Detox Paradise: Being Seen and Listening to Sheep

It was 2011. I was about to enter what they call recovery. I had no idea it was called recovery. If someone had told me I was going into recovery, I might have asked, ‘What is it I’m meant to be recovering?’ I wasn’t recovering anything, I was finding things I’d never had. It was discovery. I packed everything I owned into a small suitcase and my trusty old, cider-stained rucksack. I said goodbye to the people in the hostel I lived in. Marcel, my wide-eyed and lost next door neighbour was very sincere in his goodbye. Even a little puzzled. The underpaid staff wished me luck. I handed in my keys and off I went, wearily pulling my material life behind me for the thirty minute walk to the Basement on Parr Street.

When I got to the Basement there was a white mini bus waiting, with a little steel trailer attached. Waiting next to the trailer were seven nervous men, all smiles and darting eyes, about to spend the next two weeks with each other. I tried to accept what I’d got myself into. I wasn’t going to fit in, I knew that. It was about getting somewhere other than the barrel full of shit I was in. And I looked like I’d been in barrel full of shit for a while. We all did. We loaded our stuff and were gone, a van full of Walking Dead extras. Guiding us through our sobering extravaganza was Donna the woman who ran the Basement detox and was a recovering addict, Sue a holistic therapist, Jimmy a support worker who was recovering addict, and Tommy a volunteer who was a recovering addict.

We drove to a big cottage near Berwyn, Llangollen, Wales. We were in the middle of nowhere not just because it was peaceful, but because there was nowhere to get any mind-altering goodies. Even the local pub, The Sun Inn, had been advised against serving any thirsty, desperate looking Scousers. Being on a detox didn’t mean we weren’t allowed to drink though. For the first few days we got pissed. It was a reduction detox, a method which weans alcoholics off the drink for the first few days so as not to shock their system. The liquid menu for the first full day was half a litre of sherry and a can of Skol Super four times a day – breakfast, lunch, dinner and supper. The amount was reduced over the next three or four days depending on how much a person regularly drank, and how long they’d been drinking.

We were happy, the first couple of nights everyone was pissed. It was when the ale reduced to next to nothing that things got tough. The others were decent though, there were no real problems. Other than the obvious ones we were all carrying in our wounded bodies.

I was a quiet, trying-to-be-stern-looking, pasty, inward-facing loner with no social skills to speak of and a chest full of quivering earth. But I was determined that they were the first days of the rest of my life, and I was spending them with a mish-mash of people who’d all been through similar things in different ways. Many of us had lost people we’d loved in sad, tragic, even horrific ways. We’d all been taught that being hard was best. We all had skinheads, they were easy to look after, no combing or washing needed. Our haircuts were also better at making us appear as though we might snap if looked at in the wrong way.

Getting pissed the first couple of days gave me something to hide behind, but there was huge anticipation at what would come next. It was like knowing that imminently I’d be shot into space but first I was having a nice spa day with plenty of food and muscle relaxants. Jimmy, the gruff support worker, and Tommy the hyper-surrealist, keen fisher and volunteer, said that once the ale was taken away it was likely we’d feel the need to cry. Cry? Nah, mate. Not a crier me – the group oozed that sentiment. I think some of us were curious and scared about the magic of tears without a substance to bring them on. I know wanted it. I wanted tears. I wanted that feeling, the one I’d been trying and conjure by cutting or burning myself.

The day came, my last drink. Anxiety, racing brain, fear, mania. I hadn’t slept properly because sharing a room made me paranoid. I didn’t like the early mornings. Up at 7:30am, breakfast at 8am. To me that was practically army routine. Thank fuck the army knocked me back on the basis of mental health when I’d applied a few years before. I thought the army would be good for me, away from the world, away from drink and drugs. I now know it would have probably fucked me up more. When not being ordered around by a man who looks like a screaming, veiny penis, all there is to do in the army is drink, snort coke, and be uber-masculine (to the point where it all seems a bit violently homo-erotic). It would have made a mess of someone like me.

