Tag: Addiction Recovery

  • sweet and bruised

    The Lariat always smelled like three things: fryer oil that refused to cool, bourbon poured by a hand that didn’t care where it landed, and the soft, bruised perfume of women who’d learned to keep their backs to the wall. The carpet—if it was still carpet—held the residue of every decade it had survived. Walk through in boots and you came out carrying years that weren’t your own.

    I kept near the front door, not to escape but to feel the air shift whenever someone stepped in from the lot—cold, warm, sage-heavy, diesel-thick. I craved the movement. The door swung endlessly, a hinge caught between resignation and return, ushering in miners with hands blackened by the shift, women with eyes like cracked glass, kids pretending at adulthood, drifters with whole towns stitched into their jackets.

    Adrianne never stood in that doorway.

    She couldn’t.

    Her name traveled faster than she ever could. While I drifted through the Lariat like a moth that refused to learn from its own burning, she learned the geography of stillness—corners, shadows, rooms where deputies didn’t linger.

    If the Lariat was a lung, I was one of the particles trapped inside it, pulled in and pushed out by each slammed door. Chaos that required nothing but presence.



    the hotel organism

    The bar clung to the end of a low-slung hotel that looked pieced together by someone who understood need better than architecture: a place to eat, a place to drink, a place to disappear. My room overlooked the parking lot—a slab of asphalt that breathed heat in summer and cracked like bone in winter. Neon bled under my door in thin red stripes. The ice machine outside kept its tired rhythm. Strangers rattled my handle at all hours, convinced some door in their life should have opened that night.

    Meanwhile—years earlier, miles away—my brother stepped into a courtroom I never saw. I remember only the hush in our house when his sentencing came due. My mother sat at the kitchen table turning her coffee mug in slow circles, the ceramic whispering against laminate as if she were smoothing down something frayed inside her. They showed up for the legal ritual, not the years that led to it.

    I learned the word sentencing before I learned fractions.

    When my brother eventually returned, the prison walked back with him, shadow doubling shadow. He hovered at the edges of rooms as if air itself had become conditional.

    Back at the hotel, the Lariat thumped like a mechanical heart. Regulars hunched at the bar like parishioners praying to an indifferent god. Bartenders read me by the slope of my shoulders. I belonged there the way a bruise belongs to a shin—it wasn’t asked for, but it made sense.

    Adrianne, at the same time, was learning the opposite skill: how to vanish in plain sight.

    Two girls,

    one county,

    one set of poisons—

    but different architectures of ruin.

    Mine had a parking lot.

    Hers had a case number.



    the abandoned house

    The first time I tried fentanyl, it was Adrianne who handed me the foil.

    She led me into that abandoned house—the one a grieving woman kept the way a wound is kept when you’re not ready for it to close. Two daughters gone in the kinds of tragedies small towns hold onto forever: one to a frightened horse, one to a liver that failed too soon. Their stories clung to the walls like mildew.

    The house wasn’t empty. It was collapsing while still inhabited: boxes leaning into each other, trash shifting in small drifts, cats weaving through the wreckage like smoke. The floor bowed under our weight. The air was a mixture of sweetness, rot, and something chemical that clung to the back of the throat.

    My sister had cleaned one of that woman’s houses once. She said it felt like walking into someone’s private implosion. Even then, she and I were orbiting the same scars differently: she at the perimeter, me stepping into the center as if the hole had been waiting for my shape.

    In that kitchen—the sink choked with dishes, the cabinets swollen from moisture—Adrianne pulled out the foil. No fanfare. No seduction. Just the soft competence of someone who had run out of gentler ways to live inside her own skin.

    When the smoke hit my throat, my body bucked. Not pleasure—displacement. Like being shoved out of myself. Heat, then nausea rising sharp and bright. I vomited into the sink, vision splitting at the edges.

    Adrianne steadied me with a hand on my back.

    “I know,” she whispered. “It hits wrong before it hits quiet.”

    She let me stay the night because I couldn’t walk and because neither of us wanted to be alone. Nobody was capable of desire on fentanyl. The drug erases wants. Everything becomes a single blunt edge.

    A cat hissed under the table. The house groaned in its foundations. Something shifted, as if settling into the knowledge that we would not be the last to kneel there.



    the apartment on Church Street

    People imagine descent as dramatic. It isn’t.

