HopeStories.ca – Verissimo’s Story


 

HopeStories.ca – Verissimo’s Story – To the outsider he appeared to function normally. But behind the scenes, Verissimo was a full-blown cocaine addict. Once a successful businessman earning six figures, he never dreamed he would be homeless at age 42. Verissimo, known to his peers as trucker, grew up in a drug-infested community in the heart of Toronto. He smoked his first joint at age nine on a dare. What followed was 26 years of drug abuse and criminal behaviour. When I owned my trucking company my cocaine use escalated, says Verissimo. The drug kept me hyper and awake for four to five days at a time so I could make quicker deliveries. I eventually met a girl, had a son and stayed clean for five years. Then we separated. My son went with his mother. I was devastated. I couldnt cope and fell back into my crack cocaine abuse. The drug made me feel like superman—like I could handle anything. I started to hang out with shady people. Before long, I was involved in criminal activity. This led to a conviction and I was sent to Torontos Don Jail. For four and a half years I lived in a three-foot-wide cell. When I was released I was homeless. I had nothing and no one to turn to. My family had abandoned me years ago. While in prison, I was told of The Salvation Armys Turning Point, an addiction and rehabilitation program for men. I was familiar with the address. It was a shelter for the homeless in my old neighbourhood. I called my sister for help, something I had never done before. I was crying uncontrollably

 

Vallejo woman working to repair damaged women's lives

Filed under: salvation army drug treatment program

Susie Foreman has overcome a life of addiction and now works with other women seeking the same type of salvation though Youth and Family Services Rosewood House and Susie's Project, a transitional housing and treatment center for saving women trapped …
Read more on Vallejo Times-Herald

 

Bridging the GAP program helps teens in trouble

Filed under: salvation army drug treatment program

The judge told them they had one chance left, and that was to attend the Salvation Army's Bridging the Gap program. At first the teens felt the same way sitting in … Drug addicts came in and told us how they ruined their life. Their past never left …
Read more on Worcester Telegram