I am so over all the coverage on the death of Whitney Houston.  Yes, of 
course it is tragic.  She was too young to die.  But the wall to wall coverage, 
especially when you consider they don't really know anything, is over the top.   
But that is the nature of the beast  in our celebrity driven culture today.  
What we do know is that she 
drowned in a bathtub, the coroners have confirmed water was found in her lungs.  
What we also know is that in normal circumstances if you fall asleep in the tub 
and fall into the water you will wake yourself up in time to keep yourself from 
drowning.  It isn't a stretch to believe that Whitney had some sort of drugs in 
her system that rendered her unable to wake herself up in time.  Her 
addiction issues are well-known and her most recent stay in rehab came less than a 
year ago in April or May.  There are witnesses that said they saw her out 
drinking several nights before her death and TMZ reports that prescription drugs were found in her 
hotel room.  Anyone that is less than one year out of rehab should not be 
drinking, let alone taking prescription drugs.  All that is doing is changing 
one addiction for another.  
I have watched and read many of things being said about her death.  There are 
many that are putting the blame on her ex-husband Bobby Brown for the downward 
spiral that became her life shortly after marrying him.  While it is true that 
most of her fame came before and immediately after her marriage, she was a big 
girl.  
Many young women go through 
the I am addicted to a bad boy phase during the 
teen and early adult years.  I went through that myself.  I stayed with a man who 
had substance abuse problems for far too long.  The closer my wedding got to him 
the more I realized that I couldn't go through with it.  Mainly because the 
realization of how bad of father he would be hit me and I didn't want to put my 
children through that.  While it was painful, I walked away.  I also spent years 
after that examining the reasons that I stayed with him for as long as I did.  
The conclusion that I came to was my own low self-esteem.  He treated me the way 
he did because I allowed it.  I was smart enough to never became the substance 
abuser that he was.  While I did partake in things that I shouldn't have, I 
always understood my limitations.  
To blame Bobby Brown for the 
downward spiral of Whitney's life is to take every bit of responsibility that 
she had for her own life.  Life doesn't work that way.  It would be nice if it 
did, but the truth is, it just doesn't.  While no one can argue with the facts 
that if you come from a family of substance abuse you are far more likely to be 
an abuser yourself.  That is also true of child abuse, many child abusers were 
abused themselves.  But it is not a forgone conclusion that you will become 
an abuser simply based on your childhood.  
People do survive whatever 
issues they face in their childhoods and grow to be happy, well-adjusted adults.  There are people who have no substance 
abuse in their childhoods and grow up to become abusers.  We make choices in 
life.  One of the reasons that I don't drink very much is because I have 
addictive personality so I avoid things that cause those type of problems.  I 
won't take much in the way of pain medication unless it is absolutely necessary 
and I just can't get through the day without it.  I try not to take aspirin if I 
can at all help it.  
The truth is that substance 
abuse is one of the most selfish acts you can 
do as a human being.  Once it has wormed its way into your life it completely 
takes over.  The addiction is first and 
foremost in your life.  It comes before your spouse, your job, your child, and 
anything else that you love.  For you to reach that point your self-esteem is very low.  Somewhere within yourself you feel you 
are not good enough.  You need to be drinking and partying for others to like 
you.  It helps you be "one of the crowd".  You put everything else in your life 
on the back-burner.  Nothing else really matters as much as the next high.  I 
have seen people walk away from their children, I have seen people ruin their 
marriages, and I have seen people die at far too early of an age just for the 
next high.  The man I loved died at the ripe old age of 35, leaving two small 
children who will not even remember him.  He did that to himself.  No one else 
was to blame for his problems.  He knew he had a problem, but he refused to do 
anything about it.  He didn't love himself enough to change the direction of his 
life.  
The same is true of Whitney 
Houston.  She didn't love herself enough.  She didn't realize that her daughter, 
while a young adult, still needs her mommy.  Her family wasn't ready to say 
goodbye to her.  But she didn't care enough to deal with the real reasons that 
she was addicted.  After being in rehab, she was no longer physically addicted 
to the substances that landed her there in the first place.  It became what was 
between her ears and what was in heart, not what was in her bloodstream.  That 
problem had been licked.  
While Bobby Brown is not a 
man I would want in my life, I certainly can't blame him for someone else's 
actions.  They only things that caused Whitney to use drugs and drink too much 
were her own two hands.  One of her big hits was about the greatest love of all, 
the love of yourself.  Too bad for her family and for the world that loved her 
talent that they were no more than lyrics to her.  
Monday, February 13, 2012
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2 comments:
I haven't been following this story (though I do think it tragic that she died so young), but I agree with you, it's absurd to blame Bobby Brown for Whitney's own failings. She was a grown woman, fully responsible for herself, just as we all are.
She didn't "drown in the bathtub". Water in the lungs doesn't happen if you are alive. Automatic reflex prevents that. Any Basic EMT knows that. The coroner should, too. She was dead before she slipped under the water.
The coverage is over-the-top like it is for any celeb. At the same time, we ignore the real heroes, the people who died under circumstances far worse than Houston's addiction. And the blame game is the worst.
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