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The other side of addiction

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His health finally forced his hand. At age 43, Dennis had open-heart surgery to repair a valve.

Doctors told him to slow down and stop drinking. He quit work.

Dennis is conflicted on how to define alcoholism. Society’s view, he said, has shifted through the years. A beer after work used to be the norm. Now it’s a problem?

“My dad would go home from work every day and have a glass of wine when he got off of work,” Dennis said. “Was he an alcoholic? I don’t think so. That was his way to unwind.

“Do I have a drinking problem?” he continued. “In a certain sense, yes. Compared to some people, no.”

Asked point blank if he is a recovering alcoholic, Dennis pauses to think.

“Honestly, yeah,” he said. “You could probably put me as that.”

SFlbSobering steps forward

An old friend happened to check on Renee on April 26, 2007, the day after she’d failed in her attempt to overdose. That’s the last time she saw heroin.

The friend brought Renee to a substance abuse center. The physical withdrawal symptoms didn’t cease for about 90 days, but Renee got sober – it will be six years in April.

She said the trust from her family is slowly returning. She’s getting her own place soon and plans to go back to school at some point.

Dennis got remarried three months ago. The couple are looking for their own place. The heart medication he’s on slows his heart rate and zaps his energy, but doctors think he should be able to handle a part-time workload.

He got re-baptized at a church two years ago. That, coupled with psychiatric counseling and the support system at PADS, have kept him on track. It helps to put things out there – Dennis’ family was never very open with their emotions.

His wife is worried he might start drinking again when the couple moves out, and to be honest, Dennis doesn’t know whether he will or not.

“Am I through the rough patch where I’m good to go? Probably not,” he said. “If I get out there on my own and I have a bad day, I might go out and have some drinks. ... You never know until you’re turned out in the real world.”


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