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From Orthodox Roots to Addiction
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I grew up in a strong Orthodox home, but over time I felt out of place. Drugs became my escape until addiction took hold. What changed everything was someone seeing me, reaching out, and connecting me to help. For the first time, I felt I belonged and healing began.
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I grew up in a very from orthodox
household. I went to good yeshivas, good
schools, you know, I had good grades.
You know, I was going to be the next
gador, the next RV. And then over the
years, things, you know, started to to
fall apart. I didn't feel in place. I
felt out of place. So, I started smoking
weed. And, you know, I was accepted into
a new social setting amongst peers that
smoked weed and we had fun. And one
thing led to the next and the drug usage
got worse over time until I developed an
addiction both physical and mentally.
But the most important thing about it
was that it it made me feel okay. A
gentleman that was part of my father's
shul he sat me down and he said maybe
you should think about getting some
help. And for the first time I felt
somebody wanted to help me. Somebody
understood what I was going through. And
I said sure. He said I spoke to an
organization on your behalf. It happened
to be Amuim. It was in California. I
went to Kabad Treatment Center. I went
not knowing what to expect and it was
the best experience I ever had. It was a
place where I belonged. There was no
judgment. That for me was the most
important thing. It was feeling that I
was a part of something that I never
felt before. And throughout all this,
the healing emotionally began. And
[Music]