Finding Relief After 30 Years: One Man\’s Harrowing Journey Through Heroin Addiction

Finding Relief After 30 Years: One Man\’s Harrowing Journey Through Heroin Addiction

Meet Rosezeli: The Man Who Fought Heroin, One Tangled Step at a Time

Getting out of the clutches of drug addiction is a marathon, not a sprint. For those whose lives are tangled in heroin’s relentless grip, the road to recovery can feel endless—especially when setbacks pop up like unwelcome guests. The story of Rosezeli is a stark reminder of that truth.

Who’s Rosezeli?

He’s a name that might sound like a mystery novel, but it really belongs to a real person who’s battled the same addiction many of us hope only to hear about. Rosezeli has slipped, stumbled, and bounced back from the Drug Rehabilitation Centre (DRC) on a total of four occasions. Each time, he’s tried to walk out the other side.

Why His Story Matters

His journey was spotlighted on TikTok on September 23 by Minister of State for Home Affairs and National Development Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim. In the clip, Faishal shared a chilling statistic: about 40% of the drug abusers arrested in 2020 were under 40 years old.

“Rehabilitation is like guiding the abusers out of the tunnel if they choose to walk with us,” Faishal said, before breaking out the human face of addiction. He introduced Rosezeli with a story that was part triumph, part raw honesty.

Quotes That Hit Home
  • Faishal’s Claim: “He stumbled a few times on his recovery journey but he’s still going strong.”
  • Rosezeli’s Reality: “It’s not just about quitting; it’s about becoming someone the world sees as ‘you’ again.”

Between the stats, the tribute, and the testimony, the video did something powerful: it humanized the numbers. A stubborn, resilient soul stepping out of the endless loop of addiction illustrates that recovery isn’t a straight line—it’s a series of dance steps, stumbling feet, and the occasional victory dance.

Wrap-Up: The Takeaway

In short, Rosezeli’s four‑fold battle reminds us that the path to rehab isn’t easy. It’s peppered with challenges, but with determination and the support of a community, anyone can keep lighting that path forward. If we can turn a story into a lesson, we’re one step closer to helping more people move past the darkness and into the light.

30 years heroin addiction

A Journey From the Abyss to Renewal

How a 17‑year‑old slipped into a 30‑year addiction

“The first time I took drugs, I didn’t care about the consequences. I just kept going,” Rosezeli remembered.He felt like he was walking through a never‑ending tunnel, drifting farther from the people he loved.

  • Peer pressure: He had to prove his worth to the wrong crowd.
  • Repetitive mistakes: He kept falling into the same trap, winding up in the Drug Rehabilitation Centre (DRC) repeatedly.
  • Family loss: During one stint, his parents died, throwing his life into chaos.
  • Emotional void: After leaving DRC, he felt lost and alone, and when he couldn’t manage his emotions he fell back into drug use—the only thing that could numb his pain.
  • Turning the tables in a prison office

    During his time in DRC, Rosezeli had surprisingly useful counseling sessions that changed everything. He recounts a session he’d named “An Empty Chair.”

  • He was seated in a room with two empty chairs: one for him and one for an imaginary character.
  • He used that character as his parents, talking to them‑to‑him as if they were right there.
  • He even pretended to be his parents, stepping into their shoes to truly see their perspective.
  • The emotional weight of those discussions was off‑the‑charts “emotionally very hard.”
  • With this therapy, he finally understood what his parents truly wanted. “Now I understand what my parents really wanted,” he said, crying.

    The power of community support

    Rosezeli credits his DRC personal supervisors and counselors with the most significant part of his transformation. “It’s all thanks to the strong community support and encouragement I received,” he told the camera.

    Legal context and consequences

    The Central Narcotics Bureau warns that heroin is a “powerful and addictive” drug that leaves users “dull and tired very easily.” The stakes are high:

  • Possession or consumption: Up to 10 years in prison and/or a $20,000 fine.
  • Trafficking over 15 grams: The death penalty is a possibility.
  • A personal note:

    Rosezeli’s story reminds us that turning around is possible, especially when you’re held up by a caring community and open therapy.
    (The original story was sourced from a video on TikTok, not displayed here due to guidelines.)