Light at the End of the Tunnel, Part 2

Obviously, I knew it was time for a change.  In my case, it was time for 100 changes.  I knew I had to completely shake up my life and re-create it if I was going to stay afloat.

First things first – I got into rehab.  I found a great outpatient program that I could afford on a negative income (those with student loans get it!) and started going to two group sessions a week as well as a one-on-one with an addiction counselor.  The rehab program was the first and most important step in my recovery. Obviously, I learned about dealing with stress and anxiety, navigating life with a criminal history, and how to resist the urge to drink.  I got even more, however, from my mates in rehab.

As someone with a mostly clean history, I frankly saw myself as a better person than those who were addicted to, for example, meth or prescription pills, or those who had their kids taken away after a felony DWI.  But there I found myself, in my 20s, sitting right next to those people and realizing that they were just like me.  They were not uneducated, uncultured losers with no self-restraint.  They were people…mothers, adolescents, professionals, blue collar workers, average Joes, all shoved out into the world and learning to deal with the angst of life just like I was.  We all came from different demographics, but in that group therapy room, we were equals learning to fight off a common enemy.  It was quite a humbling experience for me, and it completely changed the way I think about the criminal system and treatment of addicts in our society.

Despite all my efforts to fit in, those around me would still make comments such as “how did you end up here with people like us?”, or “I never thought lawyers dealt with this shit.”  I would answer basic questions about criminal procedure (with the strong warning that I was NOT a licensed attorney and I cannot give legal advice) and share my stories about my past.  The nice clothes I wear and the expensive degree I bragged about sometimes hid my history of depression and alcoholism, unresolved issues with my father’s death, and feelings of inadequacy.  I think I helped them in the same sense that they helped me – I helped at least some of them realize that just because they struggled with addiction and happened to get caught, it didn’t mean that their worth was decreased.  It definitely put some obstacles in their path, but they could still shine.  It had been quite a while since I felt that I was capable of motivating or inspiring anyone, and it was such an honor to have a few people look up to me. I treasure that time, and if anyone reading is going through the same issues – please reach out and I would be glad to help you find an outpatient center like mine.

I attended a few AA meetings, and they just weren’t for me.  I see the appeal and I realize it works for some people, but it seemed too…spiritual.  I am a very realistic person and I felt that people in those groups gave up their addiction to alcohol and replaced it with an addiction to AA.  I learned some good lessons from the Big Book, however (the Big Book is a book given to AA members with several anecdotes and advice from the founders and previous AA members).  Don’t take my word for it though – maybe it would be great for you!  Just not my cup of tea.

To help with my case, I decided to do the best that I could, which means hiring the best attorney I could.  I chose a gladiator named George Milner III, who has a stellar reputation in Texas and beyond.  He wiped out my savings, but he made me feel calm and got me the best deal possible given the circumstances.

Unfortunately, I didn’t have much time for personal development outside of rehab.  As soon as I graduated (a month after my second arrest), it was time to study for the Texas Bar Exam – a three day monster with a 76% pass rate.  I dedicated at least 8 hours EVERY DAY (yea, weekends too!) to studying, sometimes more if I didn’t have to work or didn’t have a mini breakdown between lectures.  I stayed pretty isolated during that time, and I found it amazing how much easier it was to retain information and focus without a hangover.

At the end of July 2015, I took the Texas Bar Exam.  Four months later, I read my name on the pass list.  While this was one of the best days of my life, I could not help but focus on the asterisk located next to my name on the pass site.  This mark meant that while I passed the exam, I did not meet the character and fitness requirements of the Texas Bar, and thus, could not immediately become a licensed attorney.  Back to reality.

While I was waiting on the results, I worked in a few different places.  I had a well-paying contract job at a corporate office in Addison, TX, and I worked in a Middle Eastern cafe in Irving, TX.  It was there I met the man who would play a huge role in my future and my continued recovery.

He was a very polite and handsome customer, and he came in two to three times a week to enjoy a meal or smoke hookah.  He always sat in my coworker Karim’s section.  One afternoon while I was alone on the floor, he came in and it was my turn to wait on him.  Our initial interaction was not noteworthy, but after a few minutes he took out the key to my heart – a DayMinder Dayplanner! No, I know you wish I was kidding, but it’s true.  People like me, who enjoy writing down goals and errands into a spiral planner, are a dying breed.  I couldn’t help but comment on it, and I ended up neglecting my other tables to continue what turned out to be a wonderful conversation.  When he asked for his check, he also asked me for my number (to make a reservation at the cafe, of course) and I happily handed it over.

Many people advise not to date when you are recovering, because addiction is a mental condition, meaning you can replace your addiction to a substance with an addiction to a person, and when it doesn’t work out, you are even more devastated than before, and may turn back to whatever got you into recovery in the first place.  That’s very sage advice that I didn’t give a f**k about.  I let this man into my heart very quickly, and over the course of a month he knew about my family, my past, my addiction and arrest (really hard to hide that kind of thing with a breathalyzer in your car, lol), and all the ugly parts of my personality.  Somehow, he saw light where I could not, and we decided to give our relationship a real chance.

