that I knew I wanted to stop using meth but couldn’t.

Recovery From Relapse
Once I truly was clean, I have gone five years without relapsing.

My Keys to Recovery
I stay strong by staying involved in my community.

Lessons Learned
My whole life has changed. I work very hard to help other adults and kids. I am the president of our local coalition – the Montgomery County A.H.E.A.D. Coalition, Advocates Helping Educate Against Drugs. I am the president of our youth sports league. I am also on Governor Mitch Daniels’ Community Advisory Board for a Drug Free Indiana. In my spare time I coach wrestling, softball and baseball.

My Advice
I tell people to work hard. This is not something that comes easy or fast. It takes complete dedication and time. If you stumble, get up and fight harder. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. There are people willing to help who have been there and have good advice. When its all said and done, you will be stronger than you realize. I tell people that they worked hard at being an addict, and now its time to work hard at being sober.

My Recovery Story
I would like to tell you about my life after meth addiction. I have been in recovery for five years, and I have exceeded my own expectations for my life. I just want people to know that you can grow and change after addiction. If you work hard, you can accomplish anything.

As for what I’ve been doing, I am currently a board member working on a strategic prevention framework in Indiana to help fight drug abuse. Of the 40 people on the board, I am one of two who is in some sort of recovery. The special part of being on this board is that we were hand picked by our governor. Before joining the board, I traveled around the state teaching different groups about the dangers of meth. Along with my work to fight drug abuse, I am a board member for a local festival we have every year and recently took a board position for a youth sports league where I’m also a coach. The work I’m most proud of is my position as board president for the Montgomery County A.H.E.A.D. Coalition. (Advocates Helping Educate Against Drugs). I have had many more accomplishments in my life, but these have the most meaning to me.

I am very passionate about recovery, and I work hard to help others. I owe a very big thank you to my family, because without their support, I would have struggled tremendously to get this far. My three children and my wife are right there with me in all my activities.

 

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Drug Addiction Phone Counseling for Families Dealing with Substance Abuse

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In August 1979, I took my last drink. It was about four o’clock on a Saturday afternoon, the hot sun streaming through the windows of my little carriage house on Dickens. I put a glass of scotch and soda down on the living room table, went to bed, and pulled the blankets over my head. I couldn’t take it any more.

This is a fabulous post, stop everything and read it. (click here)

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Roger Ebert alcoholic Roger Ebert  alcoholic

August 27, 2009 by jherzanek | 2 comments

What Special Challenges Might Women Face in Recovery?

Joe Herzanek (author/”Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?”) interviews shoppers on the Pearl St. Mall (Boulder, CO) and asks the question “What Special Challenges Might Women Face in Recovery?”



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Women in Recovery, recovering women, recovering mom, children in treatment, Women in Recovery, recovering women, recovering mom, children in treatment

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“How Do You Become Chemically Dependent?”

Joe Herzanek (author/”Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?”) interviews shoppers on the Pearl St. Mall (Boulder, CO) and asks the question “How do you become chemically dependent?”

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Drinking Problems, It is so very baffling!


Chemically dependent, Chemically dependent, Chemically dependent,
Chemically dependent, Chemically dependent, Chemically dependent,

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Man on the Street/Why Don’t They Just Quit?

Joe Herzanek (author/”Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?”) interviews shoppers on the Pearl St. Mall (Boulder, CO) and asks the question “Why Don’t They Just Quit?”

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Intervention: Is There A Stranger Living In Your Home?

Joe Herzanek, author/Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?, interviews Dr. Judith Landau about the importance of intervention. Yes, YOU can help your friend or loved one!

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Dr. Judith Landau, Family Intervention, Stranger in your home, Joe Herzanek, Why Don’t They Just Quit,
Dr. Judith Landau, Family Intervention, Stranger in your home, Joe Herzanek, Why Don’t They Just Quit

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Emotional Cleanup
The Families of Recovering Addicts Need Help, Too
by James Burrus

Pam Mains was hunting with her husband, some other family and friends in southern Colorado when her cell phone rang on the morning of Nov. 17, 2003. What she heard dropped Mains to her knees in the middle of a dirt road; a gaping hole had been ripped in her heart. Her oldest daughter, Mia, the second of five children, had been found dead by her brother of a heroin overdose. She was 26.

