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Former Coyle-Cassidy student Nick Saba By Laura O'Neill, Enterprise correspondent (Originally published April 26, 2007) ![]() Former Coyle-Cassidy student Nick Saba addresses Coyle-Cassidy students during a drug information program on April 25, 2007. (Craig Murray/The Enterprise) "It doesn't matter that we're in a Catholic school. It doesn't matter what school you go to. It's an addiction and no one is over that power of a drug," Malloch said after a drug information program at Coyle-Cassidy High School Wednesday. The senior said she was especially touched by former Coyle student Nick Saba, 21, a recovering heroin addict who told students about how drugs altered his life. "It's scary to know that he came from Coyle. He could be like any one of us sitting in the audience. It was an eye-opener," said Malloch. The program came in the wake of a recent Enterprise series, called "Wasted Youth," that examined the toll OxyContin and heroin addiction have taken on this region. Saba's story, and his emergence from four years of addiction, was featured on the second day of the series. Saba was one of four guest speakers who warned the high school students about how one bad choice could change a young person's life forever. ![]() Nick Saba hugs Coyle-Cassidy High School Principal Mary Pat Tranter, who had seen Saba slide into addiction as a student. (Craig Murray/The Enterprise) It was Saba's first visit to Coyle since dropping out as a junior, and he told students how his trip "into Hell" began with taking one OxyContin pill at a prom party his sophomore year. "I was a tri-athlete and a good student. I was planning on going to college," he said. "Little did I know that one pill would alter my life. ... I went from star hockey player to living in the streets, to ending up in jail. I threw my whole life away. Nothing mattered anymore. I didn't see it coming. It happened so fast," said Saba, who used OxyContin for a year before moving to heroin. State Trooper Brian Galvin, the event organizer and a graduate of Coyle-Cassidy, put together the program after becoming impassioned about the topic of opiate drugs. "Percocet, Percodan, OxyContin and heroin - opiates. These drugs have sunk their teeth into every community," said Galvin, who said he recently had to arrest two former classmates for possession of Percocet. He said the point of the seminar was not the elementary school message of "saying 'no' to drugs," but rather "this is what's going to happen if you say 'yes.'" ![]() A Coyle-Cassidy students listens during Nick Saba's speech. (Craig Murray/The Enterprise) "In the communities that The Enterprise covers, nine people have died in the Iraq War locally," he said. "One hundred have died in the same time period from opiate overdose." Damish told the audience that the drugs are readily available in the community. "It's out there. You will come across it in some form or fashion. This is about knowing what happens if you decide to say 'yes,'" said Damish. A slide show from The Enterprise's Internet presentation of the drug series, featuring Saba, was shown before the former Coyle student spoke. "I took that one pill and it took me through hell," said Saba, who has been sober for a year and 10 months. "Today I am a true believer that God saved my life. That's the reality. You are at the age where you start to experiment. Take it from me, you don't have to go through with it. I struggled, I lost. I threw my life away. People are dying every day from this." Taunton police Detective Bob Kramer, a 12-year veteran, also spoke about the dangers of opiates. "I have seen how much drugs have damaged people, families and communities. It all ![]() Joanne Peterson addresses students at Coyle-Cassidy High School during the drug-information program held April 25, 2007, which included a speech by recovering addict Nick Saba, a former standout athlete at the school. (Craig Murray/The Enterprise) Joanne Peterson, founder of Learning to Cope, a support group for parents with children addicted to opiates, spoke about her son's drug experiences. "All of you kids are sitting here with your whole future in front of you. Nick had no idea what he was heading for. The same with my son," said Peterson, who said it only takes 48 hours for the body to become addicted to OxyContin. "It took me to a place I never want to revisit. I had to have him locked up," Peterson said about her son, who is now in recovery. Several students said they were touched by the presentation, especially Saba's. Seventeen-year-old Jason Wood said hearing about "real-life" experiences made more of an impression on him. "It was real. It wasn't just someone telling you. (Saba) lived through it. He really realized how it ruined his life," said Wood, a sophomore. Junior Brianna Torpey said she was moved by Saba's story. "It was more personal when he talked about his own experience. It made it more real. I think it was really effective. Kids seemed to be really interested in it," said Torpey, 17. During a question-and-answer segment with students, Saba, who almost died twice from overdoses, was asked if he tried drugs in high school because he felt like most students feel - "like Superman." "That's how you feel," he said, "But believe me, Superman doesn't exist." |
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