Despair is defined as “the complete loss or absence of hope.” Drinking and drug use once gave us hope. We hoped that we wouldn’t have to feel the pain and discomfort we felt inside ourselves. We hoped that since we couldn’t make the pain go away, drugs and alcohol would do it for us. When we started experiencing withdrawal symptoms like shaking without a drink or getting sick without a drug, we hoped it would go away. Hope against hope kept us continuing to abuse substances with the ignorant outlook that it wouldn’t get any worse. It did. It always does.
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Finally, a moment came when we completely lost hope in our drug and alcohol. They stop working. Hope is completely abandoned when tolerance reaches such a threshold that there’s no way to get drunk or high. We feel hopeless when we try to take matters into our own hands and attempt to quit. Quickly we find, that’s a hopeless situation as well because we cannot stop. This is desperation. We can’t keep using it. We can’t make quit on our own. We are in anguish.
To most people who have never experienced the living terror of being in such a state because of drugs and alcohol, this might not sound like a gift. The gift of desperation is the gift of losing hope in drugs and alcohol to find hope in recovery. Without the gift of desperation, many people continue to search for hope in all the wrong places. Tragically, with harmful substances like drugs and alcohol, this can be a fatal attempt.
Hope exists in recovery. If you’re desperate for change, there is an answer. Design For Change offers residential treatment programs and multiple levels of care, in addition to other recovery services. Everyone is capable of change. Everyone is capable of recovery—Call 855-997-1372 for more information.