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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think my brother didn’t deserve to die

161 replies

Azurehawker · 25/02/2023 22:10

My brother died of an accidental drug overdose last month, he was 41 years old. When he died the attitude of a lot of people seems to be that this is what is expected when someone has been a heroin user most of their life, and it was choices he made that lead to his death so there is no one to blame for this but him. I have to admit that to me this felt almost inevitable given how he lived his life and part of me is angry that he let this happen.

Although he was once popular and well liked by the time he died he had few real friends left, some having died already or not been able to stay in contact with him in case it jeopardised their own attempts at staying off heroin. Some people just didn’t want to be around him anymore, by the time he was in his late 30s my brother was a very obvious drug user. If you met him you would probably label him as a ‘junkie’ straight away.

However he had managed to hold down a job and work most of his life. Although people knew about his drug addiction, they also knew he was a hard worker and respected him for that. He had some minor convictions for drug related crime although he had never been to prison or been convicted of a violent crime.

He openly admitted he had mental health problems, and was severely depressed. We knew that he spent his adult life trying and failing to beat his drug addiction and we tried to support him as best we could while not actually enabling him to continue taking drugs.

We had what you might call a ‘difficult’ childhood and my brother became a troubled teen, he didn’t do well at school, he got into fights and was involved with gangs, took party drugs, shoplifted etc. He and his friends were targeted by much older members of a county lines gang who introduced them to heroin, they all became addicts although many of them eventually got clean and went on to live normal lives.

When people ask how he died I sometimes lie and tell them the cause of death is ‘unexplained’ because telling them he died of a heroin overdose instantly labels him as a ‘junkie’ and in most people’s eyes a waste of space, undeserving of sympathy and respect, a person who’s life was worth nothing compared to someone who has bravely fought and lost their life to cancer or another more socially acceptable illness.

AIBU to believe that the death of my funny, kind and caring brother was a tragedy, that he was a person who was deeply depressed and damaged by a traumatic childhood, from the moment he was introduced to heroin he never really had a hope of beating drug addiction, although he tried. And that he didn’t deserve to live his life like this or to die.

OP posts:
NomiMacaroni · 26/02/2023 00:03

What an excellent point.

elenacampana · 26/02/2023 00:04

I have two uncles who passed in their early 50s, one was abused as a child, the other saw active service in Northern Ireland. One could never beat alcohol and the other didn’t really try. I wish they’d been able to come out of the other side of addiction and that my Nana hadn’t had to experience their losses within 8 months of each other or know, especially with the second one, that they had ‘done it to themselves’.

They died in 2005, we talk about them all the time and I know my Nana loves the bones of them, even though it’s been so long since she last saw them and the end of their lives brought her so much pain. I feel that somewhere out there, they are together, arguing about something… sober and finally content.

PlanetLuna · 26/02/2023 00:05

@Azurehawker I’m sorry for the loss of your beloved brother. It’s a heartbreaking loss, no matter the cause, and you are not being unreasonable to feel the way you do.

Addiction is a serious illness, and your brother did not deserve to die. No one needs to feel ashamed for suffering from addiction or having a loved one who is/has suffered from it. ❤️

derbylass81 · 26/02/2023 00:08

So very sorry for the loss of your lovely brother. He was let down horribly but he is at peace now Flowers

shockthemonkey · 26/02/2023 00:13

I am so sorry for your pain, and for his.

Wider society as you call it should jolly well think “there but for the grace of god”. I think you might be surprised at the number of people whose close family have been touched by addiction. There is no place for judgement of any kind.

Azurehawker · 26/02/2023 00:17

Thank you. It has honestly made me feel better to know that so many people are willing to offer sympathy for his death. I am always torn on how to handle it when people ask, we know from his history and the account of people who were with him that his death was caused by heroin, possibly mixed with other drugs. But the full toxicology results are not available yet so the working cause of death is ‘unexplained medical’ and that is what I tell people who ask. But the more time that goes by the more I want to tell people his story and what he went though in his life in the hope that they can understand that he was not a bad person.

I’m so sorry to everyone else who has posted on this thread that they know or have lost someone to drug addiction, it truly is awful to witness someone you love go though this 💐

OP posts:
OllytheCollie · 26/02/2023 00:26

I am sorry for your loss. I hope you are able to spend time focusing on the happy memories you must have of your kind funny brother.

