30 Years Ago Today I Became Sober

Airport

I will never forget the day I became sober — January 5, 1989 — I waited to board a plane to a treatment center. I’d started getting high on New Year’s Eve and hadn’t stopped. I had not slept or eaten for five days. I am six feet tall and I weighed 127 pounds. The skin on my shoulder blades was as thin as cigarette paper.

I was frightened, disoriented, and rabid with anger. I had lost everything, including myself. Bankrupt physically, emotionally, and spiritually, I was without hope.

On the airplane, I began to cry uncontrollably. A flight attendant asked me what was wrong. All I could say was, “I lost my daughter.” She left me alone with my grief.

At the rehab center, after two days of detox, my assigned counselor met with me and asked me to tell her my story. My eyes filled with tears. I told the counselor that I had been to five other treatment centers and they had not worked because no one could answer my question – Why had the people closest to me betrayed me?

I guess what I wanted was someone to understand my anguish and validate my misery.

And the counselor listened carefully. But at my first pause, she leaned toward me and said in a solemn voice, “I see tombstones in your eyes.” Just like that, she discarded me and everything I had said. She walked away. That counselor was my last lifeline, and it had just snapped.

The turning point

I am only alive (and sober) today because of the miracle I experienced on my third day in treatment. As I entered my room and walked by the mirror, I glimpsed something I had never seen before. I jumped back to take a second look but it was gone. Gone but not forgotten. It was like the movie The Fly, where the man is lost within the monster.

For a split second, I saw that monster. And at that moment I realized that I was possessed by a demon: addiction.

The tools that I had always relied on, and that had helped me succeed and distinguish myself — intelligence, charisma, loyalty, and determination — became weapons that my addiction was using against me, leaving me with no hope of fighting it on my own. My mind was the enemy.

With this realization, I surrendered completely. I abandoned my old self without any bargaining or even remorse. In fact, I experienced hope for the first time. I awoke to the fact that my salvation was only possible if I allowed others — my counselors — to guide me back to life.

How it works

Everything I had ever known was based on a reality that I now had to abandon completely. Surrender means letting go of everything you believe in. So for me, this meant giving up how I saw myself, my parents, my soul mate, my daughter.  All of my love, memories, ambitions, and hopes, my sense of everything and everyone that I had known and lived for — was gone.

I discovered that almost everything we think we know about our selves and our lives is a fabrication of the mind. The mind continuously distorts our reality to a point where our perceptions are cut off from our true existence. But just like in the movie The Matrix, when Neo woke up and found out he was living an alternate reality, we too have the capacity to wake up.

My discoveries

When I became sober, I learned to trust life even when bad things happen, because there are always good reasons, whether or not I can comprehend them.

And I never lost the unique traits that I had been afraid of losing, such as my personality, sense of humor and passion. In fact, my better qualities became more apparent in the absence of my ego, and without substance use.

Now, I experience more fun and natural highs from intimacy and connection, from the joy of eating and sleeping, feeling healthy, creative and productive. And these are all gifts that are forever there for me to tap into, without any hangover or depletion.

Today I am so blessed

I am completely at peace with my weaknesses, defeats, and blessings. For the most part, I live in the moment where time seems to stand still. My brain is quiet and I am able to savor the minute details of my priceless gifts — my life, health, family, friends, and my freedom. Every day is fresh, exciting, and engaging, with new unexpected opportunities to grow, fall in love, and whatever I desire.

And the incredible irony is that I have experienced far greater success in every facet of my life, even materially, than when I worked tirelessly to achieve success.

What you can do

Over 20 million Americans over the age of 12 have an addiction (excluding tobacco). And overdose deaths have more than tripled in the past 20 years. Every day, hundreds of people die from accidental drug overdoses. 

If you or someone you know is battling addiction or depression, I invite you to find out how I arrested my addiction and found greater happiness. What I experienced and the insights I discovered on my journey are the heart of my book, Higher: Awaken to A More Fulfilling Life, and I am happy to give it away for free to anyone who wants a copy. Just follow this link and request a copy (please include your mailing address and phone number.)

I believe that everyone can, and deserves to be, really happy.

It’s National Opioid and Heroin Awareness Week

Opioid

Do you know anyone dealing with overdose, addiction, substance use disorder, or dependence on prescription painkillers?

Well, chances are you do know someone – a friend, colleague or family member. But they may be hiding their struggle so well that you have no idea they’re in trouble.

