Sunday, April 7, 2013

Waymonn shares his testimony | Denver Portrait Photographer


A few months back I posted this blog post about Waymonn, a man (and friend) who I photographed as my own version of Help-Portrait.

Waymonn recently shared his testimony with me and after reading it I asked him if I could share it with all of you.

Waymonn, I just wanted to let you know that I am so proud of you! We all are!




My Testimony


By Waymonn

"My life started out pretty normal, until 1963 when my parents moved us from Park Hill and life in the inner city to Westminster, life in the suburbs. My parents were both teachers and they move to a school district where we would receive a good education. I don’t fault them for that. They made a good living, provided for our every need and we never wanted for any material thing. However, being the only black family in the neighborhood and the only black kid in the class, what I wanted was equality. I wanted to be treated like everyone else and given the same opportunities as everyone else. But the fact is, I was different, the color of my skin made me different on the outside and I was made to know this on the inside. The prejudice and rejection came in the classroom, in sports and even among my friends. At times the prejudice came from other parents, especially when I began dating their daughters. The oppression I felt sunk deep into my heart and began to believe I was different and unworthy of love and acceptance.


At home, I was the youngest of three in a performance driven family. I grew up competing against my older sister and brother for everything and learned to perform at a level that was expected of me. I was told I had to work twice as hard as the white kids in school, to be considered their equal. I began to believe that I could only achieve acceptance through hard work and that I could earn love. Unfortunately, I could not perform at the level I thought was expected of me and felt like a failure. I began to lose my ambition for success and believed I was unworthy of love. In my defense, I learned through hard work I could obtain money and with that I could purchase friendship, acceptance and even what I thought was love. As a young adult, I lived my life seeking self gratification, the approval of others and through performance; I could purchase love and respect.
This lifestyle afforded me great material wealth, but left my heart empty and I desperately tried to fill it with things of this physical world. My drinking went from beer to hard liquor. I began smoking pot at a young age but my emptiness lead me to speed and then cocaine. I became addicted to alcohol, destroyed two marriages and left a wake of damage in my past. As my addiction progressed, I went from drinking in the bars to doing cocaine in the strip clubs and ended up on the streets using crack, pimping prostitutes and committing crimes to support my habit. It wasn’t long before I found myself in trouble with the law and unable to stop drinking and using dope. I had brief periods of forced sobriety. I was sentenced to Peer-1, a two year residential behavior modification Program. After graduating and four years of sobriety, I found myself no longer doing those program things that were keeping me clean and sober. Basically the program ended, so I stopped programing. The brain washing faded and I went back to the man I was before. They call it relapse, when a man lapses back into old behavior. I call it a change of the mind not a change of the heart.


So as I sat in jail, wondering what happened and wanting to know the truth about addiction, I began to search for a power greater than myself. This is when I first found God. The seed was planted and I became a believer but that seed fell upon rocky ground. My heart was hard and the word that was planted, withered and died. I found myself back at Peer-1 in a worse condition than before. Rebellious and full of pride, I relapsed again, was discharge from the program and sent to prison. After a year behind the walls, I came out with a new attitude. I believed if I could stay busy working and tried harder to stay clean and sober, I could succeed. This worked for a while. I went from electrical foreman to owner/operator of JBR Electric. In three years, I had a thriving business, but I was miserable on the inside. The emptiness I felt in my heart, and the lack of satisfaction I found in trying to fill it, was too much for me. The relapse prevention classes and all the UA’s in the world couldn’t keep me from using. I used because I liked the way it made me feel and all I felt on parole was emptiness, pain and misery. By this time, even my addiction turned on me. Using was no longer fun and it became harder and harder to get that high I was seeking. As I struggled to get high one spring day, I came across a friend with some powder cocaine and I reverted back to shooting dope. The day was Good Friday and right after I stuck the needle in my arm, I knew I was in trouble. I overdosed! It was around 4:30 pm and as I fell out, backwards, I cried out “OH GOD” The next thing I remember was waking up on Sunday afternoon, in the hospital. I had been dead and in the grave for 3 days but by the grace of God, Jesus saves. I was living in a homeless shelter and I looked like the walking dead, but I continued to use until I was arrested again and sent back to prison.
Only because of God’s mercy and grace, I was sent to prison that had a Faith Pod. This was a faith based recovery program called The Basic Life Principles Program. This is where I learned the Word of God, met Jesus Christ and began to study the Bible. It was like a year of Bible College, only I couldn’t apply it to my life. I gained great head knowledge of God and learned what Christ had done for me on the cross but I failed to develop a personal relationship with Him and the desire to follow Him was not in my heart. The 12 inches from my head to my heart, is the biggest foot in the world. 


