Allen's Story
By November 1999 I was a Bank Manager and an
alcoholic and drug addict. This in itself was no mean
achievement; I’d been working towards it since 1984 when, at
the age of 14, I began abusing solvents. From the solvents I
moved onto (in order) alcohol, cannabis, LSD, ecstasy, cocaine,
crack, pain killers and sleeping pills. When I met Alistair my
daily cocktail was costing more than £200 a day and, according
to a medically trained friend I confided in, enough to kill a
person without the tolerance I’d developed. Yes, surprisingly,
I held down a responsible job despite my chronic
dependency.
I knew some serious changes where needed when, one day, I
realised that I had made the decision to buy more drugs rather
than food. Each day when I woke up I regretted it. This sounds
melodramatic even to me but, I wanted to die.
The N.H.S. let me down badly; I spent six months on a waiting
list only to have my appointment cancelled with one week to go.
Then I met Alistair and things really started to happen.
There are two people who saved my life; one is the friend who
encouraged me to go against my family’s wishes by going into a
clinic. The other is Alistair, who has helped me to pull all
the pieces of my fragmented life and personality back
together.
In my first session, he told me “One day all these things that
you’re ashamed of will be your greatest strengths.” I won’t
repeat my exact answer but I think it conveyed my disbelief
quite well. Well, now, Alistair has been proven right, yet
again. I’ll come to that later.
There’s something about Alistair, which I can’t quite put my
finger on. The nearest I can come to it would be to say that he
is so utterly human. And, by being so human, he taught me about
accepting my own humanity; my own flawed and imperfect
humanity.
Having been abused as a child I found (and still do to a lesser
degree) it very, very hard to trust myself or anyone else.
Alistair not only accepted that, but used it as a part of my
recovery. Within the first few sessions with Alistair though, I
couldn’t help but trust him. I think it was the sheer
human-ness of the person sat with me; not just in the room with
me but truly WITH me in every possible way. Everything I
brought to him became a strength; no matter how destructive it
had been prior to meeting him.
Over the past years I’ve been given a lot of labels; alcoholic,
drug-addict, chronic depressive, complex P.T.S.D. (Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder), clinically paranoid and actively
suicidal. Alistair has steadfastly stuck to one label – Allen.
To him I’ve always been Allen (or Big A, as he calls me) who
has problems or difficulties that he can help me to
overcome.
He has helped me to rebuild myself from all the parts I had
deliberately kept separate. Some people reading this might
understand when I say I only allowed people to see a part of me
but NEVER to see all of me. I only felt “safe” that way. With
Alistair’s help that has changed; I now have the freedom to be
me and not be ashamed of it. I’ve taken all the parts of my
insanity or ‘unwholeness’ and put them together to make a whole
person.
The first thing I gained from Alistair was how to have the gift
of choice. To some people that might be a given. It wasn’t to
me but now, finally, I have it.
Please do not put Alistair on a pedestal – That’s a pretty
precarious position for anyone to be in. As he might say
“There’s one trouble with tests; If you test yourself hard
enough you’ll eventually fail.” Alistair isn’t a god by any
means; he’s human. But he’s SO human he’ll get through to you,
very quickly, in his own undeniable way.
So now, six years on, what’s changed? I’m still ‘clean and
sober’ which I would never have believed possible. That doesn’t
really surprise me though; I’ve achieved so many things I’d
previously thought impossible. And I’m a Drug therapist, having
worked in Prison with Drug Addicted offenders, and working in
the community helping addicts find recovery, – the good old
“rags to riches” story. How could I not try to do it?
Alistair is not just a fantastic therapist and an amazing human
being but a wonderful teacher or, as I prefer to describe him,
a Guru. When you meet someone like Alistair, change is
inevitable. You may not know what form it will take or when it
will happen but it will. The hardest thing would be to try to
stop it.
I only have one regret in all my time that I’ve known Alistair;
not trusting him 100% from the very beginning, but that was my
story. Who knows how different yours will be?
Allen Quine - Addiction Therapist, UK
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