I ARRIVED HOME, FEELING EXHAUSTED. Force of habit made me flick on the light in the hallway, even though the bulb had gone. Weโd been meaning to replace it but kept forgetting.
I knew at once that Kathy wasnโt there. It was too quiet; she was incapable of quiet. She wasnโt noisy but her world was full of soundโ talking on the phone, reciting lines, watching movies, singing, humming, listening to bands Iโd never heard of. But now the flat was silent as a tomb. I called her name. Force of habit, againโor a guilty conscience, perhaps, wanting to make sure I was alone before I transgressed?
โKathy?โ No reply.
I fumbled my way through the dark into the living room. I turned on the light.
The room leaped out at me in the way new furniture always does until youโre used to it: new chairs, new cushions; new colors, reds and yellows, where there once had been black and white. A vase of pink liliesโKathyโs favorite flowersโwas on the table; their strong musky scent made the air thick and hard to breathe.
What time was it? Eight-thirty. Where was she? Rehearsal? She was in a new production ofย Othelloย at the RSC, and it wasnโt going particularly well. Endless rehearsals had been taking their toll. She seemed visibly tired, pale, thinner than usual, fighting a cold. โIโm so fucking sick all the time,โ she said. โIโm exhausted.โ
It was true; sheโd come back from rehearsal later and later each night, looking terrible; sheโd yawn and stumble straight into bed. So she probably wouldnโt be home for a couple of hours at the earliest. I decided to risk it.
I took the jar of weed from its hiding place and started rolling a joint.
Iโd been smoking marijuana since university. I first encountered it during my first term, alone and friendless at a fresher party, too paralyzed with fear to initiate a conversation with any of the good-looking and confident young people around me. I was planning my escape when the girl standing next to me offered me something. I thought it was a cigarette until I smelled the spicy, pungent, curling black smoke. Too shy to refuse, I accepted it and brought the joint to my lips. It was badly rolled and coming unstuck, unraveling at the end. The tip was wet and stained red from her lipstick. It tasted different from a cigarette; it was richer, rawer, more exotic. I swallowed down the thick smoke and tried not to cough. Initially all I felt was a little light on my feet. Like s*x, clearly more fuss was made over marijuana than it merited. Thenโa minute or so laterโsomething happened. Something incredible. It was like being drenched in an enormous wave of well-being. I felt safe, relaxed, totally at ease, silly and unself-conscious.
That was it. Before long I was smoking weed every day. It became my
best friend, my inspiration, my solace. An endless ritual of rolling, licking, lighting. I would get stoned just from the rustling of rolling papers and the anticipation of the warm, intoxicating high.
All kinds of theories have been put forward about the origins of addiction. It could be genetic; it could be chemical; it could be psychological. But marijuana was doing something much more than soothing me: crucially, it altered the way I experienced my emotions; it cradled me and held me safe like a well-loved child.
In other words, it contained me.
The psychoanalyst W. R. Bion came up with the termย containmentย to describe a motherโs ability to manage her babyโs pain. Remember, babyhood is not a time of bliss; itโs one of terror. As babies we are trapped in a strange, alien world, unable to see properly, constantly surprised at our bodies, alarmed by hunger and wind and bowel movements, overwhelmed by our feelings. We are quite literally under attack. We need our mother to soothe our distress and make sense of our experience. As she does so, we slowly learn how to manage our physical and emotional states on our own.
But our ability to contain ourselves directly depends on our motherโs ability to contain usโif she had never experienced containment by her own mother, how could she teach us what she did not know? Someone who has never learned to contain himself is plagued by anxious feelings for the rest of his life, feelings that Bion aptly titledย nameless dread. Such a person endlessly seeks this unquenchable containment from external sourcesโhe needs a drink or a joint to โtake the edge offโ this endless anxiety. Hence my addiction to marijuana.
I talked a lot about marijuana in therapy. I wrestled with the idea of giving it up and wondered why the prospect scared me so much. Ruth said that enforcement and constraint never produced anything good, and that, rather than force myself to live without weed, a better starting place might be to acknowledge that I was now dependent on it, and unwilling or unable to abandon it. Whatever marijuana did for me was still working, Ruth arguedโuntil the day it would outlive its usefulness, when I would probably relinquish it with ease.
Ruth was right. When I met Kathy and fell in love, marijuana faded into the background. I was naturally high on love, with no need to artificially induce a good mood. It helped that Kathy didnโt smoke it. Stoners, in her opinion, were weak willed and lazy and lived in slow motionโyou pricked them and six days later theyโd say, โOuch.โ I stopped smoking weed the day Kathy moved into my flat. Andโas Ruth had predictedโonce I was secure and happy, the habit fell away from me quite naturally, like dry caked mud from a boot.
I might never have smoked it again if we hadnโt gone to a leaving party for Kathyโs friend Nicole, who was moving to New York. Kathy was monopolized by all her actor friends, and I found myself alone. A short, stubby man, wearing a pair of neon-pink glasses, nudged me and said, โWant some?โ I was about to refuse the joint between his fingers, when something stopped me. Iโm not sure what. A momentary whim? Or an unconscious attack on Kathy for forcing me to come to this horrible party and then abandoning me? I looked around, and she was nowhere to be seen. Fuck it, I thought. I brought the joint to my lips and inhaled.
Just like that, I was back where I had started, as if there had been no break. My addiction had been patiently waiting for me all this time, like a faithful dog. I didnโt tell Kathy what I had done, and I put it out of my mind. In fact I was waiting for an opportunity, and six weeks later, it presented itself. Kathy went to New York for a week, to visit Nicole. Without Kathyโs influence, lonely and bored, I gave in to temptation. I didnโt have a dealer anymore, so I did what I had done as a studentโand made my way to Camden Town market.
As I left the station, I could smell marijuana in the air, mingled with the scent of incense and food stalls frying onions. I walked over to the bridge by Camden Lock. I stood there awkwardly, pushed and nudged by an endless stream of tourists and teenagers trudging back and forth across the bridge.
I scanned the crowd. There was no sign of any of the dealers who used to line the bridge, calling out to you as you passed. I spotted a couple of police officers, unmissable in their bright yellow jackets, patrolling the crowd. They walked away from the bridge, toward the station. Then I heard a low voice by my side:
โWant some green, mate?โ
I looked down and there was a small man. I thought he was a child at first, he was so slight and slender. But his face was a road map of rugged terrain, lined and crossed, like a boy prematurely aged. He was missing his two front teeth, giving his words a slight whistle. โGreen?โ he repeated.
I nodded.
He jerked his head at me to follow him. He slipped through the crowd and went around the corner and along a backstreet. He entered an old pub and I followed. It was deserted inside, dingy and tattered, and stank of vomit and old cigarette smoke.
โGissa beer,โ he said, hovering at the bar. He was scarcely tall enough to see over it. I begrudgingly bought him half a pint. He took it to a table in the corner. I sat opposite him. He looked around furtively, then reached under the table and slipped me a small package wrapped in cellophane. I gave him some cash.
I went home and I opened the package, half expecting to have been ripped off, but a familiar pungent smell drifted to my nose. I saw the little green buds streaked with gold. My heart raced as though I had encountered a long-lost friend; which I suppose I had.
From then on, I would get high occasionally, whenever I found myself alone in the flat for a few hours, when I was sure Kathy would not be coming back anytime soon.
That night, when I came home, tired and frustrated, and found Kathy out at rehearsal, I quickly rolled a joint. I smoked it out of the bathroom window. But I smoked too much, too fastโit hit me hard, like a punch between the eyes. I was so stoned, even walking felt difficult, like wading through treacle. I went through my usual sanitizing ritualโair freshener, brushing my teeth, taking a showerโand I carefully maneuvered myself to the living room. I sank onto the sofa.
I looked for the TV remote but couldnโt see it. Then I located it, peeking out from behind Kathyโs open laptop on the coffee table. I reached for it, but was so stoned I knocked over the laptop. I propped the laptop up again
โand the screen came to life. It was logged into her email account. For some reason, I kept staring at it. I was transfixedโher in-box stared at me like a gaping hole. I couldnโt look away. All kinds of things jumped out before I knew what I was reading: words such as โs*xyโ and โfuckโ in the email headingsโand repeated emails from BADBOY22.
If only Iโd stopped there. If only Iโd got up and walked awayโbut I didnโt.
I clicked on the most recent email and opened it:
Subject: Re: little miss fuck From: Katerama_1
To: BADBOY22
Iโm on the bus. So horny for you. I can smell you on me. I feel like a slut! Kxx
Sent from my iPhone
Subject: Re: re: re: little miss fuck From: BADBOY22
To: Katerama_1
U r a slut! Lol. C u later? After rehearsal?
Subject: Re: re: re: re: re: little miss fuck From: BADBOY22
To: Katerama_1
Ok. Will see what time I can get away. Iโll text u.
Subject: Re: re: re: re: little miss fuck From: Katerama_1
To: BADBOY22 Ok. 830? 9? xx
Sent from my iPhone
I pulled the laptop from the table. I sat with it on my lap, staring at it. I donโt know how long I sat like that. Ten minutes? Twenty minutes? Half an hour? Maybe longer. Time seemed to slow to a crawl.
I tried to process what I had just seen, but I was still so stoned, I wasnโt sure what Iย hadย seen. Was it real? Or some kind of misunderstandingโ some joke I wasnโt getting because I was so high?
I forced myself to read another email. And another.
I ended up going through all of Kathyโs emails to BADBOY22. Some were s*xual, obscene even. Others were longer, more confessional, emotional, and she sounded drunkโperhaps they were written late at night, after I had gone to bed. I pictured myself in the bedroom, asleep, while Kathy was out here, writing intimate messages to this stranger. This stranger she was fucking.
Time caught up with itself with a jolt. Suddenly I was no longer stoned.
I was horribly, painfully sober.
There was a wrenching pain in my stomach. I threw aside the laptop. I ran into the bathroom.
I fell to my knees in front of the toilet and threw up.