Jennifer’s Story

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Hi! My name is Jennifer, and this is my recovery story.

Early Struggles and the Start of Addiction

I started out not knowing much about addiction. I had two emergency back surgeries at age 25, and my doctor put me on a high dose of strong pain medication. I went through a lot of trauma with my children’s father and began self-medicating to cope with life. Over the years, my doctor raised my medication several times—giving me stronger and higher doses each time.

But he eventually died, and since I was so young, I couldn’t find another doctor to legally prescribe what I was used to taking. I went through miserable withdrawals and felt as if I was dying. I called up a friend at 4am, and she told me to come over. I didn’t know she was selling heroin at the time—I thought what she handed me was a crushed-up pill. She told me to snort it, so I did. The withdrawals immediately started to subside.

She then told me it was heroin, but I really didn’t care—because it helped, it was cheaper than pills, and I didn’t have to take much at one time to feel better. I continued my heroin use for several years.

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Hitting Rock Bottom

Eventually, I got DCS involved in my life and decided that rehab was best and what I really wanted. After completing rehab, I had a new fiancée standing beside me, and life was going well. I enrolled in college. We moved into a house with my kids. Life was great—or so I thought.

In reality, I was depressed and lonely—and didn’t even know it. My fiancé was always working, and I was always home, since I was getting an SSDI check every month due to my back. I decided to get in touch with a cousin and an old friend who were both still in active addiction. I wanted to help them so we could all be sober together. I had already been sober for two years, so I thought I had it together, right?

I couldn’t have been more wrong. Eventually, the addiction in my mind got the best of me and told me I could just do it one time and be fine. WRONG! This sent me back into a full-blown spiral for six more years, worse this time than ever before. I began shooting up heroin and fentanyl. I started smoking crack and meth.

DCS got involved again, and this time I was removed from my parent’s home because I had overdosed in their bathroom. Sure, I’d overdosed before, but Narcan had brought me back easily. This time I barely lived and woke up on a ventilator. While in the hospital, I found out that a child I had nearly helped raise had been murdered.

I still didn’t want to take accountability and used this—along with DCS removing me—as justification to keep using. But this time I was done with heroin. I started taking Suboxone off the street and just smoking crack and meth. I did this for another year. I was homeless and stayed wherever I could, in the worst part of Louisville, KY. I had outstanding warrants in Indiana for missed court dates, and blamed this on DCS for making me leave my parent’s house.

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Turning Point and Recovery

But God had better plans, because on June 15, 2023, I was arrested by the Louisville police. I spent four months in the county jail. I drew closer to God, had time to think and evaluate my own and my children’s lives, and even built a relationship with my DCS worker.

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I was released from jail and knew I had to do something different. I decided to enter a long-term treatment program. This helped me build a new life for myself and my kids.

I started working at Avenues Recovery after a year of sobriety while still in sober living. I lived there for 16 months and took my time as I got better. I now have my own apartment, a job I love, and forgiveness from those closest to me.

Thank you!

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