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From an addict, warnings about the path to heroin

FALLS VILLAGE — Evan W., a 31-year-old man from White Plains, N.Y., described his progression from smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol in high school, to being a full-fledged heroin addict in his late 20s, to a group of students at Housatonic Vaalley Regional High School on Monday, Nov. 30.

Evan was with Jimmy Hughto and Brittanie Decker from Mountainside Treatment Center in North Canaan.

Evan attended a big high school in White Plains, with 4,000 students. “I was exposed to a lot of stuff — some good, some bad.”

In early adolescence he began to feel confused, uncomfortable, “unsure of myself.”

He started using marijuana and drinking — and he liked it.

“It filled the void,” he said. “It made me feel comfortable, confident.”

And this discovery took him on a journey he now regrets.

“Once I realized I could change the way I felt, I didn’t lose that for years.”

For the next 15 years, he devoted himself to using alcohol and drugs.

Evan was “kicked out” of his high school and sent to “the bad kids school,” where he made connections with people who had gone beyond the alcohol and marijuana stage.

Evan began writing graffiti, and this led to a respite of sorts when an art teacher took him aside and taught him about drawing and painting — enough so Evan was able to get into art school in Boston.

But by this time, he said, the pattern of substance abuse and spending his time with like-minded people was firmly in place.

And it was in Boston that Evan was introduced to opiates — first in the form of prescription medications such as OxyContin, and then heroin.

It didn’t take long for Evan to become physically addicted.

“When I got involved with pills I had no clue. Within a month I was physically addicted.”

If he couldn’t find a supply of the drug, he experienced withdrawal symptoms.

“There is nothing worse than going through drug withdrawal,” he said.

His life deteriorated. To finance his addiction, Evan stole from friends, family and employers.

“I thought I was this big, bad, streetwise person. But I was a complete drug addict.”

During the final five years of his addiction, heroin was the primary drug.

Evan had a few things to say about how this all happened.

He said that for him, marijuana and alcohol were “gateway” drugs, because once “I crossed the threshold” he saw no reason to refuse other drugs when offered, such as cocaine or PCP.

He said in high school, when his substance abuse began in earnest, he developed “a mental obsession” with getting high.

And as painful as physical withdrawal can be, Evan said the mental obsession was the most difficult thing to overcome.

He returned several times in his talk to the realization that he had wasted 15 years.

“All I cared about was hanging out with stupid people, drinking, using drugs, and chilling.”

Evan noted that during his high school years, heroin was not commonly used by young people.

“There is heroin in high schools now,” he said. “If I had access to it then, I probably wouldn’t be here now.”

He warned of the dangers of heroin. “Old losers like me don’t die. It’s young and talented people with everything going for them who die.”

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