The Only Life I Could Save
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Classification: LCC HV5805.K48 (ebook) | LCC HV5805.K48 A3 2018 (print) | DDC 362.29/13092 [B]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017033129
Praise for The Only Life I Could Save
“From a mother’s harrowing journey into the dark abyss of fear and to the bright light of hope, help, and healing, this story unfolds the vivid gamut of emotions any parent knows when a child becomes entangled in alcohol or other drug use. A must-read for anyone who wants to know what to do (and not to do) to help a loved one recover from addiction.”
WILLIAM COPE MOYERS
New York Times bestselling author of Broken
“Kathy Ketcham is a gifted storyteller and uses her considerable resources from a life devoted to the telling of others’ stories to provide an unfiltered, visceral immersion into her own family’s experience with addiction. This book is both an essential, informed resource for any family facing addiction and a sacred tale of a mother’s personal transformation. Kathy exposes the impotent powerlessness of a parent attempting to cure a child’s addiction, as well as a powerful, personal portrayal of her healing journey. I recommend this book to any family struggling with addiction.”
MARVIN D. SEPPALA, MD
chief medical officer, Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation
“Profound, raw, and visceral! Once again, Ketcham grips the reader with passion and clarity, disclosing the hidden nature of drug and alcohol addiction, its ravages, and the pathway to recovery. Unlike her resume of collaborative scholarly and objective works on the disease model of addiction, she now opens the curtain to her own story: A mother and her addicted son. A family in distress. What to do, how to cope, where to turn. In her usual poignant fashion, she uniquely exposes her own journey—‘walking the walk,’ unveiling the mystery of addiction—this time through the eyes and agony of life experience.”
L. ANN MUELLER, MD
coauthor of Eating Right to Live Sober
“There are many books written on addiction, but this one will grab you and hold you tight. It will show you that beauty and love are always there for the finding.”
DEBRA JAY
author of It Takes a Family
“What is it like for a mother (and an addictions expert) to experience her teenage son’s drift into addiction and struggle through treatments before finding his own road to recovery? That question is answered in Katherine Ketcham’s riveting story, The Only Life I Could Save. This heartbreaking and uplifting story will offer readers an insider’s view of the family experience of addiction, treatment, and recovery. Highly recommended.”
WILLIAM WHITE
author of Recovery Rising
“I’ve been treating addictions as a clinical psychologist for over forty years, and I’ve never met anyone who understands the emotional, spiritual, and psychological experience of an addicted human being as well as Kathy Ketcham.”
ARTHUR P. CIARAMICOLI, EDD, PHD
author of The Stress Solution
“At a time when we lose 144 people a day to accidental drug overdose in our country, Kathy Ketcham captures the raw emotion of watching a child taken hold by addiction and a parent’s desperate fight to save them. Her beautifully recounted journey will help countless families struggling in solitude to realize that they are not alone and give them hope that, like Ben, their child can find long-term recovery.”
MARCIA LEE TAYLOR
chief policy officer, Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
“Ketcham has given us a treasured must-read. It belongs in every pediatrician’s office and in the offices of every school counselor, assistant principal, youth minister, and adolescent therapist. It teaches countless lessons not only for other parents and families struggling to make sense of what is unthinkable to them, but it also carries a profound message to all the adults in the lives of young people about their missed opportunities to help. It can teach neighbors, pediatricians, youth ministers, coaches, school administrators, and counselors that treating any use of drugs other than as a major concern is a disservice to parents and an injustice to the child. To intervene, to speak up, to express concern to parents who cannot see their reality is the greatest kindness. I recommend this book broadly. There are critical messages for all of us between its covers.”
SIS WENGER
president and CEO, National Association for Children of Addiction
“Katherine Ketcham captures the essence of a family deep in the throes of the insidious disease of addiction. Despite her expertise in the field, Kathy finds herself as helpless as any parent watching the deterioration of a loved one before her eyes, caught in the same fear and denial she has warned against in a trove of published works on the topic. As a person in long-term recovery, I found The Only Life I Could Save to be chillingly accurate in its description of a mother trapped in despair, actually rereading her own books in an effort to find comfort and perhaps some answers within. As a parent of a teenage son and daughter, I was gripped by the stories within the story, knowing there was a ‘happy’ ending to come but realizing my family’s journey is still underway. Kathy has brought a needed light into this darkness called addiction, sharing a timeless story that addresses a very contemporary issue.”
DON FERTMAN
chief development officer, Subway
“Eloquent and moving . . . Ketcham’s engaging writing style will capture and sustain the interest of the many families battling addiction in their children as they fear the worst but hope for a good outcome modeled after [her son’s] recovery.”
DAVID SMITH, MD
founder of Haight Ashbury Free Clinics
“[A] wise and wonderful masterpiece . . . The Only Life I Could Save is a powerful and insightful work . . . The current national addiction crisis has created a plethora of books, podcasts, and documentaries on how to best respond to this epidemic, but this book is different. Katherine Ketcham knows addiction. Not only is she a bestselling author and expert on the disease, she has also experienced it firsthand through her son Ben’s journey through addiction and recovery.”
SUSAN BRODERICK
associate research professor, Georgetown University
“With addiction, no matter how deep the despair of the family, there is hope. No matter how sick the addict, the miracle of recovery is possible. These truths are beautifully brought home in Kathy Ketcham’s latest wonderful book, The Only Life I Could Save.”
