I walk you through a night that changed everything, the years that followed, the way coping turned into chaos, and how faith and recovery rebuilt a life from pieces. This piece centers on trauma, addiction, mental health, and the faith-driven work toward reconciliation and sobriety. I won’t sugarcoat the mess — I’ll show how hitting bottom opened the door to a new kind of strength.
The memory of my legs giving out is sharp and strange. I woke to my sister at the door, our parents’ raised voices leaking through wood, the kind of sound that makes a house feel unsafe. When we knocked, my father opened the door with a loaded gun pressed to his head, and I collapsed to the floor, numb and unable to move.
That one night did not explode my life so much as it settled like a stone in a shoe, always there. Our home was threaded with conflict and instability, lessons in vigilance that felt like survival tactics rather than the building blocks of trust. Over time, that quiet terror bled into friendships and relationships, making connection hard and performance easy.
I learned how to hide the wound instead of name it; survival became identity. Resentment toward my parents, especially my father, calcified into a part of who I was. Instead of reaching for people, I learned to perform, to keep emotions at bay, and to mistrust safety when it showed up.
When substances arrived, they felt less like self-destruction and more like a solution. Drugs and alcohol quieted the noise and offered a counterfeit normalcy, a way of being that seemed to fit better than the person I thought I should be. The problem was that it only masked the root; it did not heal it.
Labels followed as the chaos escalated and professionals tried to make sense of my behavior. My father’s struggles with mental illness echoed through our home, and I carried my own diagnoses for years, some useful, some incomplete. I was even prescribed medical marijuana, and instead of relief it triggered severe reactions — escalating instability, bouts of mania, and psychosis that warped my sense of reality.
Addiction unfolded slowly and then fast, through cycles of denial, relapse, and bravado. Each attempt to assert control on my own terms only tied me deeper into chaos. Eventually the spiral culminated in a reckless stretch in Atlantic City that left me facing legal consequences and a truth that could no longer be ignored.
At rock bottom, the illusion of self-sufficiency finally collapsed. I believe God had to bring me to my knees because nothing else was working. In that place of surrender, faith stopped being a background idea and became lived reality, the only thing that made real change possible.
Scripture says, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.” And also, “You shall be called by a new name.” Those lines used to sound like nice platitudes, but on the other side of desperation they clicked into a real promise I could live into.
Through recovery and faith, I encountered Jesus not as religion but as relationship. My identity began to shift — not instantly, not perfectly, but profoundly enough to undo the habit of defining myself by pain. I worked the Twelve Steps, committed to sobriety, and began helping others walk the same path.
One surprising fruit of that work was reconciliation with my father. The man I blamed became part of a redemption story marked by grace and honest repair, not by forgetting but by choosing a different way forward. Today I’m sober, grounded in faith, and involved with Chain Breakers, bringing Christ-centered recovery to people who need it.
The link between unaddressed childhood trauma, misunderstood mental health, and substance abuse is clear to me now. Healing required spiritual surrender and straightforward conversations about what was really going on beneath the surface. I share this as someone still learning, still imperfect, because the more light we put on stories like this, the less power shame and isolation will have over the people who are still struggling.