    We tried to move Adrianne out once—from that apartment on Church Street where the porches sagged like tired lungs and the streetlights flickered as if deciding whether to stay in the fight. The power was cut when we arrived. No warning. Just a door opening into total dark.

    I packed boxes by feel: a hairbrush, a candle stub, a stack of letters damp with something sour, a shoe without its mate. The air tasted like dust and last chances.

    Adrianne wasn’t even in the room.

    She was next door, smoking and dealing in the halo of someone else’s porch light, her silhouette wavering like a signal losing strength.

    That neighborhood lived the way someone on life support lives—not alive, not dead, just suspended.

    Fentanyl didn’t invent it.

    It simply animated what had already surrendered.

    A lighter flared outside.

    A floorboard softened under my heel.

    A cat knocked something over in the far corner.

    Survival isn’t cinematic.

    It’s ugly, practical, shaped by the smallest choices that keep a body moving.

    The only beauty came from how the objects testified:

    a softening board,

    a dull-edged foil,

    a box packed in a powerless room,

    a sink that remembered water only in theory.

    This wasn’t myth.

    It was mold.

    It was breath.

    It was the intimacy of two girls trying to outrun their own weather systems.



    the call

    The call didn’t arrive with drama. It came in the middle of an ordinary day. Angel didn’t stir. A spoon rattled in the sink. The house kept its indifference.

    The number had the geometry of custody.

    Prison calls always sound submerged, like the voice has to travel through water and concrete. Adrianne’s words reached me stretched thin by fluorescent light.

    She talked at first about something small—commissary prices, a bunkmate, something forgettable. What mattered was the echo behind her voice, the room speaking with her.

    Then she paused.

    “We’re the same,” she said.

    Not mournful.

    Not pleading.

    Just placing a truth she believed between us.

    I didn’t answer. Silence can be a more honest instrument than agreement.

    A fleck of paint drifted from the ceiling and landed on my arm. I brushed it off. She kept talking, unaware she’d opened any seam in me.

    What do you say to someone who thinks they’re standing on the same ledge as you when you can see the canyon clearly?

    You don’t.

    You let the room speak for you:

    the spoon in the sink,

    the hum of the fridge,

    the delay in the line,

    the distance built into the very technology of confinement.

    Her breath hit the receiver.

    Mine stayed in my chest.

    The call ended without ceremony—just a cut line, a quiet return to the world I was still allowed to live in.

    Her words hovered like dust unsettled.

    The strange part wasn’t that she believed us the same.

    It was how instantly I knew we weren’t.



    the cold

    I stepped outside. Wyoming air doesn’t greet; it judges. The cold slid around me with the blunt honesty of a land that expects nothing from you and offers nothing in return.

    Out there, her sentence didn’t echo.

    It just hovered—persistent, unresolved.

    Yes, we stood on the same weather-warped plank.

    No, we did not stand in the same place on it.

    She grew up on trapdoors.

    I grew up on thresholds.

    Her descent hinged on stillness.

    Mine hinged on movement.

    The difference wasn’t merit or morality.

    It was angle.

    It was timing.

    It was which part of the board cracked first.

    Somewhere east, she was being counted by a guard.

    Somewhere west, I was breathing under a sky too wide to hold anyone gently.

    Freedom doesn’t feel triumphant.

    Sometimes it feels like exposure.

    The plank held under me.

    It splintered under her.

    But both of us learned to feel the wobble.

    Cracks don’t announce themselves.

    They simply widen.



    the last image

    Later that night, after the call and the cold, I sat on the floor beside Angel. Her breathing was heavy with trust. A strip of hallway light spilled under the door. The carpet showed the worn paths of our pacing—her circling, me circling, both of us learning to survive our own restlessness.

    Somewhere beyond town, a train pulled its long body across the plains. Its horn stretched into the dark, traveling farther in one minute than we ever managed in our childhoods.

    I listened until the sound dissolved into the place where land gives way to sky.

    That’s where the truth lives—

    between motion and collapse,

    between noise and silence,

    between two girls born of the same storm

    and shaped into different kinds of weather.

    Sweet and bruised.

    Not the same.

    Close enough to rhyme.

