鶹ԭovery – A Resource for Students Dealing with Substance Abuse

鶹ԭovery

鶹ԭovery vice president Shawn Shepherd and president Roxanne Newman​

Let’s face it, life on Earth has to be one of the toughest missions. Many look for the “great escape” without having to leave the planet.

At 鶹ԭovery, a student organization at 鶹ԭ, students talk about substance use. This is not an NA or AA meeting but a peer-to-peer support group. Those who drop in are battling addiction, have friends or family with addiction issues or simply want to become more educated around addiction. ​

鶹ԭovery President Roxx​anne Newman is a psychology major who transferred to 鶹ԭ this year as a junior. A recovery coach for the Anchor Recovery Community Center in Pawtucket, Newman will be entering the chemical dependency addiction studies program at 鶹ԭ next fall. 

Newman is also a recovering heroin and cocaine addict who lived homeless for many years on the streets of Providence. Slowly, with the help of a “village,” the 33-year-old rebuilt her life. She’s been in recovery for five years and is the mother of a 16-month-old girl. Newman’s ever-present, childlike joy in simply being alive has returned, and with it, a passion to support other addicts.

“I lost a lot of years of schooling due to my drug addiction,” she said, “but I’m very grateful to be back in school and part of this movement. I’m an advocate at heart. I like to raise awareness that recovery is possible. At 鶹ԭovery, we want to be that support for someone who might be struggling with substance abuse and needs to know how to get out of it and what resources are available.”

鶹ԭovery Vice President Shawn Shepherd is a psychology major in his senior year. Though Shepherd is not in recovery, he has had experiences with mind-altering substances, resulting in a healthy respect for them. He joined 鶹ԭovery​​ out of concern for a friend’s addiction and the need to support others. Shepherd holds biweekly open discussions on Wednesdays at 12:30 p.m. in Horace Mann 192, while Newman helps facilitate​ meetings every Thursday at 6 p.m. in Donovan 204.

Shepherd’s goal, he said, is to raise awareness without using fear tactics to keep students away from drugs. “Fear tactics really don’t work,” said Shepherd. “People are going to do what they want to do.” 鶹ԭovery’s focus is rather ​on “harm reduction” through peer-to-peer support groups and training sessions.

Students drop in on meetings to release stress, to talk about addiction or to make plans to advance awareness. In addition, each semester 鶹ԭovery holds training sessions on how to administer naloxone, the antidote for opioid overdose. 

Newman, an overdose survivor, said that though naloxone training and other harm-reduction methods are not the solution to addiction, naloxone will help keep individuals alive so that they can work toward recovery.

“I know that the disease of addiction is stronger than I am, stronger than you are, stronger than any single individual,” she said, “It takes a community of people – whether they’re your school community, recovery community, church, family, doctors or therapists.”

“Right now, there are 19-and-20-year-olds at 鶹ԭ who, unfortunately, are starting their journey down that path. They may not know that cocaine is being laced with fentanyl and that some Percocets are actually fentanyl stamped with Percocet numbers​. They go to a party house off campus. Everyone’s hanging out, and someone says, ‘Let’s try one of these.’ If you’re under the influence of alcohol, or if you’re not thinking correctly, you try one and that’s it; it’s all over. [Read about the deadly effects of fentanyl​.] Any student with an addiction needs to know that when they’re ready, there’s a place to get help.”

“I encourage everyone to come to 鶹ԭovery meetings, even if you don’t know anything about substance abuse,” Shepherd added. “Come and see what we talk about, what our lives are about. I like to market the idea that we’re learning together.”

In addition, to open discussions and Naloxone trainings, 鶹ԭovery will host a recovery guest speaker in the spring, co-sponsored by the Psychological Society and the Student Nursing Association.​