I Will Not Do This

It's just another day at work - a beautiful day. In fact, the kind where you find yourself looking longingly out the window every few moments wishing you could enjoy just a bit of the clear, crisp fall weather before it fades to the inevitable bone-chilling damp cold of winter. The bright, spacious sun room I am perched in offers a glimpse of what I am missing outside: sun-dappled orange and yellow leaves, just a hint of a fair breeze, a pure blue sky with only the faintest wisps of clouds overhead. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I am fortunate to have a job as wonderful as this one. The cozy group home where I work is meticulously geared toward making this environment a happy, safe, and comfortable one for the people in its service. It is a quiet day here--though of course one knows better to say such a thing out loud--and I have the time to pore through a large drawer of medications waiting to be wasted.

I am fortunate to have this job for another reason. Nearly four years ago I reported myself to my employer at the time, and to the board of nursing soon afterward, for a devastating struggle with prescription medications. It crept upon me insidiously, worsening when I made the decision to quit drinking. Alcohol abuse was present in my family and I had recognized in myself a difficulty controlling my drinking, which was becoming more frequent. I unsuccessfully tried my hand at "social drinking." The phrase, and indeed, the concept entirely, is a bit humorous to me. Like many alcohol abusers, I don't really understand why anyone would choose to go out to a restaurant with friends and just have a drink or two. For the taste? Soda tastes good and doesn't cost $5 per serving. As a social lubricant? I certainly found myself completely unable to hit that sweet spot between relaxed/charming and completely embarrassing myself. My kids were getting older, and I didn't want them to be tormented of memories like the ones I had of my mother while binge drinking: wetting her pants, falling down the stairs, begging for her car keys so she could drive home, all the while barely able to stand. I was done. No more drinking for me.

The best thing about giving up drinking was that it was incredibly easy. I never really liked the taste, and I certainly was glad to know I would not be suffering anymore hangovers. The problem that I didn't recognize at the time was that I had grown accustomed to treating myself to a slew of alcoholic beverages for the most mundane reasons: I had a hard day at work, I was stressed at taking care of the kids, I was bored and doing dishes was more fun with a buzz. I wasn't really ready, or even equipped, to deal with the stress or boredom. It was far too easy to fall into using medications to create that false sense of comfort and ease. A lack of secure med management at my place of employment meant an easy and guilt-free pipeline to a bevy of discontinued meds, untracked until they were discarded. It was far too easy to talk myself into just taking this or that here or there rather than just throw it away. What a terrible waste, after all.

Ultimately I knew that my problem would catch up with me. I pondered reporting myself to my supervisor or seeing a therapist for advice. I wanted to tell my significant other so badly, but did not want to feel the judgment and shame that I would certainly be subjecting myself to. It was far easier to just keep sneaking, and keep hoping. I had not nearly reached the depths of how bad I could envision my problem becoming when I made the decision to report a diversion to my boss. It was the hardest thing I had ever done, and I was rewarded for stepping forward by being fired less than a day later. Suddenly it seemed I had lost everything.

It is agonizingly difficult for nurses in recovery to find jobs. The stigma from those both in and out of our field is unmistakable. Nurses are often the ones on the front lines who deal with addicts, yet the judgment cast on us is incredibly harsh. We are the caregivers, we are the gatekeepers to wellness, we are the ones tasked with pulling someone from the depths of unbearable pain and loss into the hope of a new beginning. How can we be expected to do so when we are sick--when this flaw, this failing, is marbled through us?

I am fortunate to have found this job. I am fortunate to be given the opportunity to rebuild myself and begin anew in sobriety. Every day I am thankful that I am still an RN. I am fortunate enough to have been hired by a woman who, when I looked her in the eye and told her I took medications, said, "It can happen to anyone."

Today none of these things are on my mind as I gather up medications waiting to be wasted and sit down on the mat table in that bright sun room. A bottle of Tylenol that was never used. A prevacid that fell on the floor. A whole bevy of compazine suppositories that have sat in the med fridge for months. My mind wanders as I pop the medications into the coffee container filled with cat litter, thankful that my day will end early enough that I can spend the afternoon out playing in the leaves with my kids when my shift is finished.

Suddenly it all changes.

The next medication in my pile is a card of tramadol.

Tramadol. I freeze.

Tramadol is a medication that I remember very clearly. The soft, sweet euphoria of this pill is burned into my mind forever. Whatever flaw it is in me which makes me brain think that it NEEDS these things, it is still there. It was hidden until this moment. Suddenly all I can think about is the high. All I can think about is how long this blister pack of medications would last me. 58 pills. 58 whole pills. No one else cares about this blister pack. Whether it goes in the trash or slips surreptitiously beneath the jacket lying next to me on the mat table, no one will know or care. But I am being monitored by the state to prove my safety and sobriety. I can't take these pills. Not today. Not yet. My contract is up very, very soon. In just a few weeks I won't have to worry about random UAs, about whether the state will be aware that these pills are floating in my system. I can take these with me and no one will know.

