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Reasons for
Living
“ I had money in my pocket, anything I wanted. People always wanted to hang with me for my money or drugs, but I didn’t care. It was the rush of selling and doing that was keeping me going
(Samuel, 19).”
Samuel (19) says he had a “happy, go-luck type of
upbringing.” He had a best friend, Brian, with whom he experienced a
lot of the usual boyhood “firsts”—including smoking their first
joint at age 12. From marijuana, Samuel progressed to cocaine use.
Then he began selling cocaine. Eventually, his craving for drugs and
money led him to more dealing and stealing.
As well as cocaine, Samuel discovered Ecstasy and opiates. He was
arrested for possession with intent to sell. In retrospect, he had
become so addicted that he had grown careless about concealing his
habits—even from his parents.
When Samuel’s parents discovered drug paraphernalia in his bedroom,
they insisted that he enter a teen residential program. As one of
only two boys’ residential programs in the Commonwealth, our teen
treatment home in Danvers was the best and closest option.
There, working with his counselors and education coordinators,
Samuel came face-to-face with his addiction and many other truths
about his young life. An avid writer, he has researched and written
papers on teen drug use and the growing problem of substance use
among school-age adolescents. He has also made presentations on the
topic at his school.
He says, “I’m 43 days clean and I feel better than when I was the
most drugged up in my life.”

*The names and photos have been altered to protect confidentiality, but these are true stories and direct quotes.
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