A mother
fights drug addiction with love, no reproach
To have one child, and then another, become drug addicts guarantees a
life of suffering, a life of living on the edge.
At
70, Nguyen Thi Minh Le has garnered several lifetimes’ worth of experience in
dealing with a hopeless situation.
She
had resigned herself to taking care of two adult sons until her last breath.
At the same time, however, she never stopped trying.
A
resident of District 4 in HCM City, Le said both her sons became drug addicts
with the “The little brother following the older one,” she said in tears.
She
remembers the village as a centre of drug addicts. Every family had at least
one addict.
“This
people-killing white powder (heroin) had come to every corner, like a
plague,” she said.
When
he was four, her older son dropped out of school, fell into bad company and
became a drug addict. The family was broken, but worse was to follow. The
second child, three years younger, took after his brother, and became an
addict, too. The life of the mother collapsed.
“It
is a nightmare when both children are addicted.”
The
mother had to develop "three heads and six hands" to be able to
survive. She woke up early, went to bed late, travelled to other provinces to
purchase agricultural produce to sell in the city, aiming to save small sums
of money that she could give to her two sons.
Her
reasoning was simple.
"The
two are very kind, but I was afraid they would steal from others, so I tried
to make money for them.”
Meanwhile,
she also took the two addicts to rehabilitation centres, and brought doctors
home to treat them.
All
this while, Le had hopes that some day her sons would escape from their drug
addiction. But these hopes diminished as she borrowed money from relatives,
friends and neighbours, sometimes at usurious rates to keep the treatments
going. She had to evade creditors by living temporarily in remote commune.
Then,
time seemed to stop. There was a period when both sons got married and
children were born as the sons did not relapse into drug use again.
Sadly,
it did not last, and the relapse happened. The wives left, leaving behind
their children, although they were just infants. The two addicts were admitted
to drug treatment centres.
On
her own, Le took care of three children, 10 months, 20 months and 27 months.
After
all the ordeals, a mother’s and grandmother’s love paying off, at least
partially.
In
2006, the second son ended his two-year treatment at the Nhi Xuan Clinic, and
found work as an electrician. He has remained drug-free since.
The
older son remained addicted, so Le had to take him to the city’s mandatory
methadone treatment centre for addicts in 2012. This time, it worked.
The
elder son found work, too.
For
more than 10 years, there were several times that she felt like ending it
all. “I wanted to die, but it is a mother’s love that forced me to wait until
today.”
A
few months after the rehabilitation of her eldest son, Le Van Ho, an education
official at Ward 8, came to meet Le. He suggested that she works as a peer
educator with the voluntary treatment programme for drug addicts.
She
agreed. "As a mother of drug addicts, I understand the misery of parents
and families having children who get addicted. If you take ten addicts to the
treatment centre, eight return to using drugs again.”
“But,
with the information I have, I still want to help everyone avoid the mistakes
my two sons made.”
Despite
having to deal with drug addicts again, Le is very happy with what she is
doing now.
At
70, she is in the consulting room of Ward 8 every day, to support addicts
admitting themselves to the treatment centre and helps organise outdoor
activities.
“She
assists addicts with a mother’s love. Sometimes, she gives them small amounts
of money,” said Ho, the Ward 8 official.
For
Le, both two battles to take two sons back from addiction, and to help
addicts were harder.
“Those
who give up addiction successfully, I am happy. Those who relapse, I take
them to other routes. I guide them to be treated with methadone or at
compulsory rehabilitation centres,” she said.
One
addict, a young woman, asked Le recently to help because her mother, the only
relative, was seriously paralysed and couldn’t vouch that her daughter would
drink the methadone as required. Le persuaded the doctor at the district’s
treatment centre to allow the girl, standing as a guarantee herself.
Many
addicts now see Le as a life-saving benefactor.
N.V
Trung, a local longtime drug addict, has been assisted with money many times
by Le to go to the treatment centre, but has relapsed every time. Le was sad,
but gave her love without reproach. As he talked with her, Trung cried a lot,
and once again, she guided him to register for using methadone, and bought
rice for Trung family.
Ho
said the local treatment programme faces many difficulties because there is a
high rate of relapse after treatment.
“We,
peer educators and drug addicts see the life of Le as an inspiration to
continue the fight against addiction,” he said.
Vu Thuy, VNS
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Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 4, 2017
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