I concluded rehab and I wrapped up my contract job.  What happened next was SO unexpected, but it was just what I needed.

 

Diary Entry: May 7, 2016

Yesterday I received a letter from my lawyer asking for $9,000 and advising that my BAC for my DWI 2nd was 0.125.

Standing outside of my apartment reading the letter, I felt as if Freon was coursing through my veins.  I was cold, shaky, and honestly shocked.  I entered the apartment after a few moments in the passageway.  My husband, who was finally home after 2 1/2 weeks on a rig, was blissfully unaware of my emotional state, was cheerful as usual as he did the dishes.  I tried to maintain my composure for his sake.  I failed.

I went into the bedroom and shut the door, then cried as if I had lost a loved one.  It actually hurt.  My jaw is still twitching today, nearly 16 hours later.

He wants to understand what is going on in my mind, and I want to tell him.  In order to do so, I must understand it myself.  There is a mosaic of emotion in my mind, and the part of glass which catches the most sunlight is the color that shines through, even if it’s the not shade I wish to focus on at the moment.  This leaves with the monumental task of controlling the sun.  Here goes nothing…

  1. The first thing I feel is ANGER.  I am angry at myself for being so dumb, for ruining my career for an insignificant night with people who are not even my real friends.  I feel angry at the smug officer who arrested me.  I feel angry with the justice system for not adjudicating my case despite it occurring over a year ago.  I feel angry at the Texas Board of Law Examiners for denying my licence for a mistake I made even though I am paying the price for it every single day.  I feel angry at my friends and family for sweeping my addiction under the rug (and even encouraging it sometimes) instead of giving me the slap in the face I needed.
  2. I feel HOPELESS.  I lost hope in getting a law license in Texas and Oklahoma. I lost hope in getting a job that will pay my bills.  I lost hope in even getting an hourly job for which I am overqualified and underpaid because I can’t pass a background check.
  3. I feel FEAR and ANXIETY.  If I can’t be a lawyer and I am limited in other job options, I will not be able to pay my bills.  I have 5K in credit card debt and 200K in student loan debt.  My money will go to bills and court fees while I empty my savings and drown in interest.  In 5-7 years, when my background will be less of an issue, I will be near 40, and I don’t know that I will still be sharp enough to convince anyone that I deserve a second third chance.
  4. I also feel SHAME.  I see my friends celebrating success in their careers while I am working as a part-time envelope stuffer.  I wonder what I will tell my kids about my life.  I wonder who knows about my history and what people are saying behind my back.  I feel ashamed to spend time with my professional friends who didn’t fuck everything up for themselves.  How do I explain to them that I put myself in mental and professional catharsis?
  5. I feel LONELY.  I don’t associate with other criminals, so there is not a single person in my life who can understand what I am going through.  I can tell people how I feel, and they will nod and sympathize and tell me everything is going to be OK.  But, maybe it won’t.  I know that, but they can’t possibly know.  Maybe my life really is on hold and it will continue to be miserable for the foreseeable future.  I am not a pessimist, but the truth is not always caked in glitter.
  6. I feel like a FRAUD.  When I was in law school, I was always terrified.  I kept fighting, studying, working…but on the inside, I was so self-conscious.  I thought everyone else had their lives together, that they were sure of themselves and the path they chose.  I was a kitten among lions, just waiting for someone to see right through me.  I still feel that sense of inadequacy and I simply don’t know why.  I have the brains and the talent, but something is preventing me from executing.  It was, at least. Now my pending trial has all but made me completely abandon all hope to chase my 24-year-old dream of being an attorney.
  7. I feel spectacularly UNMOTIVATED.  I don’t care about my looks, my cooking, reading, writing, keeping the house in order, setting personal goals – I don’t care about anything.  I wake up, do what I have to do for the day, then retreat into myself.  I numb my mind with hookah and TV.  I avoid talking to friends and family and even my husband.  I have no sex drive.  I have no joy.  Living like this is not living, but I don’t have the fight in me to change it anymore.

How does one re-invent themselves at 29?  What I always wanted is no longer an option, and so many doors of possibility are now closed.  And it’s all my fault.  I carry concrete bricks on my shoulders everywhere I go.  Before, I was hanging onto the glimmer of hope that I would have a low BAC and be found not guilty.  Now, that seems foolish.  The hopelessness I feel in this case is leaking into other parts of my life.

I know I have to change.  What I am doing isn’t fair to myself nor those around me. But how?  How do I pick up all these broken pieces when it hurts to get off the couch?  Others turn to faith, but I have none.  I loathe AA for all the false hope its attendees have. I can’t afford therapy.  Saying “no” and “I can’t” constantly is cancerous to the mind, but how do I convince myself otherwise?