I wish I could say my last drink was a single malt aged twenty years. That I’d drunk it from a crystal glass, swirling it, inhaling the aroma of my near demise. Unfortunately, my last drink was a can of lukewarm Carlsberg I drank while I sat thankfully alone on top of a picnic table on a chilly early-afternoon whilst listening to the sheep bleat in the field next to me. It really did sound like they were talking to each other, or maybe me. What would their message be if they were talking to me? Maybe they were asking me to stay, to live in the relative safety of the towering Welsh hills. Or maybe they were telling me to fuck off with my shit lager. I hate Carlsberg, so inoffensive and unchallenging to the senses. It sickened me. I was used to drinking things that made me gag on the first swig, or set my belly on fire. Carlsberg was just shit lemonade. Totally non consequential. But I tried to make the most of it. And as I slowly sipped that can I became all philosophical and thought about the insignificance of a man drinking his last beer in a world that hustles and bustles and gets on with it regardless. I was insignificant in it all, didn’t matter to any of it. I only mattered insofar as I made myself matter, and if I wanted my future to be a better one I had to be the one willing myself through it. I was the part of the universe that would make my life better, the rest of existence didn’t give a shit. Maybe that was what the sheep were telling me.

I sensed time around me ticking away as normal, I tried to hold the moment close to me like I’d never done before. Moments that normally stuck with me were bad ones – moments that’d shocked me, embarrassed me, or traumatised me. Memories froze in time to haunt me at their will. But that moment, the last drink, I wanted to grab and pull in. Make it a setting to revisit in my mind’s eye. I started to think about what had brought me there. About the deep hate I had for the world, and how I couldn’t really hate what I didn’t know. I tried to think concretely about what the future might hold and drew nothing but fear and anxiety. I moved on. I was going to break the chain. The me I knew existed in there, the artist, the thinker, the friend, the lover. I wanted them to be real. An empty, green, lager can was the start. The sun was low, it was breezy, the hills made me feel safe. The city was waiting. That’d be the real test, but for the next ten days the green hills were there to hide me. I crushed the can in my hand, took one more look around me, and went inside.

A day or two after, we were all sober. That’s when the work began. There was no telly allowed, there was time for films in the evening, but daytimes were for workshops, cooking, going for walks, talking, getting the wood fires going. The workshops were normally based around dealing with emotions, how to help others, what our triggers for relapse might be. Eight men who could blag, fight, steal, and generally bungle our chaotic way through the miserable world were lost for words when it came to sharing how vulnerable we might really feel. Some were in downright denial. Two of them said there were no triggers, nothing made them the way they were, it is what it is. One of them in particular went as far to deny he ever felt sad, his conclusion was that he didn’t even have emotions. Another one clammed up for a long time, never going further than saying he was struggling. Then one day he burst into tears talking about how he was worried for his son, who was three or four at the time, and was unwell. All he wanted was to help his son through life and was scared he wouldn’t be able to. Two others were distant, but down to earth. They said anything they were feeling wasn’t going to be shared at the table. There was a small, skinny man who seemed quite confused. I knew he was scared to share much of what went on beneath the surface, because I felt the same. I saw a reflection of myself in his hunched, shifty, body language.

I couldn’t share my real feelings at first, it felt completely alien to share feelings without banter, ale, the safety net of being able to walk away. But after a day or two of workshops I did it. I told how I felt scared, vulnerable, like I didn’t know what the world had in store for me. I felt like someone or something was out to get me even though I was far away from any danger. I was probably the safest I’d been for a long time, but actually feeling safe wasn’t something my head would afford me.

As the days went on my panic and sense of impending doom, weakness, and utter despair had the top soil removed and roots were exposed. Sitting at the dinner table one evening I stared out of the windows, acting as if I was looking at something in the darkness. Really I was going over and over scary scenarios, confirming to myself that everyone hated me. I was worthless, all I’d ever done with my life was fuck it up. Fuck me! Fuck, why? Die, just die. Don’t even think. It hurt. Chest pains. Head gone. Messed up. No one else felt like me. Everyone was better than me. The little outcast, alien, hermit. Chewing through my skin. Sweating. I couldn’t run to the offy or to the dealer. I couldn’t stuff my face with cake and sweets and crisps. I was fucked.