I agree our society doesn't value the lives of people with addiction enough. We could do so much more to help people than we do currently. But lots of people who love people with addiction care very much, and so do many people who work with people with addiction. I am sure your brothers loss is being felt deeply by many around him. And maybe his kindness and some of the gifts he had to offer live on in you. He didn't deserve to die, but he did deserve your love and that's quite a big thing to have had.

Billslills · 26/02/2023 00:30

I am truly sorry for your loss. Your brother did not deserve the life he was dealt with. Addiction is a very real illness and no one deserves it. He is everything you've described him to be, kind, funny, loving hardworking. Sending lots of love your way.

ThreeLocusts · 26/02/2023 00:31

OP I'm sorry for your loss, sorry your brother had such a hard life and sorry that you still have to deal with the stigma of addiction.

It's good that you're here to remember him, the bad and the good. Take care

Requiem - tearful the day

ArcaneWireless · 26/02/2023 00:32

@OllytheCollie

A beautiful end to a kind and thoughtful post.

Namechange10101010 · 26/02/2023 00:35

Godlovesall26 · 25/02/2023 23:59

Depending on the drug, and especially if introduced young, it very quickly rewires your brain.
OP’mentioned gangs, they’ll give you the worst ones to keep clients.
I disagree with your position about it being an illness, but respect it in the way you see it, but isn’t that also true for many illnesses (obesity etc) that have much less stigma ?

I guess I'm consistent as I would also class obesity as something strong enough in its own sense to describe the absolute struggle many people have with their weight. Sadly many obese people and substance misusers then develop related conditions / illness. Again respect those with differing opinions.

By rewiring of the brain are you talking about the illegal opiates binding to pain receptors causing dreadful withdrawals and constant chasing and failing to get the initial highs, then replacing it with the methadone that binds even more tightly causing more intense addiction and withdrawals or changes in brain plasticity?

The former I have previously done a little research on (and forgotten most), but believe happens very quickly and is the reason for addiction being so hard to beat, becoming more intense with the length of the addiction, but repairable over time. Not helped by the somewhat understandable reluctance of many medical professionals to adequately medicate pain with anything stronger than a paracetamol for genuine fear of overdose or further addiction, when research actually shows that due to the blocking of the pain receptors and high tolerance addicted individuals need higher levels of pain relief for the same results.

The latter I haven't researched in terms of addiction but have in terms of PD and CPTSD which is often a contributor to addiction and I'd guess substance misuse exacerbates and further distorts the brain enlarging the emotional and reducing the reasoning. For a long time it was believed that post brain maturity this was fixed, but modern research shows that the brain retains its plasticity (sp?) and can be rewritten through CBT, DBT etc. I'd hope this relatively new knowledge of brain plasticity would also be true of being able to undue changes due to opiate misuse.

Of course then you're back to the chicken and egg of needing to fix the underlying issues to give the best chance of recovery from addiction, but almost always being told this person has capacity and needs to stop taking drugs before we will assess and treat mental health.

Fully agree with gangs, very organised business. Don't forget the freebies through the door when people are clean or the intentionally giving unaffordable credit to tighten their grip.

I fucking hate drugs!

Namechange10101010 · 26/02/2023 00:40

OP maybe it would help to write down his story.

Many years ago I was gifted a book by a charity of their users and their story's.

Very powerful.

I can't think of a single naysayer who wouldn't have been moved by it as without exception it talked of choices made by children, that blighted their lives as adults. Some recovered, some didn't.

Since when did our world evolve into a place where a childs mistakes can't be learnt from and fixed and how do we fix it has long been on my mind.

Coyoacan · 26/02/2023 00:46

I lost a few friends to heroin so I won't judge. Actually most of my friends had had happy childhoods, but were foolish enough to try heroin.