My mental decline has affected my physical health as well.  I am always tired.  I broke my wrist 6 months ago and it simply didn’t heal.  I got my first-ever bladder infection.  My cramps have intensified.  I am prone to headaches and nausea.  I was always so strong, healthy, and energetic until about one year ago.  Now I am a roll of dough, absorbing every knead.  Fuck, how did I let this happen?

I don’t really know how to end this entry.  I should end with some resolution to change or some promise to myself that I will stop this selfish behavior and be the best person I can despite my circumstances.  I can’t do that this time.  I don’t know if someday I will laugh about this period of my life or look down from some high-rise office and remember when I through I couldn’t do it.  But for now, the score is Life: 1, Amber: 0.

 

****Not part of my diary entry, but I though it important to note here that I am not looking for sympathy, condescending remarks, or affirmation. I am using this blog as an outlet and if anything good comes out of it, it should be to help people like me in knowing that they are not alone in these battles.  Thanks.   -A

Real Talk: Life as an Alcoholic, Part III

This is Part III of the series , where I will discuss my first year and a half in law school.  Check out Part I  and Part II to get the full story.

The first year of law school was a blast.  There was drinking involved, of course, but it was so exciting and I got wrapped up in the rush of being in such an honorable place.  The fact that you are in law school – even if you don’t graduate, even if you are in the bottom of your class – impresses people.  I became proud of myself and began to believe that this was the second chance I had been working toward my whole life.

In my first year, I did pretty well.  I was in the top 11% of my class.  I got elected to represent my class in the Student Bar Association (the equivalent of Student Government on the law school level) as a 1L Representative (1L = first year law school student).  I got an internship with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission after just one semester of classes (which is a huge deal, most students don’t get internships until sometime during their second year).   I was a finalist in a 1L mock trial competition.  I made 2 great friends who are still close to me today. I did so many things right.

EEOC

Side note: During my internship with the EEOC I worked on the most fascinating case I have ever read about to date.  We fought for freedom for mentally disabled adult men being housed as slaves and working for a turkey farmer.  Read about it here.

For the most part, I was not drinking heavily during that first year.  I went out a couple nights and had more than I should have, but it was balanced.  I cared so much about my studies at that time and I really wanted to do a good job for myself. I was so motivated and wouldn’t let anything stand in my way.  I wish, I wish, I wish I could have kept that state of mind.

The summer after my 1L year was one for the books.  During the first half, I worked at a paid internship with a local criminal defense firm in the mornings and attended classes to get a few extra hours in the evenings.  I took Oil and Gas Law (big deal in Texas) and Marital Property (very important subject for me, see my last post).   The weeks flew by, and I was off to my first law school study abroad in Croatia to study Intellectual Property in the European Union.

Croatia

This is a photo I took at a port in Rijeka, Croatia.  Who could be unhappy here?

Croatia was a real turning point with my substance abuse issues, but I want to take a detour and share the funny anecdote which landed me my summer criminal defense internship.  As mentioned above, I got an internship with the EEOC during the winter of my 1L year.  That organization was not my first choice though.  I went through the application process to be an intern in the Dallas County Family Violence court; a position which I was thrilled about and initially believed would be my place of employment after graduation.  I went through the application process and disclosed I had been arrested for a DWI in Dallas County, and it wasn’t a deal breaker.  I was scheduled to go for my third interview (the in person one which would have resulted in a formal offer) when I got a phone call from the administrator.  She informed me that I was no longer going to be considered a candidate because I failed the background check.  I asked her for details (I previously disclosed my DWI so I didn’t understand what the issue could be), and she transferred me to a court clerk who stated that I had a warrant IN DALLAS COUNTY for failure to appear.  If I arrived at the court house, they would be able to detain me for a hearing with a judge.  I was furious and humiliated.  Remember, prior to my first DWI I had barely gotten a speeding ticket – not passing a background check was something that I had never experienced and never anticipated up to that point in life.

 

So, I emailed my attorney with all caps demanding to know why I had a warrant.  He put the blame on his paralegal for failing to calendar the docket for my court date and apologized profusely.  Even though I was livid, I realize mistakes happen, so I forgave him…and jokingly told him he owed me an internship because he cost me mine.  Four days later, he called and confirmed the firm would be happy to have me as a paid intern the following summer.   Every time I relayed that story throughout law school, people would snicker and tell me how awesome it was.  I didn’t hide my arrest and something great even came out of it.  Sobriety would have been a better result, but I didn’t think of it that way then.

 

Now, onto Croatia.  I picked this trip on a whim.  I was never interested in traveling to the Balkan region, nor did I have a penchant for intellectual property.  The trip was the only one that allowed me to complete my summer courses, work, and travel.  It fit the schedule, it was (somewhat) affordable, and I wanted to get out of the country.  I think the only way to tell the story about Croatia is to start from the beginning.