Even when distracted by my constant fear I heard a lot when people thought I wasn’t listening. I saw a lot when people thought I wasn’t looking – it comes from a childhood of always being on high alert. And something happened which pulled me out of the window-staring act, I heard Donna whisper to Sue, the holistic therapist, ‘He’s trapped in his head.’ Hearing that was a revelation. Someone had seen me. Someone had done what very few people had ever done, they noticed. They saw inside, beyond the act. I didn’t flinch. Didn’t move a muscle. Had to stay in character.

The cottage we stayed in had something to do with the families of the Tate and Lyle sugar company. One day this foppish, handsome, Hugh Grant-but-a-farmer type came and planted apple trees with us. He brought the saplings, the manure, the feed. Those of us who were fit to do so went to work digging and planting these little fellas on the grass bank along the drive at the side of the cottage. We loved it. We had pick axes to break the soil, shovels to dig. We whacked in the support logs for the saplings to be tied to. It was hard work, but I found an abundance of physical energy for it. If I could go to the ends of the earth to get a drink or a weed, then planting some trees was a piece of piss. It was a transfer of motivation and reward. Mentally, it was hard. Every time I spoke to this lovely Hugh Grant guy I felt like he hated me. My perception was all askew, I’d interpret any body language or vocal communication that wasn’t explicitly positive as a sign of extreme dislike for me.

A few days later Hugh Grant man came back with a brass placard screwed to a big, grey rock. On it was engraved the name of the people who’d planted the trees, and the date they’d been planted. The trees are still there today. It was a lovely thing for Hugh Grant man to do off his own back.

The van ride home to the big city was surreal. I’d had an experience I’d never had before, with people I still didn’t really know. We’d shared our space, cooked for each other, smoked, laughed, and silently fumed together hidden amongst the sheep for two weeks. When I’d needed to I’d went and listened to the little brook by the cottage. I felt small and safe focusing on the sound of the trickling water amidst the vacant greenery. At night I’d stared at the magnificent stars and remembered that at the end of the day we’re all a bit miraculous, but never the less ultimately fucked, in the big soup. I didn’t want to leave. I could have lived out the rest of my days there, I thought.

As far as I know, four of the people from the residential have since died. Three detoxees died due to drug related illnesses or accidents. And Jimmy, the support worker, passed away due to a sudden cardiac arrest. Others relapsed but are now back in recovery and getting some time under their belts.

Just another aging, traumatised millennial. Exploring trauma, mental health, addiction and "recovery" through the voice of lived experience.

How did I know I was ready for “recovery”?

It’s a cliché, “I hit my rock bottom”. The tired old phrase that can mean any number of things. But it carries with it an understanding, “I’ve reached a point where I’m so low I feel any lower is unimaginable”. It’s commonly accepted that hitting rock bottom is what causes people to want to seek “recovery”. But in fact, I don’t think it necessarily is.

12 Steps’ dominance over the world of recovery has planted many ideas into public consciousness and the addiction treatment industry. The saying “rock bottom” comes from them and is often heard in meetings. Rock bottoms are shared as instigating events or circumstances that lead a person into recovery. A rock bottom can be introduced into a peron’s narrative as being the moment the person new they were ready for recovery. But according to addiction researchers Cloud and Granfield, for the number of people who seek treatment for their addiction, there are just as many others who are motivated by things such as financial, romantic, or parental responsibilities. Or they just get bored and fed up of their addiction and move on in what is called “maturing out of addiction” or natural recovery. So, the idea of rock bottom isn’t always applicable.

Addiction is a complex subject with many tenets. I think understanding addiction needs an open mind and proper research, not a catalogue of outdated preconceptions, phrases and ideas. No matter how helpful they might have been in progressing theory on addiction in the past (I’m referring to 12 Steps, but a bit more on that in another post).

