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LETTERS: For some, it beats working

Editor: Re: Varying levels of discomfort, Sept. 14 letters.
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Editor:

Re: Varying levels of discomfort, Sept. 14 letters.

Before I retired, I was an addiction counsellor in a facility that had one requirement.

You had to be a recovering alcoholic or addict to work there.

So, obviously, I knew the lows.

Before there was addiction centres and half-way houses, there were two free organizations: Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. That is where my recovery started.

We didn’t care if you came in wearing rags. We cared that you were there. Plus it is free.

I picked myself up from the gates of hell and worked hard. I took two jobs that, at the time, I felt were beneath me. I also had a child to support.

There are jobs out there. Maybe not the jobs you want. I washed dishes in a restaurant. A far cry from my fancy banking job.

My son and I lived in an one-room bachelor apartment. Slowly, I filled it with furniture and moved to a bigger place.

Without the support of AA, I would not have been able to do it.

When I was counselling, a lady came in. Her name was Jane. I immediately recognized her from the restaurant I had worked in. She was a great waitress earning good tips.

After 90 days, Jane was ready to go back into the working field. I recommended she go back to her old boss and get a job.

“Oh no,” she said. “I make more money panhandling, plus I get welfare.”

I asked her how much she made panhandling. Averaged $200 a day, and more if it was raining. She dressed the part.

From that day on, I never gave out money or food.

It is called bringing their bottom up.

C. Eden, Surrey