 

First, I planned to fly into Madrid and spend 2 days there, then ride the train over to Barcelona for an additional night.  I love Spain, I speak Spanish, and I traveled there two times prior to this trip.  I just needed some Sangria and flamenco to forget the world.  While in Spain, I didn’t get too crazy.  I was alone, and I spent most of my time walking around, eating, drinking (but not over the top), and meeting locals who I would join at local pubs or discos later in the evening.  It was a tame three nights.  When it was time to leave, I was sad.  I had just a taste of the country that I loved so dearly, and I was headed to a spot I knew absolutely nothing about to study a topic that didn’t excite me.

Selfie Fail Madrid

Selfie Fail in front of the Royal Palace of Madrid

I arrived in Croatia a little late. I checked into the dorm and I was immediately disappointed.  The accommodations had been advertised as a place which had a café, air conditioning, a computer lab, and was within walking distance to major attractions.  It was none of those things.  The dorm was small and dirty, and equipped with two twin beds and nothing else.  There was a common bathroom for the entire floor (read: all students, regardless of gender) for bathing and everything else that happens in bathrooms.  The “computer lab” was a sweltering little closet with 4 extremely old model PCs running on Windows 95.  There was a café, but it was of course not open for summer.  The only things within walking distance were a TINY coffee shop (which literally only sold coffee) and a 24 hour bakery. For everything else, we had to take the bus, which stopped running around 9:45pm.  Later, I would come to learn that Rijeka is simply a miserable city, and there were other extremely exciting destinations in Croatia that offered more of what I had expected, but I would not be seeing any of those other places.

My roommate was a young woman originally from Jamaica who had a huge chip on her shoulder.  See, at this time, we were just beginning to enter the #blacklivesmatter era, and Croatia was not exactly the place to protest.  There are no black people in Rijeka.  In fact, people did not even attempt to hide their stares at my friend.  It wasn’t out of hate or disgust, but rather, they were fascinated.  They had never seen a black person in real life.  People would take photos, tell her she was pretty, smile, or just look at her and take it all in.  Rather than seize this and realize it is a great opportunity to show them that being black is just as ordinary as being white, she got angry and took offense to the people looking at her.  She yelled at a man on a bus when he asked her to move away from the door so he could exit.  She gave menacing glances to the people looking at her and cussed at them under her breath (or audibly, as the trip went on).  Thankfully, she usually just retreated to the dorm room after classes and I was able to venture out on my own.

 

Speaking of on my own, one thing that particularly bothered me about this trip was that four students from my university were also there.  Can you imagine the chances?  The trip was open to any law student at any level across the United States.  35 people attended – and 5 of them happened to be from Fort Worth, Texas (specifically from Texas A&M University School of Law).  The reason this bothered me was that even though I was in their class, from their school, and knew them all personally, I was excluded from their daily activities in Croatia.  I was never invited to go see the old observatory, go to the downtown pizza restaurant, hang out in the little pub, go shopping, take a hike at the waterfall…they just went on their own.  I tried to justify it and say it didn’t matter since it’s not like we planned to come to the same place…but it did matter!  I was so depressed about not having anyone to hang out with.  I traveled alone, and I expected to be alone because I didn’t know anyone.  Despite my predetermined solitude, I was not ready to have familiar faces next to me who would completely reject me.  Even writing this, I feel whiny and sensitive.  Back then, I felt whiny and sensitive.  Bottom line, I was lonely and felt like I didn’t fit in.  If you have read my previous posts, you know what this means.

I was drunk every single night in Croatia.

There is not much to do in a small city like that, so I found the city center to be a daily destination where I could fill up on white wine and read under the sun.  I tried researching new places to see, but nothing caught my attention.  I would drink, argue online with the guy I was dating at the time (who never wanted me to travel in the first place because he didn’t trust me), then try to find something to do late into the night.  Eventually, the guy and I broke it off, and I immediately internalized the pain by having a summer fling.  One of the waiters at the café, Ivica, seemed to be the best choice.  He helped me purchase hashish for one of my peers on the trip, and we had been messaging here and there.  We stayed together a few times, and it was absolutely understood by both of us that it would not be a long lasting thing.

only one with wine

Notice I’m the only one with wine.

One of the most interesting evenings I had in Croatia was with a man about 30 years my senior.  I don’t remember his name, but I will never forget him.  As you remember, I am an aficionado of hookah (or shisha, nargilah, whatever you would like to call it) and I always try to find a place to smoke when I travel.  In Croatia, I found a spot about 30 minutes away in a province called Opatija.  I planned my night, invited the 4 kids from law school (who declined) and got dressed and excited.  When I arrived, I noticed the destination was actually a hotel with a small lounge on the first floor which offered the pipes.  I expected them to be horrible (and they were) but the ambiance was incredible.  Opatija is situated on a somewhat steep mountain, and it overlooks the sea.  There are beautiful colors adorning every building, and driving there means following winding, narrow roads.  Every taxi driver is skilled at doing this in Croatia, but I was blown away.  Coming from Texas, where 8 lane highways and huge pickups are the norm, I felt like I was in a cartoon of sorts.

