What I Couldn't Tell You: One Man's Struggle with Opioid Addiction
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.28 (753 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0998356905 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 392 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-02-19 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Sarah Ginter said Moving, timely, and important.. Matt Edwards was my friend from high school. We hadn't spoken in years, and in the interest of full disclosure, we were not extremely close. But we talked when we saw each other, and we had many mutual friends. After I graduated, we grew apart and didn't see each other for a few years, but in September of. "Excellent content. Fast paced story. Unique approach to helping addicts and understanding this epidemic." according to gardengirl. These journals helped me fully understand the heart of addiction. I read so much on the science behind addiction but nothing really helped me understand what an addict really goes through daily and why they can't tell people what they are truly experiencing until I read these journals. I would suggest thi. This books makes you think, about the past, This books makes you think, about the past, present, and future. About addiction struggle and life its self. Thank you Jane for putting this together to share for all of us who knew Matt, but yet didn't really know Matt.
He felt “touched by God” after taking the first pill and was never the same. After a clinical procedure, he received a prescription for Vicodin. Addicts are full of love, and are desperately seeking someone to accept love, yet are heartlessly dominated and disenfranchised.If you want to help fight the addiction epidemic at home or on the streets, What I Couldn’t Tell You will give you the truth addicts rarely reveal.. Friends and family, the legal system, the medical system, pharmaceutical companies, spiritual institutions, treatment centers, societal biases, and other factors fuel the cycle of dependency.Matt’s journal entries are interspersed with insightful