Daniel – Interview 05
At the age of 23 Daniel realised that he was an alcoholic and decided to ask for help. In early 2006 Daniel was diagnosed with drug and alcohol addiction. Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), meditation and his religion have all helped him recover from his alcohol and substance dependency. He wants to train as a counsellor.
Daniel started drinking alcohol at age twelve and over the years, his drinking increased slowly. Before his seventeenth birthday he mostly drank at weekends but between the ages of seventeen and twenty two he describes his drinking asexcessive’. During that timehe went to Nepal and while there, he tried several different drugs:opium, LSD and heroin. He took LSD regularly for nine months. He tried cannabis for the first time when he was fifteen but gave it up when he was twenty two because he found it boring’. He was keener on cocaine and ecstasy. He described himself as having an addictive personality that he feels has resulted from his sense of disconnection with the world around him.
Daniel has experienced distressing events in his life which were the direct result of his addictions. He was arrested in the USA after collapsing in a nightclub andhe became violent in someone’s flat and startedsmashing things with a hammer, all under the influence of alcohol and drugs.
Daniel’s parents tried to help him. When he was sixteen they took him to see a hypnotist to see if hypnosis could help him with his problems and later, in his early twenties, they wanted him to go and talk to his GP. But Daniel thinks that his addiction problemscan’t be helped by the usual treatments anddescribes himself as been beyond the realm of psychiatry’.
Daniel had his last bingeing weekend in January 2006. On that occasion he was violent towards someone, something that he felt bad aboutwhen he sobered up. This made him realise and admit that hewas an alcoholic. He decided that he wasn’t going to drink or do drugs again. He called an old friend of his father who had been sober for a long time and he took him to an AA (Alcoholics Anonymous) meeting. For the next one and a half years Daniel attended lots of AA and NA (Narcotics Anonymous) meetings andhe still attends AA meetings. For that first year Daniel says that he was crazier’ than when he was drinking; he was smoking heavily and having sex with total strangers.
Daniel said that it took him around two and a half years to understand his addictive personality and to recover from his addiction. The Bhagavad Gita (a sacred Hindu scripture) has enabled him to work on a spiritual programme and help other alcoholics and addicts in AA and NA. He meditates daily, and it is very important to him. In addition, the AA Twelve Step programme has helped him get a structure in his life. He hasn’t drunk alcohol or taken any substances since January 2006. He said that one positive impact of it is no longer seeing his mother cry because of his addictions. Daniel’s relationship with his parents is described as ‘good’ and ‘mutually supportive’. He lives with his girlfriend whom he describes as special’ and has a good group of friends. He plans to train as a counsellor.