I became a habitual relapser and spent the next five years going in and out of prison, jail and the halfway house. I tried AA, NA , CA and then Celebrate Recovery but I still had a reservation that I could beat this addiction thing and use like a regular man, but I could not. I got to the point where I wanted to stop using and I tried with all the will power I had but it wasn’t enough. Probation and Parole couldn’t stop me from using; certainly the Denver police couldn’t stop me as hard as they tried. Not even with six felonies, and the threat of a 25 year habitual prison sentence, was unable to stop drinking and using. But that’s when something powerful happened in my life. I found a church called Victory Outreach and joined their men’s recovery home. This was a recovery home where men are taught to live by spiritual principles. I was disciple and began to develop a relationship with Jesus Christ. After I left the recovery home, I progressed to the non-res and moved into the Timothy House. Discipleship continued and we began to prepare for ministry. My life was full and exciting. I was working full time, attending church 3 to 4 times a week and a relapse prevention class for probation. I thought I had this recovery thing down pat and I was once again in control of my life. I met a woman, we fell in love and we got married and began to rebuild our lives. But I forgot about my addiction and my focus and my heart left Jesus and the world pulled me away. I became restless, irritable and discontent. My life was once again miserable and out control and I was powerless to stop it. My marriage fell apart, I got divorce # 3 and then I got high. For the next 2 years, I continued to live on self-will and I was seeking self-gratification but not even alcohol and crack cocaine could ease my pain. My addiction, the street life and homelessness beat me down to a point of willingness. It was a cold February night, around 3 in the morning when Jesus saved me. All the crack and booze was gone, the money was spent and there were no more victims to rob. I hadn’t eaten in about 5 days, and I was in pain. My feet, my legs, my back, my arms and my head all hurt but I was afraid to go lay down and sleep, I might miss out on a mouthful of smoke. I was stuck on Capital Hill and had to keep moving because I had a warrant for my arrest and I was ducking and dodging the police. As I stood in the Wendy’s parking lot that cold lonely mourning, tired and hungry, I tried to find some food in the trash dumpster. I climbed in to find something to eat, but the dumpster was empty. I couldn’t even dumpster dive successfully. That’s when it happen, I was beaten, I could not go on living this way. I looked up to God and asked Him, God, you know how hard I’ve worked to rebuild my life time after time. If this is all you have for me in this life, relapse after relapse, I would rather be dead. Please God, take me home, I no longer wanted to live. At that moment, I was broken and I died.


I found my way to the Denver Rescue Mission, if only for a meal and mat on the floor. The time was late February and it was cold out side, so I began to come inside, night after night for the chapel service before dinner. And that’s when I heard this still small voice in the back of my head. It was Jesus calling! I was drawn to the alter and that is where I surrendered my will and my life and I’ve never been the same since that night. I spoke with Chaplain J Earl and joined The New Life Program. 
My life has not been perfect, but it’s getting better each and every day. There have been plenty of ups and downs, but I knew my worst day clean would be far better than my best day using. With an honest desire to stay clean, the support of the program, I was told to work out my own salvation, with fear and trembling. So I began to work on myself. 1st I humbled myself and returned to cocaine anonymous. I had seen this program work for many an addict and I was willing to try anything. They told me I had to clean up the wreckage of my past and keep my side of the street clean. I began to do this by finding a sponsor and working the 12 steps of recovery as outlined in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous. With the guidance I’ve received from my sponsor, my mentor and my chaplain, I try to the best of my ability, to live my life by these spiritual principles. I’m not sure exactly when it happened, but somewhere along the way, I became a disciple of Jesus Christ. I was not just a believer and hearer of His Word; I became a follower and a doer of His Word. I became more than a conqueror. What I have today is Christ, living in me. I’m a new creation. The old Waymonn is gone and the new Way is here."


Elizabeth Fehringer | www.imagesbyelizabeth.com

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