CHARLIE KESTER
owner, Lakeside-Milam Recovery Centers
“Ketcham’s powerful story and the vulnerability with which she shares it hit hard—both in your head and in your heart. Her storytelling elicits a visceral and emotional reaction that awakens and heals . . . I had to stop to wipe away tears. Her story is my story, my mother’s story, and all of our stories. It’s a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the inevitable rollercoaster ride of life, how awareness and acceptance are the landing pads to peace, and a reminder of the humanity and spirit that exists in all of us.”
RICK SHAMBERG
CEO of Gray Wolf Ranch
“Remarkable book . . . I was so deeply touched with the rawness of Kathy’s journey and her courage to hold nothing back . . . This is a MUST-read for all persons struggling with how to save their addicted loved ones from addiction.”
JOYCE SUNDIN
intervention specialist
“An intimate, poignant description of one family’s valiant efforts to cope as their son spirals into the cunning grip of addiction, told through the heart and lens of a loving mother. Katherine Ketcham, a deeply informed author and expert in addiction, painfully deconstructs her son’s progression into the inferno, illustrating how addiction is nondiscriminatory even in loving, functional families. Her fear and anguish force her to seek understanding from her spiritual life, revealing that addiction is but another part of the family tapestry.”
CHERLYNE SHORT MAJORS, PHD
behavioral health consultant
“There is a critical need for
this courageous, inspiring book. Finally, those of us who work in the addiction treatment field have a book that we can recommend to suffering families, written by an addiction expert and loving mother who offers her firsthand perspective on the destructive nature of drug addiction and the difficulties so often encountered on the pathway to long-term recovery. The recovery process takes time, but with the family’s loving support, exposure to good treatment, continuing care, mentoring, and mutual support, the ‘miracle’ of recovery is a reality for millions. A must-read for any parent concerned about the epidemic of drug addiction in this country.”
NICHOLAS PACE, MD
clinical associate professor of medicine, NYU
“The statistics on the opioid epidemic currently devastating our country fail to reveal the true impact of substance abuse and addiction. Despite being an expert on teen substance abusers, Ketcham initially was blind to the extent of her son’s problems. But, as the addiction exploded into the family, her expertise was shattered as her feelings as a mother overwhelmed her. This account, evolving as smoothly as a novel, reveals the soul-searching journey to recovery that Ketcham, her son, and each of her family members was compelled to undergo. The beauty of the book is that in telling her story, Ketcham’s expertise comes back into play, helping make sense of what happened and serving as an inspiration and resource to the many families across the country that are dealing with this crisis.”
ANGELA DIAZ, MD, PHD, MPH
director, Mt. Sinai Adolescent Health Center
“This is a story of real life: The life of a mother whose journey takes her full circle as she tries to help her child. Fearlessly honest, The Only Life I Could Save provides a clear vision into the reality families face when a loved one is struggling with the disease of addiction. Kathy and her family’s willingness to share their story will help other families discover they are not alone and learn that regardless of how things look from the outside, there are other families with the same challenges, the same hopes, the same fears.”
SCOTT MUNSON
executive director, Sundown M Ranch
“Through openly recounting her own desperate attempts to cope with her son’s addiction, Katherine Ketcham vividly shows us that, despite vast personal knowledge and professional expertise, life’s deepest and most gratifying existential realizations are borne of the humility that comes from the very real struggle between holding on and letting go.”
JOHN F. KELLY, PHD, ABPP
Elizabeth R. Spallin professor of psychiatry in addiction medicine, Harvard Medical School; director, Recovery Research Institute, Mass. General Hospital
“Kathy Ketcham has written a mother’s spiritual geography of witnessing her youngest child’s descent into addiction. As she watches her teenage son begin to use drugs addictively, she engages in the inevitable self-blame and desperate search for solutions common among parents of addicted children. An author of many previous books about addiction and recovery, she ironically finds little comfort in those works—and thus, like so many authors, she has written the book she needed to read, with the desire to help just one other parent who at any given moment may be staring into a dark vortex of fear for their addicted child’s life. The book offers many practical strategies for negotiating this fear, including the poignant practice of writing love letters to our children. Above all it is a lyrical, intelligent reflection about the nature of surrender and the myriad qualities of the providence that lives within all of us.”
JENNIFER MATESA
author of Sex in Recovery and The Recovering Body
“The Only Life I Could Save is the very best of all the books written on the desperate challenges of addiction in a family. So many books on addiction are written with sad endings, but this is the beautifully written one that has many poignant new beginnings, hope, and yes, gratitude. An emotional and meaningful description of the pain and frustration family members experience when loving a chemically impaired child.”
GINNY LYFORD ASP
coauthor of Living on the Edge
“This book gave me goosebumps—repeatedly. It is gripping, wise, and soulful. An instant classic.”
JEFF JAY
author of Navigating Grace
“Katherine eloquently captures a rarely told story that hits close to home for me and for one in three households in America. When addiction enters your home, it leaves parents lost and searching for answers for one of the most challenging health issues any person can face—especially a child. This story articulates the struggle, but most importantly inspires optimism throughout a powerful journey to recovery that will lead families to continue to work through the challenges of addiction and remain hopeful.”
GREG WILLIAMS
filmmaker, The Anonymous People and Generation Found, and cofounder of Facing Addiction