Thursday, March 18, 2010

When I was just a young girl

My youngest brother, who is older than I am by thirteen years, was sentenced to twenty years at Angola Pennitentary for his involvement in an armed robbery of a convenient store. He was sitting in the car in drug induced euphoria while his friends held up the store with a hand gun.

He was eighteen, and served nearly fifteen years before being paroled.

The things I remember most before, and during that period in his life was his romance with an "older" woman. He was quite young and she wasn't quite so young. Betty Anne was her name. He had a son with his childhood sweetheart. Since we were "poor white trash," her parents refused to acknowledge him, and he grew up not knowing my brother.

I remember his motor cycle. It was big, black, and loud. His best friend was killed while riding it. I remember that quite clearly, although I was really young at the time, because he was decapitated...and my brother threw the motor bike in the ship channel.

I remember his music, halloween parties, and everyone calling him "Chicano." He was half mexican. We had different dads.

He was wild. Liked to party. Liked to smoke, drink and fool around.

My brother came out of prison in the early ninties.

As it is with most boys becoming men while living in prison, living in the "world" was a trial. He found work as an offshore cook, and then moved his way up...way up to a very skilled crane operator, met a woman, had a son, left the woman, lost his son, and lived his life deep in alcohol and whatever else he could find to fill the emptiness.

He loved his son.

Truly loved his son, and grieved the forced seperation that his son's mother imposed. But at the same time, the disease of alcoholism and drug addiction had such a hold that not even for his son could he give it up. He tried. And at times succeeded. He fought for his son, and time and time again, lost. I think it broke his heart, and from that breaking, he could not become fixed. The alcohol and drugs became so deeply embedded. It was the only thing in his life that remained faithful to him. How could he not be the same in return.

He was a good person, aside from the addiction he battled daily. And would not hesitate to offer help when the need was there. I remember the endless days I spent in the hospital battling cancer, and the endless days he spent being there, sleeping on a couch that made his butt look big.

Demon's aside, his heart was good.

My brother is dying. He was diagnosed years ago with Hep. B. Fearing for the loss of his job, he decided to forego treatment. And now, years of abuse combined with this disease is taking his mind and his life.

I do not know how long he has. I do not know how many bouts of sanity vs. insanity we will see.

And my heart hurts for the man who lost the boy that he was.

13 comments:

  1. Oh, Alex.
    I hope you have many good times filled with sanity. That sounds strange, but you know what I mean, right?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Holy shoog! I'm so sorry for his struggles. Hopefully the time that he has left will be kind to him.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow. I'm so sorry to hear about your brother's struggles. I can only hope his last days are as comfortable and happy as possible for him.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'm so sorry. sorry for him and that life he couldn't overcome. and sorry for you.

    ReplyDelete
  5. What a very sad tale, and yes his life was taken from him years ago by his demons and circumstances.
    I wish for you a few lucid and happy moments with him,I wish for your brother peace.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is so close to home for me. My brother was in and out of juvie at age 14-17...then jail. Addiction to cocaine, pills, and alcohol have all been issues for him. He is almost 35 now (tomorrow) and is still on probation. He, also, is a GOOD man with a GOOD heart. I watched my father struggle with alcohol and drugs for 13 years of my life. He's been sober for 17 years now and he makes me the proudest I have ever been. I will be keeping your family in my thoughts. I truly believe that these "types" of people will have a much better life when they go...

    ReplyDelete
  7. Alcohol and drugs are some very powerful addictions, to be sure. Like cancer, it is not choosey either about who becomes addicted to the substances -rich, poor, wonderful, nasty, genius, low-IQ -it makes no never mind who becomes a slave to the stuff. My ex-husband is alcoholic, although he's been in recovery for going on 17 years now. My son needs to take a very close look at himself, at his drinking and recognize what his sisters and I see there -yet another family alcoholic. And my son-in-law just spent two weeks in a rehab facility for substance abuse -pills! It's a very frightening disease -and yes, contrary to what some may still believe, addiction is indeed a disease.

    My sympathies to you and your family as you try to eke out some good days amid the pain of your brother's illnesses and prayers for all of you as you go through this ordeal.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Alex, such a sad story. I'm so sorry for your brother's pain. Sometimes being in the wrong place at the wrong time has devastating results.

    ReplyDelete
  9. That is very sad. I'm sure you feel helpless and heavy hearted. Hope he knows how much you care.

    ReplyDelete
  10. What a sad and tragic story. I hope you are able to have some time with your brother so that he feels your love and caring. What a poor, tortured soul. I hope he finds some peace within himself.

    ReplyDelete
  11. What a hard story to read - to watch - to live. A spiral like that is difficult to escape. I wish I could hug you. And him.

    ReplyDelete
  12. It's very sad to hear about it and hope now everything is fine.

    ReplyDelete