Only you can answer this question.
This may not be an easy thing to do. All through our
usage, we told ourselves, “I can handle it.” Even if this was true in
the beginning, it is not so now. The drugs handled us. We lived to use and
used to live. Very simply, an addict is a person whose life is controlled
by drugs.
Perhaps you admit you have a problem with drugs, but
you don’t consider yourself an addict. All of us have preconceived ideas
about what an addict is. There is nothing shameful about being an addict
once you begin to take positive action. If you can identify with our
problems, you may be able to identify with our solution. The following
questions were written by recovering addicts in Narcotics Anonymous. If
you have doubts about whether or not you’re an addict, take a few
moments to read the questions below and answer them as honestly as you
can.
- Do you ever use alone? [Yes] [ No]
- Have you ever substituted one drug for another, thinking that one
particular drug was the problem? [Yes
even
those areas which seem at first to have little to do with drugs. The
different drugs we used were not as important as why we used them and what
they did to us.
When we first read these questions, it was frightening
for us to think we might be addicts. Some of us tried to dismiss these
thoughts by saying:
“Oh, those questions don’t make sense;”
Or,
“I’m different. I know I take drugs, but I’m not
an addict. I have real emotional/family/job problems;”
Or,
“I’m just having a tough time getting it together
right now;”
Or,
“I’ll be able to stop when I find the right
person/get the right job, etc.”
If you are an addict, you must first admit that you
have a problem with drugs before any progress can be made toward recovery.
These questions, when honestly approached, may help to show you how using
drugs has made your life unmanageable. Addiction is a disease which,
without recovery, ends in jails, institutions, and death. Many of us came
to Narcotics Anonymous because drugs had stopped doing what we needed them
to do. Addiction takes our pride, self-esteem, family, loved ones, and
even our desire to live. If you have not reached this point in your
addiction, you don’t have to. We have found that our own private hell
was within us. If you want help, you can find it in the Fellowship of
Narcotics Anonymous.
“We were searching for an answer when we reached out
and found Narcotics Anonymous. We came to our first NA meeting in defeat
and didn’t know what to expect. After sitting in a meeting, or several
meetings, we began to feel that people cared and were willing to help.
Although our minds told us we would never make it, the people in the
fellowship gave us hope by insisting that we could recover. Surrounded by
fellow addicts, we realized that we were not alone anymore. Recovery is
what happens in our meetings. Our lives are at stake. We found that by
putting recovery first, the program works. We faced three disturbing
realizations:
- We are powerless over addiction and our lives are unmanageable;
- Although we are not responsible for our disease, we are responsible
for our recovery;
- We can no longer blame people, places, and things for our addiction.
We must face our problems and our feelings.
"The ultimate weapon for recovery is the
recovering addict."