Top 5 Reasons to Say No to a Rehab Romance

Top 5 Reasons to Say No to a Rehab Romance

Don’t Fall in Love in Rehab!

Treatment isn’t fun. It’s necessary, enlightening, a space for growth, and life saving…but it isn’t fun.

I don’t know about all you, but when I went to my first treatment center all I cared about was fun. So, the gears in my faulty brain started turning. They cranked and cranked and came up with the idea of getting a boyfriend while in treatment.

rehab romance

It isn’t going to end like this…I promise

This is called a rehab romance and trust me when I say – don’t do it! Nothing good will come from it. I’m sure most of you reading this are already shaking your heads. Come on girl, you’re thinking!

I know, I know. Anyway, I figured I’d share my experience so that others don’t have to make the same mistakes I did. Enjoy!

5) It Can Wait

This isn’t really a good reason at all, but it’s true. If you meet someone you like in treatment, or if you meet someone who pays attention to you and is cute (that’s all it took for me!), save it for later.

Having a rehab romance will do a lot of things for you…none of them are positive. Plus, it’s usually breaking the rules of the treatment center. That’s addict behavior. We got sober to CHANGE our behavior, remember!

The love of your life might be around when you both get out of rehab. They might not. It doesn’t matter. Just wait.

4) The Other Person is Sick

I feel like this one goes without saying, but I’m saying it anyway. There’s a reason your perfect boyfriend ended up in rehab. That reason, hard as it may be to swallow, is because they’re sick!

Addiction and alcoholism are diseases of selfishness, dishonesty, resentment, and failed relationships (romantic, platonic, and familial). So, knowing all this, why would you get into a relationship anyway? It just doesn’t make sense!

3) You’re Sick!

Again, I feel like this one is obvious, but I’m saying it anyway because it wasn’t obvious to me!

If your new prince charming is sick…well just think about how sick you are! I was a lot of things when I entered treatment (insecure, afraid, neurotic, emotionally crippled, emotionally unavailable, jealous, full of resentment, lonely…the list goes on). You know what I wasn’t? Healthy.

Why would I want to get into a relationship with another human being when I’m not even okay on my own? Why would I want to subject another person to the madness that was inside my head at the time?

It just doesn’t make sense. Of course, most alcoholics do things that don’t make sense. Falling in love in rehab, though, takes the cake of most nonsense and silly things to do!

2) It Distracts from Therapy

Why’d you go to treatment in the first place? To get help! If you’re anything like me, you desperately needed help with just about everything in your life.

So, while in treatment, why would you do anything that distracts from getting that help? Of course, hindsight is 20/20, right? I didn’t think getting involved with a boy distracted me from therapy. I thought I was still doing my assignments and learning about myself.

And I was…to a degree. I wasn’t fully present though. Guess what I thought about at night? If you said plans for my future wedding to Bobby from Boston – you’re right!

I wasn’t concentrating on figuring out what made me tick. I wasn’t taking a fearless look inside myself for answers. I was making sure everything looked good on the outside and paying lip service to self-searching, all while dreaming about a boy. Yikes!

1) It Distracts from God

More than anything else on this list, getting involved in a rehab romance puts distance between you and your Higher Power. Do you think God wants you passing notes during smoke break? I don’t know about you, but my God definitely doesn’t!

Alcoholism and addiction are spiritual diseases. The only way to FULLY recover from them is through a spiritual experience. If we’re putting people before God, well, this just doesn’t happen.

If we’re attempting to fill the void with people, attention, compliments, or anything other than a Higher Power of our own understanding, it just doesn’t work. It’s that simple.

What are your top reasons for not having a rehab romance? Let us know on social media!

Recovery Isn’t Easy…It’s Worth It!

Recovery Isn’t Easy…It’s Worth It!

Recovery Isn’t Easy

On of my favorite sayings goes a little something like this – I’m not telling you it’s going to be easy, I’m telling you it’s going to be worth it.

recovery is worth it

I’m not sure who first uttered those words. Maybe it was an athlete or a coach or somebody like that. What I am sure of is that saying applies 100% to recovery.

It doesn’t matter if we’re talking about recovery from addiction, from an eating disorder, from self-harm, or from anything else. Recovery is difficult. It’s fraught with emotional valleys and tough terrain.

Of course, recovery’s also filled with the most wonderful moments I could ever imagine. In my experience, though, we remember the challenging times more than the good ones. I think that’s just how life is.

Recovery is Worth It

Even though it’s difficult at times, recovery is SO worth it! I’m preaching to the choir here, I’m sure, but let’s explore some of what makes sobriety so wonderful.

First, and most importantly, there’s the freedom! Imagine being imprisoned for so long that you forget you’re imprisoned. Imagine forgetting what the outside looks like. The sun, the breeze, the bright blue sky…you don’t remember what any of those are.

