The Boy Who Lost Himself To Drugs Hot! 📢
People will say he chose this. They will point to the first joint, the first pill, the first needle. But choice is a luxury that evaporates long before the needle ever touches skin. Addiction is not a moral failure. It is a slow, systematic demolition of a human being, brick by brick, until nothing remains but the wreckage.
He dropped out of school three months before graduation. The scholarship to the state university, the one his teachers had cried over when they wrote their recommendations, was revoked. He stole his mother’s wedding ring from her jewelry box—not out of malice, but out of a cold, mechanical need that had replaced his soul. He pawned it for forty dollars. He shot it into his vein in a gas station bathroom. the boy who lost himself to drugs
His name was Liam. Or at least, it used to be. Now, when people in town whisper about him—if they whisper about him at all—they just call him “that boy.” The one who used to have it all. The one who threw it away. People will say he chose this
Now he is twenty-two. He sleeps in a storage unit behind a strip mall. His face is gaunt, his teeth are rotting, and his arms are a roadmap of collapsed veins and infected tracks. He does not play guitar. He does not read books. He does not remember the name of his third-grade teacher, the one who told him he could be a writer. Addiction is not a moral failure
His friends tried. They really did. They invited him to movies, to the lake, to birthday parties. But Liam had already found a better companion. The drug didn’t judge his stuttering. It didn’t ask where he’d been. So he said no so many times that eventually, they stopped asking.