  • shadows we share

    shadows we share

    My therapist once mentioned that the dynamics between my brother, sister, and me are more strained than those of any other sibling group she has encountered.   It would check out, just given our circumstances that rifts would start young.  My brother was born 8 years before me. My mom had him when she was seventeen after having already received one abortion.  This was 1976 in Douglas (Drugless), Wyoming and then in the fall of 1977, she married my dad.

    My brother wasn’t easy to raise and at one point, child services were called because my brother was found wandering alone along a busy street.  Nothing really came of it other than my brother’s time at my grandparents’ increasing where sometimes my grandfather’s manic states would end up with them both in trouble.  My grandpa would also become rageful as a result my grandmother was very checked out aside from the occasional “oh us and our mothers!”

    Mom worked at Taco Johns for a stint while Dad worked in the underground uranium mines moving up to the oil rigs and eventually landing a job at the coal mines in Gillette, WY where I was born in 1983.  I’m guessing my mom didn’t take any parenting classes and my dad was then estranged from his parents after he failed out of the Church of Christ affiliated university he was forced to attend.  When I came along, it seemed my mom was more prepared financially and with a second caregiver.

    I don’t remember too much about my early early years other than brief memories of my mom breastfeeding my sister while I pressed my own plastic baby into my chest wishing that it could actually suckle.  I found my baby book with little events liking visiting Yellowstone and one where my mom has marked “shows jealousy of brother” when I was 8 months. Infants become distressed when maternal affection is no longer exclusive and my brother was distressed, too.

    My brother feels resentment towards me for being born; however, our Mom did not have many exclusive moments with either of us.   She, like my grandfather, had some polarizing tendencies that would produce mania and extreme feelings of exceptionality (she would call herself Jesus in psychotic episodes) to depression and feelings of being unworthy.  Her last phone searches before she died by suicide were questions about whether she would go to heaven.

    My sister was born in 1986, and I was excited to have another girl whose hair I could pepper with barrettes and whom I could boss around. Mom became pretty connected to her early on and she would undulate between health and illness and was late on a few developmental markers.  My parents once left her footed pajamas in a bucket with a turd floating right on top in the bathroom.  I’m not sure why it was left as my mom liked to call herself a domestic engineer as she took on performative house duties making sure things were at least clean.

    By the time I got to college, I figured I had a pretty normal childhood.  I was riding the grief train after the deaths and suicides of a few close friends realizing then that grief can leave some pretty gnarly scars.  I began to uncover more memories in a graduate level nonfiction course (invite only!) when the assignment was my first memory of anger.  I wrote about my Uncle Warren laying into me for sneaking clumps of apple goo out of the pie on the counter.

    Our household experienced significant tension.  My brother didn’t stop with the behaviors and his delinquency became typical.  The few times my parents left us alone with my brother.  I accidentally grabbed an antique quilt made by my grandmother to put out a fire he had set in the prairie and got us all in trouble.  His own troubles became exacerbated by my successes and while he was in the Worland Boys School my parents had my IQ tested but I didn’t know what was going on so it became a strange man taking me to a strange room and asking strange questions.

    Before I considered things intergenerationally, I would often consider the genesis of any “bad parts” of my childhood my brother’s incarceration.  When I was in fourth grade, he had stolen a book of checks from my parents and for one fall I watched Gameboys appear from his room, gifts to my parents on the mantle.  I got us all in trouble again when I reported to my parents that I had conquered a new level of Tetris and they soon figured out that it was him and his friends who had just committed the crime spree on the news that included break ins of over 50 vehicles.

    After he left, things got a little easier but also harder in the home.  Family therapy was attempted and my sister refused to participate and by the time I was 16 my parents sent me to Wyoming Behavioral Institute as the best option they had for rehab.  At that time, I had only smoked marijuana.  When they tried to bring me a second time after finding needles in my bedroom our insurance wouldn’t pay.  My sister was made to write letters to me to shame me while I wrote letters to my brother hoping he would remember his family.

    I attempted for years throughout college to reengage my brother and mend our relationship which I see now was non existent and the contest for moms attention seemed to cross lifetimes.  Eventually our dad passed away in an accident in our home, falling from the second story sliding glass doors and hitting he head on the concrete pad below before his organs started shutting down in the freezing cold.  For a brief moment, my brother and sister and I united in grief.  We were devastated.

