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When the Call Comes: A Family's Story of Addiction, Survival, and Hope March 5th, 2015. 5:35 a.m. The phone rang. It wasn’t the first late-night call. They’d come weekly—sometimes more. But this one would change everything. My son Garrett was six hours away, in Arizona, undergoing treatment after a relapse. The voice on the line said he was unresponsive. And he might not survive. A Fight for Life We later learned Garrett had aspirated vomit in his sleep after taking Suboxone—part of his recovery regimen. He suffered an anoxic brain injury, caused by a lack of oxygen. We don’t know how long he was without oxygen. Long enough to trigger a medical cascade: Multiple strokes Pneumonia Organ failure Coma Near death Doctors couldn’t tell us if he’d wake up. And if he did, they warned he might never walk, talk, or recognize us again. Racing Against Fear We packed and drove through the early morning light, our daughter in the front seat. I sat in the back, numb, already thinking about funeral arrangements. She was only 9. But she had seen too much—her brother’s addiction, our constant departures, the unspoken dread we all lived with. That morning, I saw the strength in her silence. And the cost. Room C313 At Chandler Hospital, Garrett lay on life support. He was ghostly pale. Machines breathed for him. The stillness in his face reminded me of my father, who died from alcoholism. Doctors filled the room with clinical language—brain damage, renal failure, ventilator settings. I stayed at his side for days, praying and refusing to give up. Then came the Code Blue calls. Garrett’s heart stopped. Three times. Each time, they revived him. Each time, I broke. A Spark Eventually, Garrett began to breathe on his own. His eyes opened. Could he see? Understand? No one knew. His body convulsed on the left side. They restrained him to prevent injury. It was painful to watch—but these were signs of life. And signs of fight. Against All Odds From the ICU, Garrett was moved to rehab. He had to relearn everything—how to sit, speak, walk, think. But he did. Each step forward was a miracle. A defiance of every prognosis. After weeks of uncertainty, we left the hospital together. Forever changed. But still together. A Sister’s Silent Battle While Garrett’s recovery played out publicly, his sister was waging her own private war. She had lived in the shadow of addiction since she was a toddler. She watched us disappear in the middle of the night. She heard the whispers, saw the tears, and lived in the in-between spaces of fear and hope. On March 5, she sat silently in the car, sensing the weight of what was happening. At the hospital, she made cards, whispered to Garrett, and held his hand. But the trauma etched itself into her childhood. Today, she’s grown into a deeply empathetic young woman. But her insight came at a cost. Addiction affects the whole family. That’s not a metaphor. It’s a reality. From Her Eyes – A Sister’s Voice “I was eight when it happened. But I remember everything.” That’s how she tells it now. She remembers Mom crying, the phone ringing, the silence in the car. She remembers her brother in the hospital bed—pale, unrecognizable. She remembers trying to be strong while holding a broken heart. She was angry. At Garrett. At the world. At the silence around her own pain. She was scared. Scared he’d die. Scared nothing would ever be okay again. And even now, though Garrett survived, she still carries the emotional weight. She lives with a chronic illness—her body holding onto trauma even when her mind tries to forget. But she’s still here. And she wants people to know: siblings hurt too. Why We Share This We don’t tell this story for sympathy. We tell it for awareness, hope, and truth. Garrett’s overdose was a moment. His recovery is a lifetime. Our daughter’s healing is still unfolding. And our family’s journey through recovery is ongoing. This isn’t just a story about medical crises or hospital stats. It’s about addiction, recovery, trauma, resilience, and the unseen impact on those who love someone in the fight. It’s about how we broke—and how we began to heal. What You Can Do If you know someone struggling with addiction—or loving someone who is—please don’t underestimate the ripple effects. Check in on siblings. Support the caretakers. Speak honestly. Offer presence over platitudes. And if you are in the middle of your own storm, please know this: There is hope. Even when it feels impossible. There is healing. Even when the damage seems too deep. And yes, there are miracles. We’ve lived one. You are not alone.