Little Joys Were Sprinkled Upon Me: Meet Mark Matthews

If you have read my posts for any amount of time, you know I love dogs. They can often show us the way to a life of serenity and peace.

I recently finished Mark’s Matthew’s book Stray, and found it to be intriguing; a book combining the disease of addiction intertwined with lost dogs looking for a new life. It held my interest to the point where I couldn’t put it down. Stray is a book for anyone, but if your family has been touched by addiction, this book will engage you in so many ways.

Please meet Mark Matthews, author of Stray and The Jade Rabbit.

Mark Matthews

Q. Please explain your personal story.

Well, first off, if I hadn’t gotten sober myself there was no way I’d be alive today.  I had Alcoholic hepatitis of the liver, was bleeding internally, had many detox stays and half-measures to get sober, and was full of incredible despair. When I did take the steps to get sober, and the little joys were sprinkled upon me, I gathered them up to my current situation. Married, two children, and a couple of novels.  Yes, life has actually been stranger in sobriety than addiction, but I am soaking all of it in, triumph and tragedy.

Q. Why did you decide to become an addiction counselor? 

I had come to respect what they do so much. It was clear this wasn’t just a job, it was who they were, a part of them.  The ones I gravitated to had a spiritual aura that I admired and envied.  After six months sober I went back to finish my bachelors degree and there was a social service class where I could get credits tutoring adolescents in a treatment center.  Then, while working for my Masters, I worked as a counselor technician for Brighton Hospital. Since then, I have had two long runs as a therapist in residential treatment.

As I evolved into the field, I’ve learned a lot about the difference between 12 step work and therapy. I think the two get confused too much in addiction treatment.

Q. What inspired you to write your book, Stray? Why a novel?

Writers were always my heroes. So many books shaped who I am. I wrote down a bucket list and “write a novel” was near the top.  As for the particular subject matter of “Stray”, it came to me after working at a treatment center that shared a parking lot with a next door animal shelter. I would get into my car each night and listen to the barking dogs and think how their sounds of distress were not much different than the souls of the addicts in distress I had been hearing all day.  The setting of “Stray” is 100% true. Oddly enough, some of the feedback has been about the dark and grim subject matter of the novel, but the material had to actually be watered down to be believable.  The truth of the stories I heard at work were perhaps more intense than the novel. Ultimately, the story is full of compassion and redemption.

Q. What is the overall message that you want readers to take away from your book?

That we are all flowing in and out of each other all the time, how coincidence is just gods way of remaining anonymous, and how all of us are fractured, wounded, and hurting to some extent and are yearning to feel safe and whole.  This is especially true in the world of addiction. I wanted to share the nature of family legacies and addiction, and the struggle to break free from those legacies.  Three main characters in “Stray” are all sons of addicts who must bear the burdens of their father.  Some break free, others don’t.

On a more personal level, I wanted to display how the helping profession and caregivers, while often in a different level of crisis than those they serve, are also struggling with personal issues.  They make selfish decisions and are neither good nor bad but shades of grey.

Q.  What are three things that you have learned about addiction?

1. Addiction changes you in so many ways; physically, spiritually, emotionally, and it takes a long, long time to get yourself to a sane place.  Patience is the hardest thing, because if you could let an addict know what they will be feeling five years later if they just stayed sober, it would help so much, yet at that point it’s inconceivable. You don’t realize how crazy you were in your addiction until later, much later, when you can look back and see clearly.

2. There is nothing as industrious and creative as the power of an addict trying to reach his high. Nothing. And nothing more miraculous than for one in the throes of cravings of addiction to go a single day without picking up.

3.  Addiction hurts the family deeper since they have no control over losing their loved one slowly. There isn’t a parent of an addict out there who hasn’t already imagined the death of their child, and the single ring of the phone at night brings images of tears and funerals.

Q.  What advice do you have for parents of drug addicts/alcoholics who may be going through substance abuse treatment?

Such a hard thing to consider as a parent myself. For one thing, addicts will make parents think they are the crazy one, so don’t get manipulated and twisted around. Don’t own undue shame and blame that may be thrust upon you.  Sure, you have made mistakes, own up to them, but don’t own all your kids mistakes.  You’re not the one they clap for picking up the one year token or 30 day key tag, so don’t own all the blame.

Keep hopeful.  Every addict who gets sober is the one people think will never get sober, because it’s the desperate ones who take desperate measures. It’s become cliché to say, but, ‘Treatment Works.’

Do something drastic to break your own patterns as well to end the toxic dance. There is a family in “Stray” where a mom ultimately can’t break her relationship pattern with her alcoholic enmeshed son and it’s so just sad and somber.  These family therapy scenes are straight from reality.

I’m very grateful my own children are growing up in a completely sober household.