I fell down screaming “God, not her! Don’t take her! Take me instead,” Mains says, recalling the day a piece of her died, leaving an emotional wound that, despite being nearly five years old, is as fresh and painful as ever. “The four-hour drive home took forever. And walking down the steps to the Boulder County Morgue was like walking down to hell; seeing her lying there on the cold, steel table.”

Today, the pain of Mains’ loss competes with the persistent ache of regret; regret for calling the police when Mia stole her car or kicking her out of the house when she forged a check, all in support of her spiraling drug habit. “The what-ifs are really hard,” Mains said. “What if I had kept her grounded longer; what if I had done more to help her? It drives you crazy as a parent. You never get over it.”

Mains’ experience, and that of her family and friends, is on the extreme end of the spectrum of emotional and physical collateral damage caused by those struggling with addiction, be it alcohol or drugs or both.

There are myriad programs, groups, books and materials available to addicts seeking help. But what of the parents, spouses, siblings and kids of those addicts whose lives have been damaged? For those people, Joe Herzanek is nothing short of a savior. As a chaplain working with addicts seeking recovery in the Boulder County Jail since 1993, Herzanek last year published “Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?” and a companion DVD that addresses this issue directly. The book and DVD have its roots in his experience working with addicts and their families, as well as his own recovery from alcohol and drug addiction. “For every addict, there are 6-8 people, sometimes more, that are impacted by that person,” Herzanek says. “Even if they have quit, they have done damage to those relationships, either knowingly or unknowingly.”

And just as Pam Mains did, the first reaction by a close friend or family member to an addict seeking rehabilitation is to blame themselves. “What they want to do is take the blame,” Herzanek says. “They say to themselves, –If I had been a better parent or wife or brother, they wouldn’t have this problem.” But what they need to know is that they didn’t cause the problem, and they can’t cure (it).”

Getting Help

Patsy says that stumbling onto Herzanek’s Changing Lives Foundation website came just in time for she and her husband. The Loveland couple (who did not want their last name used) have been at their wits’ end dealing with their son, Matt’s, growing alcohol and cocaine addiction problem.

“A year ago, he said he wanted to come clean,” Patsy says of their 27-year-old son who works as a carpenter and house framer. “He’s been trying to stop, but it’s hard when you don’t have a support system.”

That system typically involves family and friends who function as a safety net for an addict who is just learning how to live and function as a sober person, free from drugs and alcohol. As Herzanek says, in order to succeed at kicking addiction, fundamental changes must occur. But in many cases, the best efforts can be undermined by the good intentions of loved ones that instead provoke or enable an addict to return to drugs.

“My husband is a huge enabler,” Patsy says. “He’s bailed Matt out of jail three times.” Patsy’s husband has also given their son thousands of dollars for bills, car repairs, and bail and fines associated with the arrests–ranging from drug and alcohol to assault.

Thanks to Herzanek’s book, Patsy convinced her husband to leave Matt in jail after a recent arrest. Because his behavior has alienated his older brother and sister, they, too, refused to bail him out of jail.

During this latest episode, Patsy was left searching for answers to questions she had about addiction and her enabling behavior. “I wanted to find out more about what I could do and what I shouldn’t do,” she says. “Matt is a real nice guy; he’s an awesome worker, and everybody likes him, but he’s still an addict.”

Herzanek’s advice spoke directly about such tough love tactics that convinced Patsy that she was doing the right thing.

“The tough love of saying”no” makes the pain of suffering the consequences of (an addict’s) behavior a good motivator for getting help,” Herzanek says.

“Parents often take responsibility . . . but they don’t know when they have crossed the line from helping to hurting.”

Collateral Damage

A no-contact order prevented Matt from going home to his girlfriend, so he asked to move back home-again. With guidance from Herzanek’s book, Patsy let Matt come back-with conditions. “If he was going to live here, I had a whole list of things he had to do, and if he didn’t follow the rules, he was out,” Patsy says. “I wasn’t losing another night’s sleep over this.”

By finally finding a support mechanism for her family to deal with Matt’s addiction and recovery, Patsy is optimistic again. “I’m excited; this is the first time I’ve felt hopeful. I don’t want to make any more mistakes. The last time he moved back home, he wouldn’t stick to our rules. He would lie to us and manipulate. it was a terribly hopeless feeling; especially when it’s your own son. But now, he knows that if he doesn’t follow the rules, he has to move out.”