That’s what active addiction and alcoholism are like! We’re stuck in a self-imposed prison of fear, anger, resentment, self-pity, and selfishness. We’ve been stuck there so long that we’ve forgotten freedom even exists!

So, to get sober is to be free. Even during the tough times, the times when a drink or drug is screaming our name, we’re still free. We’re bathed in the sunlight of the spirit, to quote the Big Book.

Then there’s the relationships recovery gives us! Did you know I never once had a real relationship before getting sober? Well, with the exception of my parents and grandparents. I had selfish motives in mind, coconsciously or unconsciously, during every other interaction with a human being.

And then I got sober. I suddenly realized there was an entire world (really, the entire world!) of people I could help. There was an entire world of people I could talk to with nothing selfish in mind. I could do something for someone and except nothing in return!

That was an eye opener to say the least!

What other blessings did I receive as a result of recovery? Well, they’re pretty much endless! I gained acceptance. If something doesn’t go my way, well, I don’t have to like it. What I do have to do, though, is accept it.

I could never do that in active addiction and alcoholism. I could never accept anything, good or bad! Today, I can accept anything. Sometimes it takes a little kicked and screaming (remember, recovery isn’t easy!), but I’ll eventually feel the truth of it in my bones.

I gained love, which goes back to being selfless. I learned how to love someone with my entire heart. Want to know the secret? It’s as simple as putting someone else’s needs before your own. That’s love! Of course, then we have to watch out for codependency, but that’s an article for another time!

I gained emotional stability. I’m no longer a rollercoaster of up’s and down’s. I’m no longer angry, scared, happy, and sad all within ten seconds! Today, I’m able to experience an emotion without running from it. I’m able to embrace everything this world makes me feel.

Sometimes these feelings are good and sometimes they’re bad. But guess what? I’m able to sit and experience each one. What a blessing!

So remember, it’s not going to be easy, but it’s going to be so worth it!

Getting Into Healthy Romantic Relationships in Sobriety

Written By: Katie Schipper

Romantic Relationships in Sobriety Can Be Healthy!

No, but seriously. Wait.

That guy/girl/whoever you met in your treatment center/halfway house/that meeting that you can’t live without? You can. Just wait. The crazy thing about waiting is that you might find out your tastes aren’t quite what you thought they were. Thirty, or sixty, or ninety days off your lifetime of smoking/snorting/shooting drugs and drinking? Yeah, you probably don’t know what you want!

So wait. You might grow (shocker!). You might change. You might actually realize there’s something to be said for getting to know yourself and your inherent value. You might learn that what’s inside you is so much bigger and so much better than an attachment to another human.

Before we start new relationships, we have to fix our old ones!

healthy romantic relationships in sobriety

First We Must learn to Love Ourselves

That doesn’t necessarily mean wait a year. After all, a year is just an arbitrary, man-made measure of time. Some people might get well before a year is up. Others, most others, probably need well over a year to undo a lifetime of diseased, insane, chemically affected thinking and acting.

It isn’t the year so much that matters, but rather the time you’ve given to the two most vital, lasting, and important relationships in your life: the one you have with God/Higher Power/the Universe/etc. and the one you have with Yourself.

Here’s the thing, we’re phenomenally adept at bulls**ting ourselves. Nowhere is this more apparent than when we are describing why, contrary to all popular evidence, we’re ready to be in a relationship when we’ve done no meaningful work on rebuilding the ONLY relationships that matter!

It’s a cliché, but it doesn’t matter because it’s true! We can’t fully love someone without learning how to love ourselves. That doesn’t mean we aren’t capable of love, or that we don’t care about others, or anything like that. It means that until we’ve built a solid foundation of self-esteem and self-love (spoiler alert: that doesn’t happen overnight, or in a month, or in three months) we’ll use the other person to fill a void, or feel better about ourselves.

All of these things that we do in addiction recovery programs, all of the work, and soul-searching, and praying, and meditation – it’s designed to connect us to a God of our own understanding. Guess what? This God already lives within each of us. If we seek it in another person before we seek it in ourselves, we’re doing ourselves a huge injustice. We usually pay for it, too. Maybe not right away, but any relationship that’s put before those two most vital relationships will eventually crumble.

Safe relationships? Whatever happened to safe sex?

Let the Right Relationship Present Itself

As for the actual steps for getting into a healthy relationship? There aren’t any. If you can honestly and earnestly say that you have a solid relationship with yourself and God, then chances are you won’t be actively seeking a relationship. Usually, faith that the right relationship will present itself in your life goes hand-in-hand with those two things.

The beautiful thing about unreservedly loving yourself is that you get to a point where you won’t settle for less than you deserve. You’ll have this gut instinct that explains what this means for you. So, if you want to get into a healthy romantic relationship, the first thing you should do is wait.