I can't say how long I hold this blister pack in my hand. It feels like an eternity. I am acutely aware of every sensation in my body at this moment. My heart rate has quickened, thinking about the euphoria at my fingertips. Thinking about the risk I am willing to take to have this feeling. Thinking about how I can get away with it. I can, I know I can.

But I will not.

I tell myself this. I will not do this. I can't start all over. I can't give up everything I've worked so hard to prove these last few years.

No one will know.

It isn't a voice. It doesn't say this to me. It imbues its influence in me. I suddenly and intensely feel it in every fiber of my being.

No one will know. It feels so good. You want this. You need this.

My hands begin to shake. I feel suddenly as if a bucket of ice water has been poured on me. The happy, chipper sounds around me of staff making small talk with one another in the rooms around me have drained away in a whirlpool of oblivion. It is just me and these pills. These pills, to which almost every part of me is screaming out...you must have these.

I will not.

I punch the medications into the waste container as fast as I can. Normally I would take a collection of pills such as this and pulverize them first, making sure that the powder and litter granules are interspersed sufficiently that no one, in their right mind or not, would be able to pick through for the remnants of medications. But I want these out of my hands, now.

One pill, POP.

You can still stop.

Two pills, pop.

There are still plenty left.

Three, four, five...pop, pop, pop.

What are you doing? You're wasting them. What if you need them? What if you really need them? You can still stop. Stop. STOP.

I pop them as fast as I can into a pile in the old coffee grounds container. They lay in a neat little pyramid in a putrid mess of leftover cough syrup, cat litter granules, suppositories, and split-opened capsules.

They're all sitting on top. You can still get most of them. Only a few were really wasted. You can still get them.

I pause for just a moment before I pick up the container, seal it, and shake it. I can hear the granules and syrup coating the pills, making it into a sloppy, disgusting mess. I know I will not open the container again. It's over. I won.

I don't feel victorious, or triumphant, or anything but sick and scared and small and vulnerable.

Congratulations a such a huge personal triumph.

Next time you are tempted.... start writing that book!

(quiet applause for the OP's courage)

Specializes in Family Nurse Practitioner.

I don't feel victorious, or triumphant, or anything but sick and scared and small and vulnerable.

Wondering what you mean by this...

Specializes in Gerontology, Med surg, Home Health.
Tramadol is not a controlled substance, though it has CNS depressant qualities.
Although not a controlled substance, every facility I've worked in in Massachusetts puts it on count.

It is incredible that you have shared your personal struggle. It takes a lot of strength to do that.

I did want to point something out that I noticed, perhaps it was written more for dramatic effect, but the whole time you are struggling with that pack of pills you are telling yourself that no one will know. My immediate thought went to your children and family. Family are often the ones who suffer just as much or more than the addict. They will know. They will be the ones who have to deal with the addict strung out on whatever substance they are addicted to. I hope that might give you more strength to stay clean in thinking about your family needing their sober mother.

I hope you continue to suppress your inner addict demon. I shall keep you and your family in my thoughts.

Again, thank you for sharing your story.

Specializes in Pediatric.

I loved this.

Sent from my iPhone using allnurses.com

Specializes in SICU.

I'm convinced that any truly good writer has been through some deeply low points in their life. Great story.

