Black Tar
Hero or Villain.
No one ever thinks they’ll turn out to be a heroin addict.
No mother would ever look at her child and consider, even for the briefest
moment, that they would grow up to be a junkie. No kindergarten teacher ever
looks at a single one of their students and envisions them 15 years later, on bloody
hands and knees, with sweat running from every pour, as they comb a dirty
kitchen floor in search of a used needle so that they can shoot black tar into
their median cubital vein and watch the poison race down their arm. No one ever
thinks they’ll become the villain in their own story. But the fact of the
matter is most people are only still the hero of their story by default; they
are only still the hero by definition—because it is their story. If the story were told from any other perspective,
most people would find that they are undoubtedly and undeniably the antagonist—the
villain. No one ever thinks they’ll wake up one morning on the living room
floor with a dirty needle still hanging from their arm with no recollection of
how long they’ve been strung out except for the pile of mail crammed through
the slot in the door. But sometimes, that happens. It happens more often than
you, or I, or any other part of society might want to admit. My name is Kris
Watson, and it happened to me.
“…and I’m addicted to
heroin.”
It was a long road into hell and an even longer road back
out. I didn’t just pick up a syringe full of junk one day and become an addict.
There was never a morning where I woke up and thought to myself “I’d like to
try heroin today.” It was sort of a long process, but in many other ways, it
took me over so quickly, so suddenly, and so violently, that I never stood a
chance.
Hope you enjoyed.
I'll post something a little more cheery tomorrow.
~Daniel
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