Beauty From Ashes

Beauty From Ashes

My Name is Beth and I’m In Recovery

Beth Gentry Before and After

December 2nd, 2008. That’s the day I used meth for the last time.

I’ve been asked why I’d ever try meth. See, I wasn’t your typical addict. I was thirty-one and self employed with a very profitable business. I had two beautiful daughters, a three bedroom home, a new sport’s car, and stable relationships with my family.

So, why’d I try meth? Because it was offered to me. Because I’d recently gone through a divorce. Because I was dating an addict. Because I was trying to keep up with his lifestyle. Because my self-esteem was always low.

The First Time

On October 30th, 2003, I went to a party. Someone handed me a small wad of toilet paper. They told me it was meth.

I didn’t know anything about meth and quickly asked if it would make me sick. They told me now. I asked how it would make me feel. They told me it would make me feel better than ever before. What did I do next? I swallowed the small bundle.

A few minutes passed and I began to feel the effects. My boyfriend looked at me and asked if I was on meth. I told yep, I had. I’ll never forget what he said next.

“You just f**ked your life up. In a year you won’t have anything. You’re going to lose your house, your car, your business and never want to see your daughters,” he said. I thought I could handle it and told him so. His reply? “No you can’t handle it! It’s meth!”

I’ve heard if you try meth once you may be able to walk away from it. If you try it twice though, well, then you’re addicted. I was addicted from my very first time. From that night on until December 2nd, 2008, I used daily. I used and used. The only breaks I took were to sleep (not very often) and while in jail (often).

Everything My Boyfriend Said Came True

In under a year, I lost my three bedroom house and was living with my mom. My car was wrecked and then repossessed. I lost all my clientele. Worst of all, I made up excuse after excuse why I couldn’t spend time with my daughters.

I remember my youngest daughter clinging to my leg, begging me not to leave the house. It was ten at night and my girls were in tears. They were screaming for me to stay home with them, but I couldn’t. I had to go chase the sack.

I remember bragging, saying “I do drugs, they don’t do me!” I’ve never been so wrong! Meth did me in 100%.

A Living Hell

After nine months of using, I was out of money. I had to find a way to support my increasingly expensive habit. So, like most addicts, I began to sell drugs.

The next five years were a blur. I was using, selling, and having sex with anyone to make my boyfriend jealous. I was living in utter insanity. Morals and dignity? What are those? I just didn’t care. When you don’t care, you’re a very dangerous person.

I fell asleep driving. I had guns pulled on me. I walked in to dope houses and hotel rooms with bags full of dope, alone. I carried wads of cash, alone. I was a target to be robbed, raped, and killed.

I went from bad boys to extremely dangerous men. I thought I ruled the world. I had the dope, the money, and the men. People jumped when I said jump.

I lost cars, time, memories, clothes, jewelry, and my clean criminal record.

I was arrested time and time again. I was given chance after chance to change. After each arrest, I thought I’d be slicker than the Feds and city cops. Guess what? I wasn’t.

Federal Agent Arrest

From Bad To Worse

I found myself facing life in prison. I sold meth to an undercover ATF agent. They busted me with over twenty-four pounds of meth. Guess what? My “friends” ratted me out. The state was pressing trafficking charges. On top of all that, I was pregnant.

In November of 2005, I had a miscarriage. That was the best thing for my unborn child. I was using and sell meth at the time. That baby could have been born addicted. I was hoping I’d miscarry this pregnancy as well.

Two and half months into my pregnancy, I sat in a hotel room with who I thought was my child’s father. The truth is I had no clue who the father was. Anyway, I decided it’d be best if I tried to have a drug-induced miscarriage. We loaded two syringes with over a gram of dope. We found vein on both my arms and shot it up. I knew it would kill the baby inside me. I hoped it would kill me.

I began throwing up everywhere. I was higher than I’d ever been, for three straight days. Did I miscarry? Nope.

I got into fights with my long-term boyfriend over using while pregnant. He was scared because the Feds were breathing down his neck. See, I’d been arrested again. My brand new Charger was impounded and $7,000 was confiscated from me. I was on my boyfriend’s couch when he told me I had to go. He was sick of me. He no longer loved me. He said I was sick and he hated who I’d become. Wait a minute, a junkie was embarrassed of another junkie?

I knew what was ahead of me, prison for life. I knew what I’d become to my family, already dead. They went weeks and months without knowing if I was dead or alive. I was convinced my daughters would be better off without me. They needed a stepmom who would love them and be a part of their lives. My unborn child didn’t deserve to be born in prison. I’d lost all hope.

I wrote a good-bye letter to my boyfriend, asking him to tell my family I was sorry. I texted him and said I’d taken all the pain-pills I could find. I apologized for leaving my body in the bed. I took the pills, called my dog beside me, and fell asleep.