I am fortunate to have a job as wonderful as this one. The cozy group home where I work is meticulously geared toward making this environment a happy safe, and comfortable one for the people in its service. It is a quiet day here—though of course one knows better to say such a thing out loud—and I have the time to pore through a large drawer of medications waiting to be wasted. I am fortunate to have this job for another reason. Nearly four years ago I reported myself to my employer at the time, and to the board of nursing soon afterward, for a devastating struggle with prescription medications. It crept upon me insidiously, worsening when I made the decision to quit drinking. Alcohol abuse was present in my family and I had recognized in myself a difficulty controlling my drinking, which was becoming more frequent. I unsuccessfully tried my hand at “social drinking.” The phrase, and indeed, the concept entirely, is a bit humorous to me. Like many alcohol abusers, I don’t really understand why anyone would choose to go out to a restaurant with friends and just have a drink or two. For the taste? Soda tastes good and doesn’t cost $5 per serving. As a social lubricant? I certainly found myself completely unable to hit that sweet spot between relaxed/charming and completely embarrassing myself. My kids were getting older, and I didn’t want them to be tormented of memories like the ones I had of my mother while binge drinking: wetting her pants, falling down the stairs, begging for her car keys so she could drive home, all the while barely able to stand. I was done. No more drinking for me. The best thing about giving up drinking was that it was incredibly easy. I never really liked the taste, and I certainly was glad to know I would not be suffering anymore hangovers. The problem that I didn’t recognize at the time was that I had grown accustomed to treating myself to a slew of alcoholic beverages for the most mundane reasons: I had a hard day at work, I was stressed at taking care of the kids, I was bored and doing dishes was more fun with a buzz. I wasn’t really ready, or even equipped, to deal with the stress or boredom. It was far too easy to fall into using medications to create that false sense of comfort and ease. A lack of secure med management at my place of employment meant an easy and guilt-free pipeline to a bevy of discontinued meds, untracked until they were discarded. It was far too easy to talk myself into just taking this or that here or there rather than just throw it away. What a terrible waste, after all. Ultimately I knew that my problem would catch up with me. I pondered reporting myself to my supervisor or seeing a therapist for advice. I wanted to tell my significant other so badly, but did not want to feel the judgment and shame that I would certainly be subjecting myself to. It was far easier to just keep sneaking, and keep hoping. I had not nearly reached the depths of how bad I could envision my problem becoming when I made the decision to report a diversion to my boss. It was the hardest thing I had ever done, and I was rewarded for stepping forward by being fired less than a day later. Suddenly it seemed I had lost everything. It is agonizingly difficult for nurses in recovery to find jobs. The stigma from those both in and out of our field is unmistakable. Nurses are often the ones on the front lines who deal with addicts, yet the judgment cast on us is incredibly harsh. We are the caregivers, we are the gatekeepers to wellness, we are the ones tasked with pulling someone from the depths of unbearable pain and loss into the hope of a new beginning. How can we be expected to do so when we are sick--when this flaw, this failing, is marbled through us? I am fortunate to have found this job. I am fortunate to be given the opportunity to rebuild myself and begin anew in sobriety. Every day I am thankful that I am still an RN. I am fortunate enough to have been hired by a woman who, when I looked her in the eye and told her I took medications, said, “It can happen to anyone.” Today none of these things are on my mind as I gather up medications waiting to be wasted and sit down on the mat table in that bright sun room. A bottle of Tylenol that was never used. A prevacid that fell on the floor. A whole bevy of compazine suppositories that have sat in the med fridge for months. My mind wanders as I pop the medications into the coffee container filled with cat litter, thankful that my day will end early enough that I can spend the afternoon out playing in the leaves with my kids when my shift is finished. Suddenly it all changes. The next medication in my pile is a card of tramadol. Tramadol. I freeze. Tramadol is a medication that I remember very clearly. The soft, sweet euphoria of this pill is burned into my mind forever. Whatever flaw it is in me which makes me brain think that it NEEDS these things, it is still there. It was hidden until this moment. Suddenly all I can think about is the high. All I can think about is how long this blister pack of medications would last me. 58 pills. 58 whole pills. No one else cares about this blister pack. Whether it goes in the trash or slips surreptitiously beneath the jacket lying next to me on the mat table, no one will know or care. But I am being monitored by the state to prove my safety and sobriety. I can’t take these pills. Not today. Not yet. My contract is up very, very soon. In just a few weeks I won’t have to worry about random UAs, about whether the state will be aware that these pills are floating in my system. I can take these with me and no one will know. I can’t say how long I hold this blister pack in my hand. It feels like an eternity. I am acutely aware of every sensation in my body at this moment. My heart rate has quickened, thinking about the euphoria at my fingertips. Thinking about the risk I am willing to take to have this feeling. Thinking about how I can get away with it. I can, I know I can. But I will not. I tell myself this. I will not do this. I can’t start all over. I can’t give up everything I’ve worked so hard to prove these last few years. No one will know. It isn’t a voice. It doesn’t say this to me. It imbues its influence in me. I suddenly and intensely feel it in every fiber of my being. No one will know. It feels so good. You want this. You need this. My hands begin to shake. I feel suddenly as if a bucket of ice water has been poured on me. The happy, chipper sounds around me of staff making small talk with one another in the rooms around me have drained away in a whirlpool of oblivion. It is just me and these pills. These pills, to which almost every part of me is screaming out…you must have these. I will not. I punch the medications into the waste container as fast as I can. Normally I would take a collection of pills such as this and pulverize them first, making sure that the powder and litter granules are interspersed sufficiently that no one, in their right mind or not, would be able to pick through for the remnants of medications. But I want these out of my hands, now. One pill, POP. You can still stop. Two pills, pop. There are still plenty left. Three, four, five…pop, pop, pop. What are you doing? You’re wasting them. What if you need them? What if you really need them? You can still stop. Stop. STOP. I pop them as fast as I can into a pile in the old coffee grounds container. They lay in a neat little pyramid in a putrid mess of leftover cough syrup, cat litter granules, suppositories, and split-opened capsules. They’re all sitting on top. You can still get most of them. Only a few were really wasted. You can still get them. I pause for just a moment before I pick up the container, seal it, and shake it. I can hear the granules and syrup coating the pills, making it into a sloppy, disgusting mess. I know I will not open the container again. It’s over. I won. I don’t feel victorious, or triumphant, or anything but sick and scared and small and vulnerable.[/quote']

Thank you so very much for posting this very raw and honest account of the struggle that nurse addicts face daily! I can relate to every word you wrote. The obsession - thankfully- has for the most part past, but I am still caught off guard occasionally and it all come flooding back. The disease in my head tells me how good it would feel, how much I would get done, how good of a mood I would be in. It is a very real struggle that I would like to think one day will be over- but as soon as I think it's over, it may pop up again. I will not be caught off guard again. I guess it really is one day at a time! Thank you for your honesty in the post- it helps me realize I am not the only one!!!