Heroin is becoming one of the worst epidemics our country faces.
Around 64 000 people died from drug overdoses in 2016, making overdoses the leading cause of death among Americans under 50.
One person who knows the devastation these needless deaths cause is mom Susan Lamoureux. She went to Facebook to describe her beloved daughter Alexa. Alexa was a thoughtful, animal loving, vibrant Dean’s list student who brought joy to the lives of everyone she crossed paths with.
Alexa died of a drug overdose in September last year, at the age of 28.
Her mom’s emotional letter is a must read for anyone who thinks that heroin could never affect them.
Read Susan’s letter below, then please help us share her message to help prevent more lives being tragically lost.
“Is the girl in the photograph the image you picture when you hear the words ‘heroin addict’?
This is my daughter, Alexa. And from the moment she was born to the moment she left this earth, she was adored. Loved not only by her family but also by those whose path she crossed. She was inquisitive, playful and intelligent. She was kind and loving with a smile that lit up a conversation, lit up a room, and warmed a heart.
She loved books, especially books about spirituality, holistic living, books to help her understand the injustices in the world, and ways that she could find herself. Among her favorites were “The Secret”, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”, and Victorian romances.
Alexa had a devotion for animals especially horses and her two dogs and spent time training them and caring for them. She kept journals throughout her life with pages full of raw emotion, poetry, and delicate sketches. She was deeply sensitive and felt life intensely.
In the beginning of her college years, Alexa excelled in her classes and earned her place on the Dean’s List. Sometime later, still in college, she met a ‘friend’; a young man who gave Alexa her first dose of heroin. “Just give it a try”. “What harm can it do”? It was from that first use, our daughter became physically and mentally addicted to this drug.
She fought desperately and admiringly to overcome the tremendous grip heroin had on her life. Every single day was a battle for Alexa as well as those of us who loved her and had to watch her suffer.
We did everything we could; would have given our lives for her.
Despite the love and guidance bestowed upon her, the rehabs and detoxes, her perseverance, heroin inevitably took her in and suffocated every dream and aspiration she ever had.
Alexa died of an overdose on September 21st, 2017. She had periods of time where she was free from heroin. During these times she begged God to keep her sober, sought counseling, used holistic practices, and tried to keep her focus on holistic living and organics, and exercise.
But the darkness would eventually settle in again and she would turn to the very drug that caused her so much pain, desperate to escape for a time from her tortuous thoughts of guilt and shame she felt hurting the family she loved so. Alexa described heroin as a “very lonely drug that takes you away from every part of your life and leaves you hanging on the brink of death”.
This is Alexa’s story and I ask that you share it with your loved ones and friends. Because:
1. The horrible stigma that many people have of heroin addicts needs to be dispelled. Our daughter was beautiful, intelligent, educated and well spoken. She was given every opportunity a child should have.
We are hard working parents who have raised our children with morals and values. We are not addicts. We are normal people who have always given the best to our children.
Alexa was not a ‘street junkie’. She worked from the age of 16 and supported herself up until a few months before her death. She was somebody. She was our beloved daughter. And we will forever wonder if there was anything we could have done differently.
2. If this can happen to Alexa then it can happen to anyone. It only takes one time to become addicted to heroin. ONE TIME is what it was for Alexa. She took heroin having no idea the power it would have over her.
Heroin is EVERYWHERE. Alexa used for the first time on her college campus while she was drinking and her judgement was weakened. Your loved one could be offered heroin, just like Alexa. He/she might take it and think they won’t get addicted, just like Alexa.
You can be assured that if my precious daughter, who had the world at her feet, could become addicted to heroin and die from an overdose, it can just as easily happen to your child or loved one as well.
Please share my daughter, Alexa’s story and when you do, please show her picture.
Sharing the heartbreaking story of Lexi, written by her mother, Susan:Is the girl in the photograph the image you…
Posted by East Windsor, CT Police Department on Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Please remember Susan’s story and be aware that any face could be the face of heroin.
Help us to spread this mom’s message by sharing this story with your friends on Facebook. It could save someone’s life.
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