In fact, in the United States, more people now die from opioid painkiller overdoses than from heroin and cocaine combined. The U.S. is in the throes of a drug addiction epidemic. And it kills more Americans daily than car accidents, gun deaths, or AIDS.

In the U.S. more than 175 people die every day from opioid overdoses. These people aren’t all ‘junkies’ living on the street. They’re people with jobs and families who happen to have been prescribed opioids for pain relief. And then they start needing more and more of the drug as addiction sets in.

Opioid overdoses increased by roughly 30% across the U.S. in just 14 months between 2016 and 2017. (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

No-one is immune to overdose

Although many people blame street drugs for spiking overdose statistics, it’s not just illicit drugs that are behind the dramatic rise in overdose deaths. Legally prescribed opioids have caused widespread addiction in cities and suburbs. In fact, the majority of today’s drug overdose deaths happen as a result of opioid abuse.

Opioids are prescribed to reduce pain. But many patients end up addicted to the synthetic drug. And since governments have begun cracking down on opioid prescriptions, the cost of the painkillers has increased as much as ten-fold. (In many regions, heroin is cheaper and more available than opioids. This has caused a sharp rise in heroin addiction.)

When taken in large quantities, opioids can depress functions such as normal breathing and heartbeat, until the user eventually stops breathing, leading to death. 

With fatalities from prescription drugs increasing, it’s important to spread the word that prescription medicines are not always beneficial.

Painkillers and other pharmaceutical drugs can play an important medical role, but when used (or prescribed) carelessly, these chemicals often have tragic long-term consequences.

Where there’s addiction, there is unresolved emotional pain

I began using drugs in my 20s to cope with anxiety, depression and unprocessed childhood adversity.

My dabbling in drugs for fun turned into substance use disorder, which increased in direct proportion to the growing turmoil in my marriage. I spent eight years under the influence of drugs and I was lucky to survive. I fell deeper and deeper into cocaine addiction. It systematically destroyed every aspect of my life before I started my recovery.

If you know someone who may be affected by an addiction to painkillers or illicit drugs, your first step is awareness. And compassion.

Addiction can happen to anyone.

Other ways you can help

To support National Prescription Opioid and Heroin Awareness Week, please use these hashtags:

#Opioid

#Prescription

#Addiction

#OpioidCrisis

#Drugs

#Painkillers

#Heroin

Higher Audiobook Now Available!

CHarles Hanna Higher

 

We’re very excited to release Charles Hanna’s first audiobook – Higher: Awaken to a more fulfilling life – co-narrated by Charles and the wonderful Oscar-nominated and Emmy award-winning actress, Joan Cusack. You can download the audiobook on Audible. And, if you’re not already a member of Audible, your download is free!

What’s in the audiobook?

During this 5-hour audio journey, Charles’ soothing voice guides you into a higher state of self-awareness and serenity. You will come to understand why and how addictive behavior (gambling, sex addiction, substance abuse, eating disorders) develops. You’ll also learn how you can use simple mindfulness techniques to change your perspective and dissolve addictive tendencies.

In this audiobook, Charles shares his life story with humility and honesty.  He describes the 8 years he spent addicted to cocaine. Even as his family grew and his business succeeded beyond his wildest dreams, his addiction continued to worsen.

When repeated near-death experiences failed to stop his drug use, he realized he was in trouble.  But six trips through rehab still didn’t create lasting change. He spiraled more and more out of control.

It was only a chance trick of perception during his seventh trip through treatment that led to an emotionally devastating surrender. That surrender finally gave him a route toward freedom and health.

No matter what your current state of mental health – anxiety, depression, addiction – this audiobook will challenge your perceptions and give you practical tools to help you reset your life, and heal emotional traumas and mental health challenges.

For more about addiction, mental health and perception, please read Charles’ latest post on Medium.

And in the meantime, here’s a free, quick and uplifting preview of the audiobook (1.5 minutes) – let us know your response in the comments below – thanks!

KMET Interview – How Perception Disorder Causes Addiction

author charles hanna on kmet smart talk

 

KMET1490AM – Los Angeles

Host: “You see why I had to schedule him. He was amazing. His testimony was real. It was deep. There were no excuses. What an amazing story. He was meant to live. He was meant to live to tell this story and to do that book.” READ MORE “KMET Interview – How Perception Disorder Causes Addiction”

Addiction – The Chad Benson Show

chad benson addiction

Chad Benson: “I am getting all sorts of texts as we are talking about this guy. This is what the show is all about, real people. Politics is interesting but it is not real life … it does not get more real than this.” READ MORE “Addiction – The Chad Benson Show”