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Home » Wasted: Exposing the Family Effect of Addiction – Sam Fowler (Transcript)

Wasted: Exposing the Family Effect of Addiction – Sam Fowler (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Sam Fowler’s talk titled “Wasted: Exposing the Family Effect of Addiction” at TEDxFurmanU conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

I have some people that I would like you guys to meet. This is my family. Now, for a while, I felt that my family was different. Now, I know what you’re thinking. You look at this picture and you think, “They don’t look different. They look perfect and polished and happy.” Well, I felt different for a very long time. The reason I felt this way is because of the little boy on the left side of the screen.

My Brother’s Struggle

That is my oldest brother. He was diagnosed with the disease five years ago. It’s changed my life in ways that I couldn’t fathom before. The disease I’m referring to is addiction. My oldest brother is an addict and he’s been struggling with substance abuse for about five years now.

Now, it’s really important for me to frame this to you as a disease because that’s exactly what it is. It’s been a really long time for me to grapple with that idea in my head. When I first heard about addiction and saw it in action, I thought it was something monstrous, scary.

But my brother described it to me in this way. He told me that it feels like if someone put a cup of water in front of you and you haven’t had a drink in three days and you’re incredibly thirsty. Then they try to have a conversation with you while sitting right next to it. Odds are you’re not going to care about what they’re saying or about the relationship or about how you’re behaving. The only thing you can think about is having that glass of water.

Now, imagine if you were in that kind of survival mode all the time, how you would act and how you would think and how you would feel. This survival mode is what has caused a lot of internal psychological repercussions in my family. I learned about all this when I first went to a rehab when I was in high school.

As far as my friends knew, I was on a fun beach vacation in Palm Beach. On my Snapchat, it was all pictures of palm trees and the pool and fun. But in reality, we were going to rehab for a family weekend at an addiction center. That’s where they told me something that changed my life forever. They told me that addiction is actually more dangerous for family members than for the addict themselves. I know that doesn’t make much sense. It didn’t make much sense to me at all. I didn’t understand how a drug that I wasn’t using could be dangerous to me.

The Family’s Burden

Over the years, it unfolded and I understood why. The reason this is, is because in the very worst moments of addiction, in the overdoses and the relapses, the suicide threats, the addict is numb. They’re completely unconscious to who they are and what they’re feeling. But the family is sober. Not only do they have to watch somebody that they love turn into somebody that they don’t know, but they also have to watch them turn into somebody that they might fear, which is what I’ve experienced.

I first experienced the psychological effects of the family disease that I like to call addiction when I was 16 years old. When I was 16, I woke up one morning. My parents were out of town and my other brother was gone as well. It was just me and my oldest brother in the house. I was ecstatic because we were finally at that age where we could be friends and we could start getting to know each other on a deeper level.

I woke up that morning with plans of what we were going to do that day, how we were going to spend it, bonding and doing our favorite activities. I went to his room to wake him up for our brunch reservations, knocked on his door, and there was no answer. So I walked in. That’s when I saw him on the bed, motionless. I thought he was just sleeping. So I went over and sat on his bed.

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That’s when I saw him trying to murmur words to me that didn’t make any sense, and he was trying to move and couldn’t. And I felt his hand. It was cold, and it was beating so slow, his heartbeat. It was going so slow. At that moment, the only thought in my head was, is my brother dying? I’m 16. I don’t know what that looks like. I don’t know if this is an overdose or relapse.

Facing Reality

He’s just sleepy. I couldn’t tell, but I knew I was too small to pick him up and put him anywhere and take him to the hospital. I didn’t know who to call or what to do. And the only thing I could think is, how do I save my brother’s life? At that moment, I couldn’t decide anymore if I wanted to have a childhood. I couldn’t decide if I cared about who I was taking to homecoming that weekend or if I had a math test on Monday.

All of those things suddenly seemed very arbitrary when it came to something so life and death. At that moment, everything changed, and I started to harbor these feelings of fear every day. It would be a happier story for me to tell you that that was a one-time occurrence, but it wasn’t. That’s something that I’ve experienced so many times over these past five years, and my family has as well. The phone calls and the suicide threats and the terrifying moments when you think it might be your last words to that person.

Now imagine with me for one moment somebody you love more than anything in the world.