WIRCO Recovery

WIRCO Recovery The WIRCO RSC is exactly what the Madison Area Recovery Community needs to bring together the Madison Recovery Community Organizations.

10/06/2021
02/15/2021

Day after day your thoughts shape you like flowing water shapes stone. Pay attention to what you are habitually thinking about, because your thoughts may not always be serving you so well. Be watchful - The main focus of your attention each day just might be becoming your higher power! Go easy in your flow, for you are becoming one with everything.💯✌🤍

Tomorrow afternoon I'll be leaving the house I've lived in for the past 3+ months. For better or worse, the time I've be...
12/23/2019

Tomorrow afternoon I'll be leaving the house I've lived in for the past 3+ months. For better or worse, the time I've been here, I've had the opportunity to heal, both physically and emotionally, grow from some pivotal mistakes, as well as make a few new ones. None of which would've been possible without the help of the good people in my wake: my mom, Chris; ladyfriend, Aria; buddies, Mike and Tony; the family that took me in, Cindi, Eddie, Owen and Sam (not to mention Ollie and Pepper), and, of course, my baby girl, Daisydogg. The help I've received from all of you has meant so much, and my appreciation could not be overstated. I love you all!💞
It's been a long and tiresome year, but despite all of that, I can't help but to admit that I'm proud of who I am today, and of all that I've accomplished, even when, some days, my greatest accomplishments are just getting out of bed and taking Daisy out, or, on other days, maybe getting to work early, staying late, making dinner for my mom, and still mustering the energy to sing some tunes for an eager audience. At the end of the day, it's all about perspective, and, if there's one thing I've learned through all of this, it's that perspective accounts for everything.
Everything I've survived this year far surpasses the obvious loss of my son, in that his death was but a catalyst for every subsequent hardship, but it is all a testament to how far we can fall, and, more importantly, how hard we can push back against such painful challenges.✊😑
I may be wounded but I'm healing; I may be broken but I'm sound; I may be crazy but my eyes are open; and I may be devastated but I'm hopeful. I'm hopeful that the future has more for me. I'm hopeful that despite my transgressions I am loved. I am confident that I will find my new center.
Above all, I am certain that so much more awaits me in the coming year. 💗💫🤗

Patrick R. Kempfer Avoiding Homelessness for Christmas Looking for hope and human support. I need it. I've been needing it all year, but it's only been as of

11/23/2019

Remember that there are defects of character, and there are defects of Being. Simply being aware of one's capacity to inflict harm does not make one's Being defective, but acting on the impulsivity to dominate in any given occurrence does in fact show a defect of character. The defect of Being lies in our inability to understand the line between the two.

10/15/2019

I never thought that I'd get old.
Even now as I write this
The stars aren't far,
Or so I'm told.
If only you're willing to reach out,
Despite your self-doubt.
But still I recall
A time when I was yet young,
And so very bold.
And I'm still trying to believe this
As I keep my feet moving on this
Worn and shaky road...
It's all just a journey,
Not a destination.
I never thought I'd be so glad
To get this old.

09/02/2016

Safe Communities a local non-profit held a free Naloxone training session on Wednesday. Naloxone is a medication that reverses an opioid overdose.

06/02/2016

We work so the addict can rest.

05/09/2016

Forty years ago today, on May 9, 1976, an unusual press conference was held at the old Shoreham Americana Hotel in Washington, D.C. The story grabbed th...

05/09/2016

Not quite sure how I feel about this yet....