 

As I sat and puffed on my orange shisha, a man approached me from the interior of the hotel.  He asked me something in Croatian, and when he realized I didn’t speak it, he said, “Are you enjoying your evening?”  His voice was eloquent and his English was perfect.  After he disclosed that he owned the hotel (which I believed based on the way he spoke with the hotel employees) I invited him to join me.  That night, we had a three hour conversation about traveling, life, dreams and love.  He was a spiritual man and he traveled to India quite a bit to get in touch with his inner self.  His wife left him for another man in Croatia, so he lived at the hotel he owned with his daughter and had, from what I could tell, an outstanding life.  After our chat, he offered to take me home (which I welcomed since I was strapped for cash nearly the entire trip).  He passed me his phone number and said he would love to see me again.  I wanted to see him too, but unfortunately it would never come to pass.

 

Flash forward 24 hours. I had very little food in my system, and I got unbelievably drunk in the city center (so much so that various waiters refused to serve me).  I left when it got dark and hailed a cab.  My memory is a little fuzzy, but I recall following a man who I believed was a taxi driver.  He led me into a dark alley and you can imagine what happened.  I don’t want anyone to pity me, but I think there are a lot of confusing situations for people, especially women, when they drink a lot.  It is hard on men to be able to tell if a woman consents if she has been drinking.  What if you have been out a few times but you thought the relationship was heading that way?  What if she has been all over you all night beginning before she was drinking?  What if you don’t realize how drunk she is?  There are so many what ifs.  Clearly, if you don’t know a woman, you all aren’t dating, and she is obviously drunk, then you are really F^#$#&d up for trying to hook up with her.  But there are just so many things that blur the lines.  This is coming from a woman who has been too drunk to consciously consent far too many times.  I don’t feel sorry for myself and I don’t believe those men thought they were doing something wrong or had a criminal intent.  I probably made them believe that I wanted it.  With so much practice, I am skilled at looking and acting quite sober when I am actually three sheets to the wind.  So what am I trying to say here?  Just don’t get messed up around strangers.  If you don’t have a significant other who will take care of you, then get some annoying girlfriends who force you to leave the party when you’ve had too much.  The people I see drunk out of their minds at parties are usually the ones who have no one looking after them – and they probably started drinking because they were lonely in the first place.  What a horrible situation to be in.

 

After the incident in the alley, I began to cry.  I cried like I meant it, sobbing and screaming, until someone came out on the balcony in the alley.  She told me to leave the alley because it was dangerous.  I didn’t answer, I just kept crying.  She said she was coming down.  I tried to run to get away from her, because I didn’t want to tell her what happened.  She found me around the corner at the bus stop and I gave her enough of the story that she pieced together what was missing.  She said I had to go to the police, which I didn’t want to do, but she really gave me no choice and called them for me.

opatija

A view from my “cell” in Opatija

For the rest of the trip, I had to stay at the home of the Croatian guide who assisted our group.  I just slept.  I wasn’t allowed to go anywhere, see my friends, use the phone, nothing.  I was miserable.  The only time I was allowed to leave was to visit the investigators and the judge. I wanted to fly to Portugal, where I had a dear friend waiting to see me.  I wasn’t allowed to go, of course, and that made me even more frustrated.  I convinced my parents to cut the trip short and pay to change my ticket.  Within three days of this event, I was a plane back to the states, feeling like a drunk fool once again.

 

Thanks for reading my lovelies. I can’t wait to share the next chapter of my journey with you.

 

Real Talk: Life as an Alcoholic, Part II

This is a continuation of a previous post.  Read Part I here!

If you thought my last entry was sobering (yak yak yak), buckle your seatbelt.  The next chapter is where it all started to catch up.

Ever since I was a little girl, I dreamed of going to law school.  I have no idea why.  Perhaps I saw a television show which made it look interesting, or maybe I was convinced it would bring me fame and riches.  Regardless of the source, I stuck to this goal without actually considering that I wasn’t too interested in the law and maybe my talents would be better suited in another field.  Sitting here now, I feel like the young men and women who complain that they didn’t chase their dreams after high school because their parents were forcing them to follow a particular career path.  I was my own dictator, and I really wish I had the courage and foresight to stand up to myself.

baby lawyer

When I got accepted into law school, I was naturally excited, but also panicked. I had a job that I loved at a huge resort, a lifestyle that I had become accustomed to, and a social life that was rich and full of new experiences. I really had it all.  Giving all of that up was something I saw as necessary – I wanted to move on to bigger and better things and have some impressive degree.  Now, more than anything, I wish I would have stayed there and enjoyed that life.  I could have easily moved up the ranks, shipped out (the hotel was purchased by Marriott, and employees can transfer all around the world), or stayed in my position making a livable salary and loving my life.

