I admitted myself into a Mexican detox clinic and for eight days I suffered through my withdrawals. After a day of blood tests and urine samples, (Yay! Am not HIV poz! No bugs on this baby! Weak liver, though, Old Doc Benway sez I gotta lay offa the sauce. But, the vices, herr Doktor, the vices!) I was quickly admitted and given a cot in a windowless ward. It was a large foul-smelling room with about fifty cots. Phantoms moaned and shuffled about in hospital pajamas.
In forty-eight hours the backlog of heroin in my body ran
out. I took some Nembutal and slept for several hours. When I woke up, my
clothes were soaked with sweat. My eyes were watering and hurting. My
whole body felt itchy and irritable. I twisted about the bed, arching my back
and stretching my arms and legs. I drew up my knees, my hands clasped between
my thighs. The pressure of my hand set off the hair triggering orgasm of junk
sickness. I got up and changed my underwear.
The pain, the sweats, the paranoid hallucinations. A hefty
price I paid. Believe me when I tell you it was a deterrent. Only if you ever
had withdrawal symptoms could you fully understand the fear and loathing. Words
cannot convey the pain, the searing pain on a cellular level, of withdrawal
symptoms. Long nights lying on my cot screaming until my throat was coarse and
raspy, and my body tensed as if tied in knots with the flames of devils. My clothes
clung to my torso with sweat that soaked the thin mattress through. Horrid
demons attack out of shadows from vivid hallucinations.
Real demons.
I have seen the face of pain and suffering, all under the
stare of cold dead fish eyes of the night nurse. And nothing compares to a
Mexican clinic for sheer poverty and filth. Fifty junk-sick idiots silent in a
room with cockroaches and rats climbing over you. No use complaining. There is
nothing anybody can do. Nobody can help nobody. Just sit and ride the terror
out. I knew at that moment that I'd never travel that line again.
Though, I will never regret my experience with drugs.
I found the vaccine at the end of the junk line. I live in a
one-room apartment in Colonia Centro in Tijuana, Mexico. Long been fired from
my job. I had not taken a bath in days nor changed my clothes or removed them
except to stick a needle every half hour in the fibrous grey flesh of terminal
addiction. I never cleaned the room. Empty ampule boxes and garbage piled to
the ceiling. Light and water long turned off for nonpayment. I did absolutely
nothing. I could look at my shoe for eight hours. I was only roused to action
when the hourglass of junk ran out. If a friend came to visit - and they rarely
did since who or what was left to visit - I sat there not caring if he had
entered my field of vision - a gray screen always blanker and fainter - and not
caring if he walked out of it. If he had died on the spot I would have sat
there looking at my shoe waiting to go through his pockets. Wouldn't you?
Thirty grains of heroin a day and it still was not enough.
And the long waits in front of the farmacia. Delay is a rule in the drug
culture. The Man is never on time. This is no accident. There are no accidents
in the drug world. The addict is taught again and again exactly what will
happen if he does not score for his junk ration. junk takes everything and
gives nothing but insurance against junk sickness.
Junk is a cellular equation that teaches the user facts of
general validity. I have learned a great deal from using junk: I have seen life
measured out in eyedroppers of morphine solution. I experienced the agonizing
deprivation of junk sickness and the pleasure of relief when junk-thirsty cells
drank from the needle. I have learned the junk equation. Junk is not, like
alcohol or weed, a means to increase enjoyment of life. Junk is not a kick. It
is a way of life.
And that is a life I will never repeat.
It was five in the afternoon when I left the clinic and took
a cab to Juarez Ave. I went into a bar and drank four whisky sours and got
pretty drunk. I was cured.
As I walked across the porch to my apartment and opened the
door, I had the feeling of returning after a long absence. I was coming back to
the point in time when I took that first "joy bang" with Gabriel.
After a junk cure is complete, you generally feel fine for a
few days. You can drink, you can feel real hunger and pleasure in food, and
your sex desire comes back to you. Everything looks different, sharper. Then
you hit a sag. It is an effort to get dressed, get out of a taxi, to pick up a
fork. You don't want to go anywhere or do anything. You don't even want
junk. The junk craving is gone, but there isn't anything else. You have to sit
this period out.
Gabriel came around as soon as he heard I was out. Did I
want to "pick up"? Just one wouldn't hurt any. He could get a good
price on ten or more. I said no. You don't need willpower to say no to junk
when you are off. You don't want it.
An interesting experiment, to be sure. But, I will never do
that again.
9 comments:
Damn. That's amazing, horrible, and beautiful all at once. Truly.
Doesn't sound like the Betty Ford clinic...
I wish you luck conquering your inner demons if you haven't already.
Stay strong. Smack is whack.
Congratulations, baby-
You made it! Now keep the HIV bug at bay too while you're at it. Being a diseased pariah's no fun, either.
Gros Bisous,
B
Your post was WAY more interesting, touching and powerful than that ridiculous, moralizing last half hour of "Ray".
Good to have you back!
Glad your back and feeling better. I've seen too many people lost to drugs. I am glad you aren't one of them :)
~K
"Stays crunchy in milk." Now there is proof! Good to have you back. I like your new picture too. Big hug from the big distance :)
For a moment there, I was going through some DA withdrawal of my own... nothing like what you just described. But just as scary - to any man at least... especially a gay man - impotence being one of them.
I'm glad you're back my friend.
Just happened across your blog and I want to say congrats on getting through the detox process. It sounds awful, it must've taken a lot of courage to get through..
Thank you all for your kind words.
ONWARD!!
Hey - if you're into reading I'd like to recommend a book I've read. Its called "A million little pieces." You can check it out on Amazon. Its about a recovered addict. I think you could relate to it. Its an amazing book and I'm glad you've conquerd your demons. Good for you.
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