I woke up in an ambulance with charcoal being poured down my throat. I had IV’s in my arms and oxygen on. After the paramedics got me stable, they admitted me to the Behavioral Medicine Unit, the “nut house.” The next day, I found out my unborn baby had survived. I found out she was a perfectly healthy girl. I looked at the ceiling and asked God one question. I asked God why?

A week later I left. My boyfriend picked me up and took me to my mom’s house. She insisted I go to treatment.

I sat in her bathtub with a syringe full of the last meth I had. My arms were bruised and knotty from missing shots. My veins were collapsed. I wasn’t giving up though. By God, I was going to find one final vein. The syringe became more blood than meth. I knew by the time I found a vein, the dope would be too diluted to work. I kept trying. I looked down at my pregnant belly and saw my baby kick. Tears began to fall. I was sick and tired and hated myself so much.

I slept the next two days straight. I woke up and, once again, began to scheme how I could get high. Before I could even get off the couch, the doorbell rang. It was the Feds. They were looking for me. I yelled for them to come back with a warrant. I smoked a cigarette, jumped in the shower, and waited.

Soon they came back. I was arrested and stayed in jail until, by the grace of God, I was allowed to go to rehab.

From Ashes Comes Beauty

On April 6th, 2009, my third daughter was born. She was healthy and perfect in every way. Her two big sisters were in the room. I was clean for just over three months.

beth-07

On August 17th, 2009, God spoke to me. I’d been praying ever since I got to rehab. I begged God to keep my out of prison. I begged him to let me raise my children. I lived each day in fear of losing my girls. I wasn’t enjoying life at all. I was a prisoner of my own thoughts.

So, on August 17, I went on pass to church. I took my baby to the nursing room and began to pray. The same prayer, begging God not to send me to prison. After I finished praying, I felt Him walk in the room. He sat next to me and said, “Beth relax. You’re not going to prison. I’ve kept you in rehab this long so you can get recovery. Be patient with me, it’s almost over.”

At that moment my entire world changed. I began to really live. I told everyone I wasn’t going to prison because God had spoken to me. I loved each moment with my kids and didn’t fear losing them. My prison walls had crumbled.

I graduated rehab on October 7th, 2009. On December 15th, I was sentenced. My attorney, the Federal DA, and the judge had meet the day before. They signed all the paperwork for me to do three years in federal prison. When my attorney called me, I was shattered. My world crumbled.

I had to tell me girls I was going to prison. I had to look them in the eye and apologize for screwing up their lives. I told them I wished I were dead, because that would be less embarrassing than having to tell their admit who their mother was. My oldest daughter, who was eighteen, was going to take over guardianship of my baby.

My middle daughter asked me if I was a liar. I told her I try hard not to lie anymore. She replied, “well you said God told you you weren’t going to prison”. Guess what? She was right!

I got my church elders and ministers together. We prayed for hours. There’d been over seventy letters written on my behalf. The courtroom was packed. There were over fifty people inside and people were lined up down the hall. Each person wanted to testify about why I shouldn’t go to prison.

My oldest daughter was in the front row, waiting for her mother to be sentenced. That’s something NO child should ever have to do.

The judge walked out of his chambers and called me to the bench. He said “I didn’t sleep last night. I was in turmoil about what to do with you, Ms. Pearson. In my twenty-five years of being a judge, I’ve never had a case this hard to render.” I turned around. Everyone who’d been in the prayer session, well, their jaws all dropped. What the judge said was exactly what we’d prayed for.

I walked out of the courtroom with five years probation and six months of house arrest. God is good!

A Happy Ending

Beth with her family

Tomorrow, I celebrate five years clean and free. This is a big deal because I got high for five years. I’ll finally be clean as long as I used. It’s only by the grace of God that I’ve been able to do this.

My little girl is four and perfect. Right after her most recent birthday, she said something which gave me chills.

“Mom I saw God. I saw Him when I was in your tummy. He came inside your tummy twice. He has really big arms. He held me and said He loved me and that everything was going to be okay. I asked Him who He was and He said God.”

I began to cry. I’m tearing up right now, even thinking about that day. If ever God was to intervene in her life, it was twice. Once when I tried to have a drug induced miscarriage and once when I attempted suicide.

I’m back in college. I’m getting my M.S. in drug and alcohol counseling. I speak at every meeting I can. I have a sponsor. I sponsor other girls. I have a strong relationship with God and my family.

I’ve been forgiven and am trusted. My oldest daughter told me I was her hero, while I was still in rehab! I’m my middle daughter’s best friend. My girls are my rock. I put them through hell, but they’ve seen the power of prayer. They’ve seen that recovery does work.

I now have the answer to the “why?” I asked God after I tried to kill myself.

My “why?” is a life free of meth. My “why?” is days spent with my family. My “why?” is something to be grateful for each day.