 

gaylord

The Gaylord Texan Resort in Grapevine, Texas (the hotel that still has my heart)

The acceptance letter, to me, was sort of the announcement of a prison sentence.  I knew I couldn’t do any of the things I loved during law school and my life would be constantly controlled by the need to turn in assignments, read cases, research, etc.  So I started to make dumb choices.  A lot of them.

My first bad move was hanging out with a group of promoters.  These are folks who get paid to throw parties at clubs – they get a commission per head, they get free drinks, and they get VIP and after-party passes.  Now, I am not exaggerating when I tell you that I don’t like partying. I really don’t.  I feel anxious and out of place at bars and clubs, even though I have had years of experience working in such establishments.  I was never one of the “cool kids” – always a lone ranger of sorts.  As you recall, I drink more than normal when I am anxious.  Boozing it up, once again, became an activity that I did nearly every night of the week.  My parents told me to stop, my friends said I was “a little much,” my bank account was drained and I looked and felt like shit regularly.  But you better believe I convinced myself I was having a great time.

rebecca

I wasn’t kidding.  Total train wreck.

Law school was not the only external stressor in my life at that time.  My family was also a huge contributor to my drinking.

(Let me say something here. I agree with what you are thinking – no one can make you drink but YOU.  However, the people you love and spend most of your time with can absolutely contribute to your level of stress.  I don’t care how much you meditate – if your home life is a wreck, it’s a wreck.  They way I dealt with stress was drinking.  Bad choice?  Yes. My fault?  Yes.  Did I cause my own stress? Not completely.)

 

I intend to writing a separate post on this, so I will spare you the details – but at the time I was filling out my law school applications through when I started classes, my stepfather was having an affair with his first wife.  Not just a casual once-a-week after work sort of thing…but he moved out of the house and only communicated with my mother to discuss bills and other necessities.  At that time, my mother was drinking heavily, she dropped 50 pounds, and she was actually not a mother at all, but more like a sister who fell off the deep end.  Concurrently, my stepfather’s mother was literally dying of lung cancer and refused to stay in a nursing home, so my parent’s house (where I lived) doubled to serve a as a hospice unit.  Our formal dining room was converted into a hospital room of sorts, complete with a toilet, bedpan, and medical supplies so that my mother could administer morphine drips and the like.  To recap, the house smelled like death, my mom was practically manic, my brother and I were both drinking tons, the “man” of the house was off playing house elsewhere, and my brother’s firstborn, who my mother raised, was only 11 at the time and needed tons of attention and supervision. Good times.

So, one of those nights I headed out with one of my promoter friends.  He was a Venezuelan guy who went by “Toto.”  He got me into a Latin concert at the House of Blues with free admission, valet, and drinks. The night was so-so; I didn’t know the band and I didn’t know anyone there, but I was convinced it was a cool thing to do.  As the night went on, I got completely hammered by mixing drinks on an empty stomach.  I agreed to go to an after party, then another after party, at which point I was near a blackout.  Toto was driving my car because I definitely couldn’t, and he agreed to take me to his home and let me sleep it off at his place.  We got there and all was well.  I was in safe, I had a roof over my head, and I wasn’t driving.  Unsurprisingly, it didn’t stay that way.

I went to the restroom to get sick for a while, and my brilliant drunk brain thought it would be a good idea to just sleep there.  Toto lived with family and couldn’t have a girl in high heels and a miniskirt passed out in his bathroom, so he pulled me out and placed me in his bed, where I immediately passed out.  I awoke several minutes later at the sensation of movement.  Surprise surprise…Toto thought the drunk girl in his bed was an easy catch.  I was completely uninterested in that man, and I wasn’t about to let anything happen despite his feigned generosity chauffeuring me around.  I got up, demanded my keys and started being simply cantankerous.  Though he warned multiple times that I couldn’t drive, he eventually gave in so that my screaming wouldn’t interrupt his family or neighbors.  I got in my car and started driving.  I had no idea how to get home, I knew I just wanted to get our of there.    As if he knew, Toto called to warn me that there were many cops in the area. As soon as the words left his lips, I saw the lights behind me.  I had been pulled over when I was drinking previously, and I thought I could get out of this one.  I was wrong.

I pulled over into a gas station parking lot.  The reason?  I didn’t have the front license plate on my vehicle.  The real reason?  It was 2AM on a Saturday in a small town and these cops needed to feed their families. I performed the field tests (more on this later – you will NEVER get out of a DWI for your performance on these tests) and talked to the officers. I was so polite with them because I had never been pulled over.  They were polite right back, but they still had to arrest and charge me.  I wasn’t handcuffed, they talked to me all about getting into law school, and they apologized that they had to make the arrest.  It actually did make me feel better, even though that was the beginning of a long terrible journey.