    I showed my ugly side during this time and made a horrible remark directly after my sister had called me about the accident, remarking “what did Mom do” because I had been living in the home up until a few months prior to his death and the fights were awful.  I asked them both separately why don’t you divorce. My mom didn’t have a clear answer, and my dad would always say “what would your mom do?”  It was a horrible dynamic with mom filling journals with endless cursive describing in detail how much she disliked both dad and me; dad squeaking around in his computer chair for hours gambling away his money by convincing himself he was profiting from selling short.

    In my attempt to become closer to my sister in the years after my father’s death I began to open up to her about some of the mental health symptoms I would experience during meth use.  I told her about the shadows that looked like creepy little dudes and how I thought I saw Dad passing my room when he was 70 miles away loading trains with coal.   She described how she saw these things too and sees ghosts all the time.

    I wanted my sister to feel special, and I wanted to feel like we were connected so I went along with the narrative that she had created.  In her reality dad and I were both evil somehow and the shadow people and their hooded ringleader would go back and forth between my room and his office.  The darkness killed him, and I have it in me.  On my end, I figured she just experienced us both as angry at times, so I let it go.

    During this time of connection I also reached out to my brother who began opening up to me about his dreams of becoming a counselor and I even visited him in Crested Butte one fall and went on a hike.  To get to the hike we had to go down a pretty rough road that I once again felt gooned by my brother but excited that we were adventuring again.  My sister even took a trek down to Salida to scoop me and go see my brother.  I paid for everything despite having just been fired.  I wanted them to like me.

    After that trip things started falling apart and all of us began to deal with major life events.  My sister had moved back in with my mom after she spent a few years in Utah in some kind of polyamory situation.  It’s unclear exactly what happened, but the rich man gave my sister and other women at the house lots of money for sex.  This all came out in drunken phone calls as we both suffered the ups and downs of alcoholism.  I just wanted to be close to her but my drunken rants were pushing her and everyone away.

    In meth fueled paranoia I began to do background checks on everyone including my siblings and realized that my brother was suffering significantly during this time as well and had some pending crimes against him that would surely send him back to prison.  The citations included something about intercourse.  I mentioned this to my mom along with my sisters transgressions and I blew the whole thing open

    All of us siblings have dealt with substance use issues and mine have been behaviorally exhausting and have tested the limits of my family’s grace and love.  Drugs in Gillette, WY are wildly accessible and I fell back in hard and eventually went to treatment for the 3rd time to get off fentanyl.  As I tried to claw out of the bucket of crabs my mom became estranged and my sister kicked me out of her house leaving me at the Motel 6 in Rapid City, SD.

    I had pushed away my brother and sister most likely to the point of no healthy return.  My uncle stepped in and coordinated my trip to treatment in Aurora, CO while my sister took care of my dog. 

    That autumn after getting out of treatment I had to go to court to defend myself for an animal cruelty ticket I had picked up during a horrible episode of withdrawal.  My sister was still trying to help me in the ways she could, but it was also connected to her keeping up the image with my uncle.  She had a lot to gain.

    If my uncle had died before I got well I don’t know that I would be alive.  And now that he is gone he has named us all beneficiaries and I’m the third in line getting 15%, my brother 20%, and my sister with around 60% because she got my mother’s share after her suicide.  Both of my siblings are now taken care of for the next 15-20 years even if they never work again, and they haven’t worked since he died.  

    I paid off my student debt and a bought a car using the inherited retirement money and my mom’s life insurance, taking a heavy tax hit and now I’ve got about $1000 total in both checking and savings and nothing for the future.

    And here we are now—three siblings suspended in the strange gravity of an inheritance, tangled in our history and each other’s shadows. We are no longer children vying for the elusive attention of a mother who wandered between mania and despair, nor are we just echoes of our father’s quiet sacrifices. We are adults, tethered by blood but severed by scars. They have their shares, secure for years, and I am here, clutching the weight of what’s left—what I’ve fought for, what I’ve lost, and what I’m trying to rebuild. Perhaps we were always each other’s ghosts, wandering through the same haunted house, and maybe now, we are just trying to find the exits.