I spent the last two and a half years of my "official" adolescence as a
ward of the state of California and in a large group home or "open
placement". It was an "open placement" because it wasn't a lock-down
down facility. The front doors were unlocked and we had rooms instead
of cells. It wasn't really a home so much as place to house messed up
and throwaway girls who weren't really criminal enough to require
full-time residence in juvenile hall.
Some
girls were there due to drug and prostitution charges. Some were there
behind assault and battery or arson charges. Others were simply guilty
of bad attitudes, a lack of interest in any thing an authority figure
had to say and running away from crappy homes, using alcohol or drugs
to anesthetize intense internal pain and rage. I pretty much fell into
the latter group, having been deemed a "pre-juvenile delinquent" by the
social worker who placed me there. This meant only that I hadn't been
caught doing something that would require my presence before a judge.
It meant that I was headed straight for juvenile hall and a life of
crime, if someone or something did not intervene.
And
so it was that I came to find myself at the tender age of 16 in an old
renovated convalescent home with 50 or so girls who were far more
knowledgeable about all things criminal than I had ever thought to be.
I was more rebellious than criminal, more interested in not feeling
than making money by selling drugs.
Being put into placement
probably wasn't the best place for me at the time but there was no
other place for me. My father was a pedophile as everyone had learned
several months earlier and my mother was ill-equipped to cope with not
only the situation in which she found herself but also with a wayward,
angry, stubborn and do-it-my-way teenage girl who refused to listen,
conform or do anything other than look for ways to escape whatever
uncomfortable circumstances she found herself in, one way or another.
And
while the circumstances that brought me to the group home were
heartbreaking at best; and much of what I experienced while there could
be characterized as cathartic in some way, what I learned from being
among those girls wasn't exactly therapeutic. What DID happen to me
there was I felt my first glimpse and experience with what
unconditional love and acceptance were from the woman who was charged
with dealing with me. I was allowed to to be who I was on any given
day. I received the therapy I so desperately needed. I learned my
freedoms and privileges hinged mostly on my behavior and attitudes and
I got the very first inkling that I had a problem with booze and
anything that altered my mind.
What follows is the story of how I found myself at my very first meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous.
I was constantly going AWOL and
coming back inebriated. The usual punishment for this was 50 demerits
and 72 hours restriction. Restriction meant you couldn’t go on group
activities or get phone calls or weekend passes. That kind of thing.
Well, on the fourth time in a week, my caseworker finally reached the
end of her patience and put me on restriction until further notice. She
told me if I went AWOL one more time or had my friends come to my room
window and hang out, she would not only move me to a inside room but
also send me to Juvenile Hall. Shit, foiled again. At least I could see
my friends at school.
Continue reading "I LIKE Feeling This Way" »