That night, I slept in a freezing jail cell in Rowlett (Dallas County) and called Toto for bail the next day.  I was too embarrassed to call my parents.  I went to eat with him and his father and they assured me that everything was going to be fine.  I believed it, since I personally know so many people with DWIs.  I went home that evening, took a shower, and slept.   On Monday, I went to work as usual.  I got a phone call on my way home from my mother.  She found out about the DWI because of the 50+ advertisements we received from DWI lawyers around the metroplex (when you get arrested, your charge is available on the county database – lawyers can target you based on why you were arrested).  She was furious and I tried to explain to her that it was already in the past and that I would deal with it.  All of the sudden, she said she needed to go because my grandmother just died.  If that’s not a scene made for a Lifetime movie, I don’t know what is.

For those of you who don’t know, Dallas county is huge; and there is a TON of crime there.  There were over 99,000 arrests last year in Texas for DWIs alone.  My plea would not occur until 18 months later – after I had completed my first year of law school, had a birthday, became a student teacher, and all but forgot about the charge. The drinking continued, but I was a lot more careful with driving.  I only drove when I was REALLY not intoxicated. Several times I offered to be the DD and had no issue with it.  For a while, I calmed down.  I didn’t get drunk, I focused on school, and I tried to get my life back on track.  I definitely wasn’t prepared, however, for the amount of binge drinking involved in law school.

First year law students are able to drink at every turn.  Mixers held at the school have wine and beer.  The administrators and professors encourage students to get involved with local bar associations and the like – and all of the events have drink tickets.  Law school socials are held around town at bars.  There are no classes held on Fridays, so Thursday nights are the…well…I don’t remember most Thursday nights of my 1L year.  I made some mistakes that gave me a couple of enemies, I developed crushes that would never amount to anything, and by the time I made it to my third year, I realized I hated everyone and just wanted to graduate.

Interestingly, during law school orientation, a few hours are dedicated to substance abuse issues.  After dentists, it is believed that lawyers have the next highest rate of substance abuse issues as an industry.  How those statistics are gathered or their accuracy is questionable (as with any statistics) but going to law school and working in a law firm made me a firm believer that if you don’t drink heavily, you must be a yoga instructor or a heroin addict.  Though I had already been arrested for a DWI, and I had all of the negative experiences I mentioned in my previous post and then some…I still didn’t think I was at risk for that. Not me!  I just had a temporary, one-time slip up.

If only that were true.

To be continued…

Real Talk: Life as an Alcoholic

One of the things that shaped my personality the most as a young woman was my dangerous relationship with alcohol.  Using it has prevented me from getting a law license, led to two arrests, ended relationships, caused weight gain and depression, ruined what should have been good memories, put me in dangerous situations, and depleted my finances.  I am finally over the addiction, and I feel so strong and accomplished.  I would like to share the highlights of my story.

The first time I got drunk, I was 12 years old.  My family is full of heavy drinkers, and I was left unsupervised at my aunt’s party in a trailer park near Cedar Springs Lake.  I had 3 to 4 mudslides (which, to a young person, taste like milkshakes).   That night, I was sexually abused by my cousin – a foreshadowing of the blurred lines of consent while intoxicated.  I stayed up half the night vomiting, and the other half I spent dry heaving.  My grandfather and other family members learned of the incident and stayed with me that night to make sure I didn’t suffocate on my own vomit.  They were upset, but not upset enough to tell my mother.

3_frozen-mudslide

Exhibit A: Mudslide.

     The next few years were my happiest.  I had great friends. I did well in high school, and I met my first love.  Not much happened with regard to alcohol abuse until I was 18 and started working at a local bar.  At that time, my boyfriend had moved overseas (he was not an America citizen, just here to study), and I tried to be strong through that experience but the truth was that I was devastated and heartbroken, and it would take me several years to recover.  I got a job at the bar because I wanted money and I had been waiting tables for 4 years at a breakfast joint.  I felt it was time to move somewhere that I could make “real” money.  The bar was fun, and I did make money.  The downside of that was that I got involved in a lifestyle that was dirty and too advanced for my age.  I tried to see myself as an equal to the patrons of the bar. But I was in high school, and these people had careers and spouses.  I didn’t fit in.  I also didn’t understand that seasoned drinkers have the ability to know which alcohol they can handle and how much of it is safe.  I, as a new drinker, lacked that ability.  I frequently left my tables to go behind the building and puke.  I would sometimes wake up in my bed and not remember how I got there.  I gave out my phone number, kissed people, went to after parties with strangers, drove through residential neighborhoods with enough alcohol to be poisoned. I was a disaster.   How could this happen?  Well, my parents didn’t know. I worked frequently and I was still in school danced on a team in my free time.  I wasn’t home and we didn’t talk unless it was about serious things like graduation and the like.  And, I saw the whole thing as an experience.  I laughed it off.  I didn’t take it seriously.  When we are young, we feel invincible.  When that is mixed with alcohol, life is more like a tango with the grim reaper.