I imagine heroin is like the most wonderful beautiful dream that it is hard to give up once you have a taste of it, so I don't blame your brother at all, at all.

kateandme · 26/02/2023 00:53

it was a loss like any other op.
he basically died of an illness like any other.
would anyone choose to be so unhappy this was the choices the had left to cope?
would anyone choose to be an addict and all the horridic details that come with that?
no they wouldnt.
this was acceptable.this wasnt his future.this wasnt going to happen.this wasnt predictable. this was a death.and a loss like any other from somrthing actually rwally fucking traumatic that he had to live and fitht against every day and every second of his life. to do that took bravery. to live that life take sooo much bravery.becasue that life of an addict is terrifying and agonsiing.
it wasnt a choice.
im so sorry for your loss.its ok to feel like you do.
he was your brother and all the kind things you know of him was still your brother.and like a pysical illness chages that persons body this one changed his mind.made it very poorly.
im sure if he could have clicked his fingers,for you,for himself he woud have to get well. to be happy.to have a life away from addiction.
dont listen to people op.they really have no idea.

Foronenightonly22 · 26/02/2023 01:00

I am so very sorry for your loss and for your poor darling brothers tragic life. He deserved more. Your post brought tears to my eye. Take care.

OnedayIwillfeelfree · 26/02/2023 01:21

I’m so sorry for your loss. For every one person who would judge the situation, there are a dozen who would not, and give you a hug. Nobody sets out to be an addict. A childhood friend was addicted for about 15 years, clean for 6/7 years and died from the damage heroin had caused her lungs and heart. It was so tragic at her funeral, many school friends turned up, and you couldn’t help compare the way her life had been different to theirs. I cry when I remember the the schoolgirl she was, and the way things turned out. I hope she rests in peace, just as I hope your brother does. Sending you a hug to help ease some of your pain.

PatsysBeehive · 26/02/2023 01:47

I haven't read the whole thread, but I'm so sorry.
I saw at the bottom of page one someone mentioned rehabs. Ime, which is limited, rehab is definitely not a fix and cure for all.

what did your brother like? Do you want to talk about him?

My hearts with you and your family tonight, I can't imagine what you've been through.

DFAMA · 26/02/2023 02:11

Yanbu at all! I'm so sorry for your loss. I can't imagine how difficult it must have been to watch him spiral while being utterly powerless to do anything, all while knowing what had led him there. To then have to deal with judgemental people belittling his life and making you feel that your grief is less valid because of his "choices" is appalling.

Your brother was so much more than the labels put on him by judgy people. It is utterly tragic that he was taken in that way, so young and having fought against the tide for so long. Take no notice of the narrow minded idiots, however much they might like to cling on to their misguided sense of superiority, they have absolutely no clue about the people they judge so easily and their ignorance is repulsive to anyone who has half a brain

OldFan · 26/02/2023 02:19

It feels wrong for anyone to die at 41 @Azurehawker . So sorry for your loss. x

user1496262496 · 26/02/2023 02:21

He didn’t deserve to die. It sounds like he was failed massively by society. Failed by healthcare, didn’t get the help he needed.

You should be proud of him and remember him for his achievements and the love you shared. Sod what those ignorant people say. They are part of the problem.

givemeanother · 26/02/2023 04:23

Your brother absolutely didn't deserve to die. I too lost my brother to addiction in his 40s and it is a damn complicated grief wishing he'd been able to recover, and not knowing what to tell people about it. My heart goes out to you, but hopefully what you can see from this thread is that many people know someone affected by addiction, it's just not talked about enough.

My own brothers addiction was exacerbated by covid lockdowns and I'm sure he wasn't alone in that. I try to remember him for the positives of how he influenced me growing up, but hard to shake the unfairness of the life he was dealt Flowers

kateandme · 26/02/2023 06:46

hope you ok today op. just wanted to check in and say thinking of you at this time.

inkblink · 26/02/2023 07:03

I'm very sorry OP. My brother died of a heroin overdose aged 21. I felt like that then allowed people to judge him as just a junkie (including the police, and coroner and some of my so called friends) rather than the funny, outrageous, kind, loving person that he was. He didn't in any way deserve to die, and neither did your brother. Thinking of you x

ClairDeLaLune · 26/02/2023 08:37

No-one would choose that life for themselves. Your dear brother was a tragic victim of awful circumstances. I’m sorry for your loss OP and for your ongoing grief Flowers

OurChristmasMiracle · 26/02/2023 08:43

I read it as he was a victim of a county lives drug syndicate and as a result they got him addicted to a drug so that they had control over him as they would have been his source of supply meaning getting out of that situation would have been very very difficult. They had targeted him because he had a bad childhood and wasn’t doing well at school.

to me he was a victim and heroin was his own way of dealing with his demons. You have every right to mourn his death and my heart goes out to you and to him.