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A sister’s story: ‘It started with a joint…now I can’t bear the thought of Mum finding him after an overdose’

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Growing up, every family has their designated roles, writes *Stacey a north-east woman whose family is trapped in the never-ending cycle of drug abuse and recovery.

Somebody takes out the bins. Somebody walks the dog. MineĀ wasĀ to be the one to openĀ the door of my drug-addictedĀ brotherā€™s bedroom first.

In the split second, between knocking the door and the inevitable silence in return, Iā€™m re-enacting a well-rehearsed conversation with my mum where I have to break the news that heā€™s unconscious.

If I’m being honest, thatā€™s a good day. Iā€™ve also got a talk planned for how I tell her heā€™s dead. I just can’t bear the thought of my mum finding him.

Such is the unenviable agony of being someone who loves someone whoā€™s unable to break free from drugs.

A pile of loose codeine pills, an opiate (derived from opium) used to treat pain.
Codeine pills, an opiate (derived from opium) used to treat pain.

Iā€™ve even got money saved for his funeral. True story. Iā€™m told most people donā€™t have to think about such things.

What started with a joint with his mates was compounded by codeine when he hurt his back at work. When he added in a fellow substance misusing girlfriend… the result was devastating.

I once walked into his flat, because the door was ajar, to find him staggering between rooms ā€˜cleaning upā€™.

The drug use started with a joint with his mates.

‘If it wasn’t for paramedics…his daughter wouldn’t have a father’

The needle stuck to his shoe and the crust around his mouth was a dead giveaway that heā€™d somehow survived yet another night consuming a cocktail of whatever he could get a hold of.

He now lives on his own and if it wasnā€™t for local paramedics administering roadside, bedside, parkside, lying-halfway-up-the-stairs-in-his-tower-side anti overdose medication, I’m confident his daughter wouldnā€™t have a father.

‘I heard the words and my heart sank’

Eight weeks ago my fireman friend shared a story about a rescue involving an unconscious man in a burning high-rise, and my heart sank.

No, thatā€™s not accurate: it stopped.

Twelve hours earlier my brother had called me.

Chatty, excited about a frozen lasagne and chips he was about to make, he was on the phone to seek out approval from his big sister.

ā€œAre you proud of me?ā€ he was asking, ā€œI havenā€™t had anything for three days.ā€

And while I assured him I was, and gushed about how weā€™d get a ferry to Norway one day and see the fjords like heā€™s always wanted to, everything in me was on heightened anxiety.

‘One hit in a clean body and I donā€™t have a brother’

See, what a lot of people donā€™t understand is that the clean days are the scariest.

One hit in a clean body and I donā€™t have a brother.

One bad ā€˜bagā€™ and I have to explain to my niece that Daddy wonā€™t be coming to visit anymore.

But my brother isnā€™t even taking drugs because he wants to be high any more. Heā€™s taking them because he canā€™t cope with the reality of the depressing life heā€™s got.

The woman shared a text exchange with her loved one
A text from my brother, who struggles with the reality of his life.

And so when my friend described the rescue of a man, unresponsive surrounded by a kitchen estimated to have been on fire for hours, I knew it was my brother.

‘I’m sorry sis’

The lasagne now charcoal and his body hammered again, I began ringing hospitals until sure enough, there he was.

Alive. Just.

ā€œIā€™m sorry sis. It was just one time. Iā€™m off it now. I was just that happy to have a nice dinner, I didnā€™t think it would do me any harm. It was half what Iā€™d normally have.ā€

And thatā€™s the reality. Thatā€™s his reality.

A snippet of the conversation with the firefighter.

Elation in the form of a hot dinner and weā€™re back to square one.

But I remain grateful for those who believe the best in people like my brotherĀ  – and who train to save them again and again – when the treadmill of it means those closest canā€™t any more.