On the left: High School Junior at a football game; On the Right: The Manhattan’s Cocktail Waitresses   

 When I started college, binge drinking ceased to be something I had to be embarrassed about.  It was what everyone did on the weekends.  I was especially popular since, throughout the four years in college, I worked as a bartender at a Middle Eastern restaurant, a cocktail waitress at an American bar, and a server with a “hook up” on drinks at a club.  I had an older boyfriend who always kept alcohol on hand.  Though I was so young and should have been focusing my energy on landing my dream career or getting impressive internships, I was so content with drinking nonstop and making money that I failed to realize all the opportunities I had been missing.

sorority

Just a casual Sunday in college. 

  I should not give the impression that I was a loser, however, because that is far from the truth.  While I did go out too much and drank over what would be considered healthy or normal, I also held several leadership positions and was a great influence on campus.  I was President of Student Government, Membership Vice President of my sorority, and President of Phi Alpha Delta Pre-Law Society.  In addition, I competed in Model Arab League and organized the competition on campus my senior year (that’s something like Model U.N., but with Arab States).  I also worked in a retail shop, a title office, and a NGO throughout my college years.  I went through two “serious” relationships (one ended because he asked me to marry him and I didn’t want that, and the other guy cheated on me, stole money from me, and was verbally abusive about my weight – I weighed 160). All the while, I was keeping it together on the surface, but I was absolutely drowning.  I was legally able to buy alcohol, so I didn’t have to sneak around anymore in bars and clubs. I began to pack on weight, my skin became dry and lost its youthfulness, and my self esteem was just plummeting.  Again, no one knew.  I lived alone, my friends were all binge drinkers and when I would get sick or be hungover, they would laugh about it.

model arab league

I’m on the right, looking very official.  Model Arab League Exec Meeting, 2007

     My best friend at the time, a gorgeous woman named Amanda, built my confidence a little bit by just being a companion.  But, she also unintentionally added to the problem.  She was beautiful with long blond hair and legs for days.  She was friends with all the beautiful men in our social group – she even lived with one of them.  She was thin, carefree, and smart – all the things I (thought I) wanted to be.  Anytime she wanted to go out, I was there.  I usually even offered to pay.  Something about being around people I felt were “better” or “cooler” than me made me drink twice as much as I normally would.  I wanted to fit in, but I didn’t have the confidence. Drinking gave that to me.  It made me happy and feel like I could be a part of this group.  The truth was, I was never really in it.  People knew me, but I didn’t have any friends there.  I was a laughing stock.  And I continued to be promiscuous, make horrible choices, go out to dumb places and spend money I didn’t have – all to make myself feel like I belonged.  This was a dark time, but not the worst.  That was yet to come.

aa

My idol, Amanda.

     Some of my biggest mistakes up to that point were cheating on my boyfriend, getting kicked out of a bar for underage drinking, being intimate with a professor, attempting solicitation, wrecking a car on an icy bridge, contracting a (curable) disease, screaming at friends or romantic interests in public, lying about my ethnicity and my history, and driving drunk repeatedly.  All of those things were tied to alcohol.  All of my dirtiest deeds and misfortunes occurred when I was under the influence of alcohol.  So, why didn’t I snap out of it?

The reason I continued is not that simple.  There are the obvious explanations:

  • I lack self-discipline;
  • I was addicted to alcohol;
  • I didn’t feel the consequences of my actions; and
  • It made me feel better.

And the not-so-obvious reasons:

  • My father was a heroin addict (as some research shows propensity for addiction may be genetic);
  • I had untreated depression and anxiety;
  • I felt a lot of pressure as the first person in my family to go to college;
  • We were always poor and rejected from many places when I was young and I never let go of that feeling;
  • My friends and my family (except my mom) always seemed to be drunk, so I didn’t understand the big deal; and
  • Despite continuing to drink, I was relatively successful.

The funny thing was, I didn’t consider myself to be an alcoholic during this period of my life.  I knew that I was a “binge drinker”, and I knew that alcohol had led me to some poor decisions, but alcoholics in my mind were people who could not go one day without drinking.  I wasn’t at that stage.  I had 2 or 3 days during the week when I didn’t have any alcohol.  I also didn’t normally keep alcohol at home, just drank when I went out.  All of that stuff to me meant that I was still in the clear.

Reflecting on it now, I have the same impression that I am sure you all do, “How the fuck do you look at that and not see alcoholism?”  I have shed many tears once I allowed that Pandora’s box to open, and I remembered all of the embarrassing moments I had as a drunk idiot.  But, for whatever reason, I never heeded advice when people told me to slow down.  I never considered it to be a problem since I had no real health risks, I had graduated from college, and I had never been arrested.  All of that was about to change, however, when I decided to go to law school.

 

To be continued.