That being said, maybe I had hit my rock bottom when I decided to finally seek help at the age of 25. Or maybe it was a sandstone bottom, because I could have certainly gone lower I’m sure of it. At that time, I was living in a homeless hostel. One of several I’ve lived in. But this particular homeless hostel was somewhat different than any I’d lived in before. It was rougher, more desperate, closer to the streets than I’d ever felt. It had 30 tiny rooms squeezed inside its small stature. Blood on the bannisters, and soiled, sad men sitting on the stairs. From door to door were hungry eyed grafters and empty stomached beggars in pain. The place was bursting with sadness, hurt, and the remnants of so much violence. The staff were there to maintain some rules and to make sure no one died, and that was about it. There are good hostels, some are very good, this wasn’t either of them. We, the people who lived there, were kind of like the people in those little slime filled pods in The Matrix, just there to keep something bigger running. The hostel was making a lot of money from us.

For so long I’d dreamed of… something. Just something, anything other than the nothing but misery I felt all the time. There were things I wanted, not material things really, but a flat with some stuff in it would’ve been nice. Maybe even a friend or two? Perhaps a life of some sort? What I think really motivated me was understanding that I had to learn to deal with the feelings that kept me constantly locked up inside my head. It was paranoia, self-hatred, fear, anger, sadness, and the huge anxiety that weighed me down constantly that kept me going back to drink and drugs even when they’d stopped working. I realised that it was my mental health that was really the problem. That was all I understood at that time, it wouldn’t be until a couple of years later that I really began to comprehend the huge effects my childhood and adolescent trauma had on me.

There was a poster by the front door of the hostel. It advertised an open day at Addaction on Maryland Street. The idea was that you go along and different services come in and tell you all about what they do, by the end of the day you have an idea, possibly, of where you want to go to get help. It started at 9am, and that was early for me, really very early. So I was late, I shuffled into the tiny room quite dazed. I was hot, beads of sweat gathered on my forehead, neck and back. It was uncomfortable, disgusting even. I was repulsed by my own body’s reaction, even though it was a reaction that happened to me at the slightest of inconveniences or awkwardness. The guy from Addaction grabbed me a coffee and I spilled it all over myself almost as soon as he handed it to me. I could have walked out there and then, red faced, angry, sweating. But I didn’t. I wanted out so I had to stay in. The way I saw it, whatever I was feeling in that room, on that day, couldn’t be worse than what was waiting for me if I carried on the way I was going.

At the end of that day I’d picked where I was going for help, a detox in Wales with the Basement Centre. It sounded like what I needed, to be in the middle of nowhere for two weeks getting my head out of the habit of a lifetime. Fully feeling my mental health problems without the broken safety net of getting high or pissed. Remembering. It turned out it was the right choice.

Being ready can mean different things to different people. Rock bottom doesn’t equate to readiness. It can even be that some people are never ready and that the change doesn’t come because people who aren’t ready don’t have the support around them and the system generally only wants to help people on the system’s terms. I think the idea of being ready might not be useful. How do you get ready for being ready? How do you measure readiness to change? Readiness to deal with things you can’t even comprehend? Who gets to decide who’s ready?

Being ready might be a myth, an idea we put on a pedestal and believe ourselves or others have to work towards it. What’s more important than being ready is having support around you. Having means, and meaning. Being able to feel safe. Seeing a way out, or if not a way out then at least something a little better. We should think differently about readiness and look at what people really need to make a change wherever there at. Readiness can make it seem like progress towards change is linear, when in reality progress towards change is scattered across a map. There are no metaphoric trains, trams, or planes that take you to readiness. There’s only a landscape to explore. I’m sure that the idea of readiness is actually a hindrance to a lot of people who just can’t be measured using abstract ideas and traditional expectations.

I’ve lived my whole life not being ready. My complex-PTSD will always tell me I’m not ready, sometimes very strongly. Luckily there were services available to me at that time that suited me and got me past the threshold of detox and rehab. I can’t pinpoint what personally got me into, and kept me in, “recovery”, it just kind of happened and I consider myself very lucky. I was never ready but I had options and a willingness to explore. Right now there are many people who are never going to be ready in any traditional sense, and what they are waiting for is someone to show them options and goals that suit them. They need a map that makes sense to them, not a readiness hoop to jump through.

Just another aging, traumatised millennial. Exploring trauma, mental health, addiction and "recovery" through the voice of lived experience.