Those kind of real consequences are a must for addicts in recovery and among the hardest for compassionate family and friends to enforce, Herzanek says. And that was a big reason for his writing the book and creating the organization, Changing Lives Foundation.

“Over the years I’ve seen how much family members struggle with this, and they don’t deserve it” Herzanek says. “They want to take responsibility for a family member’s addiction and that can leave them bitter for years, and they don’t understand why.”
Experience: a stern teacher

Much of the power in Herzanek’s message stems from its foundation in truth; qualities born from personal experience. As a teenager growing up in Kansas City, Herzanek was smoking pot at 19. Over the next 10 years, he indulged in hash, alcohol, cocaine and Valium.
As his tolerance increased, so did the frequency of his use.

When he finally began getting help at an inpatient treatment center and embarked down the long, difficult road to recovery, Herzanek started to see the pain he was causing his family as well.

“I was blind to how my actions were affecting my brother and two sisters,” Herzanek writes in his book. “Actually, the entire family did not understand what was happening. Even now, more than 25 years later, some members of my family remain bitter, and we have never been able to resolve those hard feelings.”

So after over 17 years as a chaplain with the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office working with inmates wanting to recover, Herzanek took a year off to write and self-publish “Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?” and launch, with his wife, Judy, Changing Lives Foundation.

The “innocent victims”that result from a family dealing with a loved one’s addiction are the primary audience that Herzanek is trying to reach. For addicts, Herzanek is a firm believer in the effectiveness of the 12-step program, so much so that he consistently leads and promotes NA (Narcotics� Anonymous) and AA meetings at the jail.

But for the family and friends dealing with an addict in recovery, he saw the need of something tailor-made for their experience.

That something is a book that, in essence, has been decades in the making. The book is the product of the drug use, the struggle to stay on the road to recovery, and the subsequent work helping other addicts and their loved ones.

The unique approach and clear, strong, brutally honest writing style won it a Next Generation Indie Book Award for Best Self-Help Book 208. And despite not having a big-name publisher, he promotes his book through his website and free email newsletter sent out to subscribers.

“Often the focus is on the addict or alcoholic,” Herzanek says. “When I went to treatment . . . there was little or no attention paid to family members. Now they have events like Family Week where family members are brought in so they can work through these issues, too.”

As much as making family and friends of addicts the focus of his book and the resources it contains, it is the honesty and willingness of Herzanek to make an example of himself that at once gives his advice and proscriptions a grounded authority.

And it’s that authority, in addition to the hope and the solace of the specific actions that he recommends, that has opened the door of recovery for family members as well. “The book . . . is for family and friends, to help them recognize the signs of addiction, what to do when they see those signs, how they can help them stay drug and alcohol free and what they might be doing to make the problem worse,” Herzanek says. “People can’t quit on their own.”

Proof is in the People

For Patsy, just having someone explain what her son is going through as well as what not to do to enable him to continue his addictive behavior was a blessing. “There is a lot of information out there and programs for addicts, but you don’t realize how someone with an addiction problem affects the whole family,” Patsy says. “It’s such a relief to finally understand what we’ve been dealing with for the past several years . . . we are in recovery, too.”

For Pam Mains, the knowledge gained from the book painfully stoked the fires of regret that she didn’t do more sooner that may have saved her daughter’s life. But it also gave her the tools, the strength, the hope that she, too, is on a long path of recovery from the grief, regret and self blame she feels.

“Until I got some help after Mia’s passing, I had myself convinced it was all my fault,” Pam says. “It was too much.” Sometimes it’s still too much. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about what I could have done differently. But addicts con you, they all do. And that’s what Joe’s book helps you understand; that their addiction wasn’t your fault and there’s nothing you can do to cure someone else’s addiction. Knowing that won’t bring Mia back, but it helps make sense of it all.”

Visit the Web site of Boulder County Jail Chaplain Joe Herzanek’s Changing Lives Foundation at www.changinglivesfoundation.org.

Order copies of his book, “Why Don’t They JUST QUIT?“at www.WhyDontTheyJustQuit.com or at www.amazon.com.

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* Have you “tried everything?” To learn about individual counseling with Joe Herzanek (in person or by phone) click here.

 

loss of child, drug addiction, emotional cleanup, drug abuse, loss of child, drug addiction, emotional cleanup, drug abuse,

June 11, 2009 by jherzanek | 1 comment

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