Update at 12:31 PM
By: DAVID KLEPPER

Across the United States, he**in users have died in alleys behind convenience stores, on city sidewalks and in the bathrooms of fast-food joints - because no one was around to save them when they overdosed.
An alarming 47,000 American overdose deaths in 2014 - 60 percent from he**in and related painkillers like fentanyl - has pushed elected leaders from coast to coast to consider what was once unthinkable: government-sanctioned sites where users can shoot up under the supervision of a doctor or nurse who can administer an antidote if necessary.
"Things are getting out of control. We have to find things we can do for people who are addicted now," said New York state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal, who is working on legislation to allow supervised injection sites that would also include space for treatment services. "The idea shouldn't be dismissed out of hand. I don't see anyone else coming up with anything new and innovative."
Critics of the war on drugs have long talked about the need for a new approach to addiction, but the idea of allowing supervised injection sites is now coming from state lawmakers in New York, Maryland and California, along with city officials in Seattle, San Francisco and Ithaca, New York, who note that syringe exchanges were once controversial but now operate in 33 states.
While such sites have operated for years in places such as Canada, the Netherlands and Australia, they face significant legal and political challenges in the U.S., including criticism that they are tantamount to waving a white flag at an epidemic that should be fought with prevention and treatment.
"It's a dangerous idea," said John Walters, drug czar under President George W. Bush. "It's advocated by people who seem to think that the way we should help sick people is by keeping them sick, but comfortably sick."
But proponents argue such sites are not so radical outside the U.S., pointing to examples where they offer not only a place to shoot up, but also health care, counseling and even treatment beds. In many cases, the users are there to shoot up he**in or dangerous opioids like fentanyl, though some take painkillers in pill form.
At Sydney's Medically Supervised Injecting Centre, more than 5,900 people have overdosed since it opened in 2001. No one has died. It's the same at Insite in Vancouver, British Columbia. About 20 overdoses happen there every week, but the facility, which is jointly operated by a local nonprofit and the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, has yet to record a death.
"A big fat zero," said Insite site coordinator Darwin Fisher.
Sydney's facility is tucked between a hostel and a Chinese restaurant in Kings Cross, the city's red-light district. Aside from the security guard posted just inside the front door, it looks like a typical health clinic.
At least two staffers, including a registered nurse, monitor the injection room. They are not allowed to administer drugs, though sterile needles are provided. If a patient overdoses, the nurse delivers the antidote Narcan, which quickly reverses the overdose.
After users get their fix, they head to a second room with a decidedly warmer feel. Colored Christmas lights hang from the ceiling; books and magazines line the shelves. Clients can relax with a cup of coffee or tea or talk to staff. Some stay for 15 minutes; others spend hours. They exit through a back door to protect their privacy.
The center opened on an 18-month trial basis following a sharp increase in he**in use in Sydney. The trial was repeatedly extended by government officials until 2010, when it was granted permanent status. It's run by the social services arm of the Uniting Church and is funded by police-seized proceeds of various crimes.
A clinic in Amsterdam - one of three injection sites in the Dutch capital - goes even further, distributing free he**in to long-term addicts as part of a government program created for hardened addicts who might otherwise commit a crime to pay for their fix.
About 80 users visit up to three times a day. Most are men, and the average age is 60. Many began using in the 1970s and 1980s.
"We would ideally like them to cut back their use," said Fleur Clarijs, a doctor at the facility.
But, she said, the main objective of the facility is to reduce risk to users - and their effects on the community.
In Vancouver's seedy Downtown Eastside neighborhood, Insite offers patients treatment services just up the stairs from where they shoot up. About a third of Insite's visitors request referral to a detox program, the clinic said.
A woman who gave her name as Rhea Jean spoke to The Associated Press after recently injecting herself there. She felt nauseous and ran outside to the curb to vomit. Her face covered with scabs, the longtime he**in user looks far older than her 33 years.
"It's a great place for active users in full-blown addiction. It links you up to other programs," said Jean, who herself hasn't sought treatment through Insite.
A 65-year-old man who gave his name only as James because he's in a 12-step program that requires anonymity said he has been using he**in since age 22. He was clean for 17 years before relapsing; he said he was sexually abused as a child and spent 23 years in prison.
He keeps returning to he**in, he said, because it provides release from his problems. Insite is the one place he can go and be treated if he reacts badly to the drug, he said.
"They saved my life three times," he said, adding that addiction shouldn't be demonized.
"There's a large section of society that still refuses to accept it as a disease," he said.
The three clinics visited by the AP initially faced opposition from politicians and members of the public but gradually won support, in part because of studies showing reductions in overdose deaths and open-air drug use in the surrounding community.
A 2010 survey of residents and businesses in Kings Cross, for instance, found strong support.
Insite was targeted for closure by Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Conservative Party. The case went to the Supreme Court of Canada, which in 2011 told the government to issue an exemption to the drug laws allowing Insite to operate.
"Insite saves lives," Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote in the decision. "Its benefits have been proven. There has been no discernible negative impact on the public safety and health objectives of Canada during its eight years of operation."
Advocates in the U.S. have long discussed the potential benefits of injection sites - but they point to the tripling of he**in and opioid overdose deaths since 2000 as one reason why the suggestion is starting to get serious consideration.
The deaths of actors Philip Seymour Hoffman and Heath Ledger put celebrity faces on the risks of overdosing alone, and it was revealed recently that representatives for Prince sought help for his addiction to painkillers just a day before the musician was found dead.
In an effort to stay safe, some addicts are taking matters into their own hands. In Boston, after Massachusetts General Hospital equipped security guards with Narcan, the hospital began seeing an uptick in addicts shooting up in bathrooms and parking garages.
Elsewhere in the city, a nonprofit recently set aside a room where addicts can go after using drugs. The users can't inject there, but a nurse monitors those in the room and will intervene in case of overdose.
U.S. federal law effectively prohibits injection facilities, but supporters say that if a state or city were to authorize one, Washington officials could adopt a hands-off approach similar to the federal response to state medical ma*****na programs.
Kevin Sabet, a former drug policy adviser to the Obama administration, put the chances of injection sites getting approval anytime soon at zero. He believes supporters want full legalization of all drugs and are exploiting the opioid crisis to advance their agenda.
California Assemblyman Tom Lackey, who served on the California Highway Patrol for 28 years, said he understands that supporters are looking for a new approach. But he has deep reservations about legislation in his state which would create clinics where users could use he**in, crack or other drugs.
"These facilities send a message that there is a safe use, and I don't think there is any safe use of he**in," he said.
In Maryland, state House of Delegates member Dan Morhaim is an emergency physician who himself has administered Narcan "many, many times." He sees his bill for supervised injection sites as just one of many creative approaches that will be needed to solve the he**in problem.
"It's not going to cure everyone," he said. "But moving people from more dangerous behavior to less dangerous behavior is progress."
Marianne Jauncey, medical director at Sydney's Medically Supervised Injecting Centre, said she would prefer better ways to help hardened addicts. Her facility will work to keep them alive until that happens.
"Given their histories," she said, "I think the least that we can do as a society is try."
___

04/23/2016

A message to mothers of addicts, as well as other loved ones of those who struggle and fall victim to the disease of addiction:

I know that nothing I say can fill the void where loved ones once lived, but please know that, as the son of a mom who tried to remain close to me, oftentimes despite her better judgment, that nothing she could or could not have done brought me out of the path addiction was taking me; it was something beyond our control and understanding. So please don't assume that you could have done more, or that you should have behaved differently, because the most important thing to convey to any addict, ever, clean or using, is your love and reassurance that they matter, even and especially when they don't believe you, because in those final moments of each person's life, it is the thoughts and feelings felt from the love of others that fills our heads and hearts, and it is that that allows us the comfort and courage to cross over without fear. Knowing we're loved is perhaps as close to heaven as we will ever get, but when it comes down to it, if that's all there is, maybe that's enough. A mother's love, for me, is enough to keep that hope alive. Be well, stay safe, and live free.

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