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The long road from addiction to sobriety
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Editor’s note: This is part 1 of a two-part story. Next
month: A look at local efforts to help people struggling
with drug addiction and recovery.
One look
across his tidy desk to the silver-haired man sitting
easily back and listening intently to his visitor’s
story gives an observer the impression Randy Viers has
always been a member of the helping profession. Viers, a
Key Peninsula resident, is a program director for Olalla
Recovery Centers, with facilities in Olalla and Gig
Harbor. The organization provides alcohol and drug
counseling on either an in- or out-patient basis to area
citizens in need of help and ready to receive it.
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Photo
courtesy Randy Viers |
Almost
two decades ago, when Viers needed help with his own
spiraling drug and alcohol addictions, treatment was in
its infancy. Having experienced both the devastation of
addiction, and the rejuvenation of life after leaving
his “drugs of choice” behind, gives Viers a unique
perspective into the addict and his/her family. His life
story, from the shelter of a parochial grade school, to
the bitter reality of life zoned out on drugs and
alcohol, and back again to sanity, is a trip with an
instant replay still capable of bringing Viers to ruin,
if he let it. Instead, he has used truth to build a
career and help others afflicted by addiction. He is the
first one to say he will always be an addict. The
process and promise of recovery is a fact of life, taken
one day at a time, minute by minute, with no reprieve
for “good behavior.” His hope, professionally and
personally, is that by sharing his story, he helps other
addicts find their way back to sobriety.
Viers’
story could belong to any shy kid looking for a way to
fit in and not finding it. When he was about 15, members
of his garage band experimented with sinus-clearing
inhalers (nasal over-the-counter amphetamines containing
basal restrictors). With the first experience, Viers
recollects he was “hooked immediately.”
“All the
things I didn’t like about myself went away,” he says.
His
parents, struggling to stay together until their
children were grown before they divorced, didn’t realize
his frequent overnights with friends were drug-induced
multiple days and nights of manic energy, followed by
crashes of depression and deep, prolonged sleep.
According
to Viers, nicotine is considered the “gateway” drug to
addiction. He started smoking at 14, outside the church
hall with his father. It was an easy transition to
drugs, paid for with “really disturbed neuro-chemicals
in the brain.” In the endless cycle of drug-binging,
crashing, depression, and binging again, something
pulled him toward sanity. He says the drug use was
dependent upon whom he was with — and he gravitated
toward musicians who were “clean.” Looking back, he says
some of his best jobs were with drug- and alcohol-free
bands. That propensity for self-preservation bought him
some time, but it didn’t stop his fall.
Viers
found that having a father in sports and a grandfather
active in the Hollywood music scene were hard acts to
follow. Determined to step in the famous footstep of his
elders, he moved to California. What he found, beyond
bit parts in movies and a stint on then-popular
“Rock-a-Go-Go” on television, were emerging
“psychedelic” drugs, more or less freely-trafficked in
the hippie/free-love era of the late 1960s. Oddly, Viers
says in the music business at the time, alcohol abuse
was tolerated, while drugs were not. He gradually tipped
the scales toward alcoholism, accepting drugs along the
way whenever offered by fans, friends, anyone.
“People
just gave them out,” he says. “It’s not in my nature to
turn them down.”
During
this time, he met his future wife, a drug-free woman; a
safe haven for an addict out of control. He became
expert at pushing her boundaries. “I played a crummy
game,” he remembers, knowing just when to back off to
avoid a crisis, only to repeat his “angry and
unreasonable behavior” when the air cleared. “Drugs and
alcohol weren’t a problem for me. I didn’t notice the
grief I caused to others,” he says. “It’s part of
addiction; arrogance and denial.” Now married 41 years
to that same woman who threw him out, took him back,
threw him out and took him back again, he is grateful
for a family who stuck with him until he got it right.
“I don’t
know where I would be if it wasn’t for love,” Viers says
today.
From
California, stints in Nevada and Oregon, he moved his
family to Washington. By this time, he had sworn off
everything but pot — a little something to induce a
“harmless high” and that kicked-back state of mind he
craved. The Christmas Eve move was a symbolic and
literal new beginning, a chance for the good life. He
figured a change of environment and friends was all he
needed to make a clean start last; some new place where
he could be in control, finally. Unfortunately, his
addiction hitched a ride with the family heading north.
Soon after resuming his music career, an offer to try
methamphetamine came his way — a “one time” experiment
with something new — and claimed his life. What began
with snorting progressed to shooting up, and led to
manufacturing and selling to other addicts to support
his own habit. He was “careful to keep that part of my
life away from my family, and off the Peninsula, where
they lived.” He believes the entire family succumbed to
denial that winter; his addiction was “private” unto
himself.
Viers was
out of control once again, and tired of fighting with
his wife about drugs; his body hurt, depression haunted
him. He didn’t care if he was married anymore, decided
to “just stay high forever” to avoid the pain and
sickness of coming down. Home from work early one
afternoon, his wife walked in to see drug paraphernalia
laying out where their boys would see it. Something in
that “caught in the act” moment snapped Viers sober.
Facing the end of either his family or drug use, he
wasn’t sure he really wanted to quit. He had an agenda,
figured he’d walk into a clinic saying, “Fix me so I
don’t shoot drugs — but I still want to smoke pot.”
On a date
he remembers, Jan. 5, 1990, four days after Viers made a
bonfire in the back yard and burned all his
paraphernalia, one of his sons drove him to a hospital.
For the first full week of the 21-day treatment, he
didn’t believe alcohol was a problem — mentally, he was
just there for drugs.
Nearly
two clean and sober decades later, Viers knows one truth
for certain. “I’m one beer, one joint, one (needle) away
from a relapse. I stay dry by doing what they taught me
to do 17 years ago,” he says.
This is a
message he shares at least once every month in a talk to
Olalla Recovery Centers program participants. Sometimes
it resonates just right— this hard reality spoken and
lived by “one of their own.” Viers is committed to
finding ways to assist addicts in recovery and avoid
relapse; he knows first-hand it can be done, and that’s
why he’s there.
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News, all rights reserved.
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