Q. What are your hobbies and/or interests when you are not working or writing books?

Running is one of my current drugs of choice, and I’ve done a dozen marathons and am training for 2 more this year. And I have the funnest family in the world.  We love to travel when we can afford to, but are just as happy with our trampoline out back or playing charades. In my addiction, I had no idea what I would do for fun without using, and now I’ve come to believe what they were all telling me… There won’t be enough time in the day for all the things you want to do.

take care,

Find the Bridge from Recovery Back to College

 

 

Recovery in college

We send our children off to college with anticipation, excitement and the best of intentions. Parents assume as our kids leave the nest that they are prepared for all aspects of college life.

We are shocked, mortified and saddened to discover that our college student is off the deep end and addicted to drugs or alcohol. After all the careful college planning, the rug feels like it has been pulled out from under us.

Many times kids do take their substance abuse to the next level when they leave home and go off to college. They suddenly have the freedom to make their own choices without their parents monitoring their every move.

When teens are dabbling in drugs and alcohol in high school, their experimentation can turn into an addiction.  They are among a large number of students and drugs and alcohol are easily accessible. Their use can escalate very quickly.

It may never have occurred to these students, much less their parents, that their habit was this out of control, but young people are the most vulnerable to addiction. Their brains are not fully developed in the areas of judgement control, emotion and impulse until about age 25.

It starts with your child admitting their drug or alcohol use, and making the decision to get treatment and find recovery. There are many options for continuing their college education, so do not give up hope.

Your child’s transcript may be dismal at best. It may feel like your hard earned dollars for your child’s college education has just gone down the drain.  Although this is a major setback, there are programs out there to get your college student back on track, and inspire them to accomplish their goals.

One option is for your child to go back to college and live in a sober dorm. It is important to carefully consider with the help of a professional whether the student should go back to the same college or transfer to a new campus. Many times those triggers, such as old drinking and drugging buddies, will be waiting for them at their original campus. Moving to a new school, allows the student to have a fresh start in a new environment.

According to NY Times article, “A Bridge to Recovery on Campus,” Rutgers was mentioned as one campus that is providing recovery dorms tucked away on campus. Their program started in 1988 and it was the first of its kind. Lisa Laitman, Director of its Alcohol and Other Drug Assistance Program helped create the program after she saw that students were struggling to abstain, and that newly recovered students were put under pressure with dorm related parties.

Rutgers appears to be the first, but the numbers are growing with over 20 programs and more to come. Texas Tech University has used $900,000 in federal grants to help campuses build programs.

At Rutgers, the students attend an NA or AA meeting at least twice a week, a group meeting with an addiction therapist during their first year of recovery and a monthly house meeting.

They have fun as well by studying together, making runs to Starbucks and competing in intramural soccer and softball leagues. Having fun in recovery helps to ensure their long term sobriety, and sets the stage for lasting change in their life.

At University of Michigan, students can choose a recovery room from the residential drop down menu to live with a roommate who has a similar interest. A recovery room is not just substance free, it is for students who are actively pursuing staying sober.

More colleges have since joined the Association of Recovery Schools giving students the opportunity to continue their education, and become the person they were meant to be.

For more information about the Association of Recovery Schools click here.  You will find links to other colleges, that support a student’s recovery.

Another option, is from Sober Living by the Sea, a treatment center and sober living home in Newport Beach, CA, which combines residential treatment with classes. The  T.E.A.C.H. Program is available for students wishing to continue their college education.  They have counselors in place to help students with their transcripts, finding programs, enrollment and more.

Saddleback and Orange Coast College, which are both two year junior colleges are located near Sober Living by the Sea. These types of programs help students, who have lost their self confidence and still feel the shame of their addiction, find their way back so that they are able to pursue their education.

My daughter’s college program followed a similar path. She had been a student at the University of Colorado in Boulder when we discovered that she had become addicted to crystal meth. After attending a wilderness program in Utah, she went to a women’s treatment program in Costa Mesa, CA which borders Newport Beach.

Her first semester back at Orange Coast College, she took two classes and worked part time, as a way to start slowly and gain her confidence as a student. She, like many newly recovered college students, had a low grade point average on her transcript and was nervous about starting college again.

She finished the two year program at Orange Coast and went on to graduate from Cal State Fullerton, a nearby state college, always holding down a part time job to help pay expenses.

She has accepted what she missed out on when she gave up her college experience at Colorado, but as we all know, your life changes when you succumb to drug addiction.

Her recovery has been one day at a time for the past 7 years. She has found a career that she loves, so all was not lost. I do believe she is a much more centered, and mature person because of this experience.

As one Rutger’s student said, “It must suck to be our parents.” Most of us who have experienced having an addicted child agree that it isn’t easy. Finding the right program for your college student may make all the difference.

If you find yourself in a situation where your college student becomes addicted, remain calm and don’t panic. There will definitely be challenges for every family member, but there is hope and your child can get their life back just like mine did.

What do you think about recovery support for college students? Do you know about any other colleges that provide this type of service. Let us know in comments.

take care,