How to overcome being weak, and prospering as a functional, not-so-useless human being:
Step one: Admit that you have a problem, it exists and it’s killing you. You have to face your addiction in one of two ways: easing off or going cold turkey. Easing off means you slowly stop; you have those few last sips, last puffs, snorts, needles, pills, kisses… Cold turkey means you just stop. Those objects don’t exist, those times never happened, that person is dead and gone. Come one, come all addicts…pick your poison.
Step two: Admit what you were doing was wrong. That everyone’s pain and suffering, including your own, is your fault. You’re to blame for all of this tragedy and you lost many loved ones because of it. Try not to fall off the wagon during this step.
Step three: Change your life drastically. It’s a fresh start and a new you. Every day is a task that will be daunting. Do you think you have the strength? Probably not, you think. Hence why changing your life might help; rearrange your furniture, run regularly, eat healthy, start dancing, read more, make new friends, stop dancing, watch television, get motivated! It’s all about motivation and positivity, until night falls and you’re reaching for them. You shake, you cry, you scream; “If I could just have them once more. Just one drag, scratch, taste, touch, I would never do it again. I promise,” you say aloud, as if there is a God that actually listens.
Step four: Destroy any memory or materials that could tempt you into going back. You say you have will power, but your “will power” was never there in the first place. Ergo, you became a pathetic addict and now you’re out of control. Your “will” will fail you. Flee from any temptation (this is why taking up running is a good idea. You’ll be doing a lot of it).
Step five: Learn from this. You were a dumbass for even getting involved with these shenanigans, at least learn something from it all. If not from the damage you inflicted upon yourself, from the pain you're feeling during this whole “overcoming” process. You probably won’t want to go through this all over again… then you're back at being a dumbass.
Finally, step six: Give yourself time. Those track marks in your arms and between your toes will heal eventually, your nose will stop bleeding, that sensation in your chest will stop (even if he is just two blocks down), and your mouth will stop salivating at the sight of a shot glass. Time actually does heal all wounds, but waiting is the worst and most tempting part.








