Delivered
In the spring of 1985, I found myself at the
doorstep of mom's house. She was expecting me, but unprepared for the shock of
her life. I had called to inform her that I was coming back home. I hopped into
my car and drove the four and half hour trip. I was a physical wreck for it
took every bit of strength I could muster up to complete the journey. I had the
shakes and a severe hangover from the previous night. I cannot remember the
last time I had taken a sober breath.
I pulled into the childhood driveway, threw
the transmission into park, and walked up to the front door. With my right
hand, I reached for the doorknob, twisted it and walk through the threshold. I was
embraced with a loving hug followed by sobbing. The tears falling down the
cheeks of her face were not joyful but terror. She did not recognize her
youngest son because she remembered her boy being full of life. Bewilderment radiated
through her expression, and she was devastated. I was one hundred and ten
pounds and the skin on my face was sunken inward, giving the appearance of a
sick and frail young man. I was speechless, hopeless and desperate.
I was only away from home for three years. I
never thought it would end up like this. I was full of ambition, ready to take
life by the horns. I had visions of prestige by planning to make a name for
myself. I had a lot of good intentions. These should have been achievable goals,
but the demons inside myself stripped away anything worthwhile.
I had reached that point where alcohol had
its way with me. I could not stop this insidious reoccurring nightmare, because
everything I tried to stop drinking drove me deeper into the black hole of
powerlessness. Bottle after bottle, time and again, I would repeat the same
mistakes always expecting a different result. Instead, I was faced with the
fact of being an alcoholic. I had turned into the one thing I despised and a
spitting image of dad.
I was baffled, ashamed and did not know
where to turn. My parents agreed to provide me a place to stay under the
condition I would seek help. I was willing and took them up on their offer. Mom
knew of a counselor who specialized in alcohol addiction. So I contacted him.
After the first face to face session with Mr. Barfield and just before leaving
his office, he handed me a flyer with a list of twelve-step programs. He highly
suggested I start attending meetings.
I decided to choose one and did not know
what to expect from the twelve-step program. I was scared. I cannot recall the
topic at my first meeting. I continued attending and began to identify with the
medical description of alcoholism. The way they laid it out made perfect sense
because for the first time concerning my drunkenness there was a logical
explanation. It spoke volumes, and as I looked back at the past, there was
concrete evidence staring me between the eyes.
Then came their hook, line and sinker that
would be the only solution to my predicament. God! That presented me with a
major stumbling block because I was agnostic. There could be no God in this
world riddled with evilness. I was highly offended by their seemingly shallow
outlook. How could God do anything for me?
Well, they said to me, just hang in there a
little longer. Don’t give up before the miracle happens is a frequent slogan.
Things did change. God began to work on me, and I gradually found faith. As a
result, from seeking God a transformation began taking root, and I learned a lot
about how He works. I came to understand that through trusting Him everything
will be taken care regardless of the current situation.
The power I received from His strength
allowed me to make amends for my wrong doings as well as healing my heart. Even
though, I found the effect of God, I failed to maintain it and became
complacent. I was content with the way my spiritual life was and started to
slack off in my devotion. I did not realize the danger this type of view would bring.
This blindness cost me dearly and after eighteen years of sobriety I got drunk.
I remember the moment I started using
alcohol again was not wise. Everything God had done for me was tossed aside
because I decided to get drunk. The insanity of alcoholism returned with a fury
taking me places of degradation. I was in the grip of wickedness unlike any I
had known. I was dying a slow and miserable death.
God did not give up on me and continued
calling me back. I finally heard Him after eight years of misery. He opened His
arms, and I embraced Him. God picked up where He had left off and quickly
showed me the light at the end of the tunnel. As I walked down God’s tunnel, He
delivered me to His Son Jesus Christ and into salvation. I now know the Light
at the end of God’s tunnel is Heaven.
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