Former Meth-Making Addict Shares Story of Restoration, Love For Helping Men at Homes of Promise
By Alex Murashko, Special to the ASSIST News Service
LA VERNE, Calif. (ANS- -- November 15, 2015) -- Looking at recovery home manager Sal Perez for the first time I sense an aura around him that can only be described as love.
I
tell myself that there’s no way that this 46-year-old man, born and
raised in the San Gabriel Valley, could have ever had a bad bone in his
body. However, Sal is living a life transformed. He’ll tell you that in
the past, as a methamphetamine addict that manufactured the drug to feed
his habit, he intimidated people – he wanted to be bad.
It’s
a Friday night at Izzy’s Place, and almost immediately I realize
there’s something more to this recovery home than men simply trying to
kick alcohol and drugs. Sal is smiling ear-to-ear as he greets new
people and gives nods and hugs to others.
In the kitchen, women are preparing dinner for those attending a Celebrate Recovery [http://www.celebraterecovery.com/]
meeting in the backyard. The meeting is for the dozen or so men in the
house, but it’s also open to the public – those seeking help in the
recovery program that utilizes the steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, the
gospel, and identifies “Higher Power” as Jesus Christ.
The
genuine warmth shared by those on the property located in a quaint
neighborhood in La Verne, and run by Sal and Homes of Promise [http://www.homesofpromise.org/] is palatable. Obviously, Sal plays a big part of what’s happening at Izzy’s Place.
“I
started using drugs at 12. I started off with alcohol and marijuana,
but because that didn’t seem so bad, I then started with pills, downers …
Quaaludes, Valium, anything I could get my hands on,” Sal told me
recently in one of the rooms of the 1917 Edwardian style home. “I was
willing to take everything and anything that crossed my path, but one of
the things that I didn’t want to get involved with was heroin because
both my brothers were heroin addicts.”
Sal
explained that he continued his drug use and drinking even as he met
his girlfriend, had a child, got married, and had two more children.
Although
there were times in his life before his total surrender to Jesus where
he momentarily gave up drugs and began to focus on work, church and
prayer, he fell back into a drug culture world that included physical
threats, violence, and jail time.
After
attending a Bible study and staying sober for three months he
“gradually started smoking weed again, doing what I wanted to do and not
what the Lord wanted me to do.”
“That’s
when I really started doing the cocaine and acid. I started smoking
heroin,” he explained. “I wouldn’t slam it because I related that to my
brothers. I’ve seen them get sick. I saw them steal from us. I figured
smoking it was okay. I didn’t realize that if I did it often enough I
would still get that same sickness.”
After
going through phases of using different types of drugs he said he found
his “true love” (at the time) of methamphetamine. Because he couldn’t
afford to buy meth, he started selling it, and then eventually making it
on his own.
He
said he went to church again because he didn’t want to lose his family.
At one particular service he began to uncontrollably cry.
After
a friend told him that it was okay to cry and “this was like a
cleansing,” Sal said, “I literally felt the weight of my sins, without
question, off my shoulders. It was such a relief because I had done so
many things that I was ashamed of – it was what we needed to do to
survive in the streets.”
Yet,
one more time, after a brief time of sobriety from drugs, he began to
use heavily, especially after his wife had left him. “I had given up on
being any part of society whatsoever,” he told me.
Sal
says his final days of using and selling drugs included a violent
confrontation with another drug dealer and if it wasn’t for the fact
that part of him was already at least listening to God’s will, he may
have entered into an even darker world.
Finally,
a friend helped him get into a sober living home. And this time, Sal
kept moving forward as someone wanting to do God’s will in his life. He
has been sober for 13 years, serving for 5 years as the manager of the
Brick House Sober Living Home in Pomona. He also started a ministry at
his home church (Faith Community) that provides transportation for
clients from American Recovery Center and takes them to church for their
12-Step meeting — and then again to their church on Sunday.
“When
I left the sober living home environment I never left working with
people in recovery,” Sal explained. He reflects on his past life. “I
think everything prior to Homes of Promise was preparing me for Homes of
Promise. I believe that with all my heart because the Lord was evident
in my life at various stages and whatever route I would have chosen, the
Lord would have me here, right now, one way or the other. Everything
was for His plan and that’s why my heart is in this (HOP) completely.”
While the vision for Homes of Promise [http://www.homesofpromise.org/]
includes more recovery homes in the local area, and a network of
Christ-centered recovery homes throughout the nation with the help of
churches, Sal reflects on founder Ray Adamyk’s belief that it’s also
about the restoration of men’s lives.
“I
believe in the vision that’s been put on Ray’s heart to develop men so
they can develop themselves to be better husbands, better fathers, and
better members of society,” Sal said. “I’d like to help in any way to
produce God-fearing men, not just Christians per se, but true followers
of Christ, people that will follow the word of God.”
Photo captions: 1) Sal Perez.2) Alex Murashko.
Freelance journalist and ANS correspondent, Alex Murashko, is the public relations director for Homes of Promise. [http://www.homesofpromise.org/] He is also an associate producer at One Ten Pictures. [http://www.onetenpictures.com/]
Article may be republished with permission by sending notification to alex@alexmurashko.com .
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar