A $300 a week drug habit. Over a year, it’s more than $15,000. Over a decade, it’s well into six figures. Over a lifetime, the total can be staggering. After myA $300 a week drug habit. Over a year, it’s more than $15,000. Over a decade, it’s well into six figures. Over a lifetime, the total can be staggering. After my

What Addiction Couldn’t Take: My Sister’s Story

2026/06/17 16:43
4 min read
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A $300 a week drug habit. Over a year, it’s more than $15,000. Over a decade, it’s well into six figures. Over a lifetime, the total can be staggering. After my sister died from a fentanyl overdose last year, I found out the cost of her addiction. Then I realized I was measuring the wrong loss. Some struggles arrive suddenly. Others quietly settle into a family and remain there for decades. My sister struggled with addiction from her teenage years onward. Over time, it became the kind of shadow that never fully disappeared, no matter how much help, hope, or determination surrounded it. There were periods of stability and optimism when it seemed the future might finally open before her. But addiction is a patient adversary. Even after years of effort, it remained a demon she battled until the day she died. It would be easy to let that final sentence define her life. But it would also be deeply unfair. Because before she became part of the growing statistics surrounding addiction, she was simply my sister. She was intelligent, compassionate, funny, and deeply caring. She worked as a nurse, caring for others through long night shifts with skill and gentleness. She ran road races and completed two Marine Corps Marathons. She loved concerts, pickleball, and her orange tabby cats. Friends adored her. Family loved her fiercely. She had a sparkle about her that drew people in and a smile that could melt any heart. Perhaps that is what makes addiction so difficult for families to understand. We want suffering to fit neatly into categories. We want to believe that bad outcomes only happen to reckless people or broken lives. But addiction does not work that way. It can live quietly alongside love, education, accomplishment, humor, friendship, and hope. Not long before she died, my sister told me she was fighting a demon and trying to get help. Looking back, I began to appreciate one of the hidden costs of addiction. Over the years, her $300 a week habit was quietly consuming a staggering amount of money, money that might otherwise have gone toward travel, financial security, retirement savings, or simply the freedom that comes from having choices. Yet even that number fails to capture the true cost. Addiction has a way of draining far more than bank accounts. It consumes opportunities, relationships, confidence, and time. It leaves families worrying through sleepless nights. It creates years filled with hope, disappointment, recovery, relapse, and hope again. But looking back now, I realize the money was never the real loss. The real loss was measured differently: in opportunities that never materialized, in dreams deferred, in years spent fighting a battle that never should have existed, and ultimately in a future she still believed she had ahead of her. That may be the hardest part of all. Even near the end, she was looking forward to life. There were still plans, conversations, hopes, and things she wanted to do. Addiction had walked beside her for years, but so had resilience. Families who live alongside addiction often exist in that strange place between fear and hope, never fully surrendering either one. In today’s world, we have become accustomed to reducing people to the worst thing that happened to them. An overdose becomes the headline, and the human being slowly disappears beneath it. I don’t want that to happen to my sister. I want to remember the woman who cared for her patients through long nights, who crossed marathon finish lines wearing red lipstick, who loved her cats, who filled a room with laughter, and who loved her friends and family with all her heart. I want to remember someone whose life contained far more than her struggle. Because in the end, addiction may have taken her life, but it never fully took away the person she was. And perhaps that is the lesson I carry with me. The greatest cost of addiction isn’t the money it consumes. It’s the risk that we forget the person behind the addiction: The life they lived, the love they gave, and the future that should have been theirs. I share Tory’s story in the hope that it helps others understand the human cost of addiction. If you or someone you love is struggling, please reach out for help. The SAMHSA National Helpline is available 24 hours a day at 1-800-662-HELP (4357). No family should have to face addiction alone.

The post What Addiction Couldn’t Take: My Sister’s Story appeared first on HumbleDollar.

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