Posts tagged ‘Magistrate’

Jesse had an exceptionally hard time maintaining a job. Indeed, because of his lassitude and lack of motivation, he was jobless far more regularly than he was gainfully employed. And when he did get employment, he had a particularly hard time getting to work when his shift started, he typically received less than positive performance evaluations, and he called off sick so many times that he regularly got fired three or four weeks after he began working. Not unexpectedly, one of the consequences of Jesse’s less than stellar work history was the fact that he was virtually without a dime almost on an everyday basis.

Regardless of Jesse’s less than positive employment record and financial laxity, however, in some way he made it his business to drink a great deal on a daily basis.

So it came as no big shock when Jesse received a third DWI. When he went before the court, the judge stated to Jesse that his alcohol-related conduct was disgraceful and, consequently, he was going to sentence Jesse to serve ten months behind bars.

Time In The Municipal Jail To Think About The Demoralizing Consequences of Abusive Drinking

During his time while locked up in jail, Jesse was expected to learn more about alcohol facts, about the harmful consequences of hazardous drinking, and he was expected to get alcohol rehab. The magistrate highlighted the fact that unless Jesse receives professional alcohol rehab and learns how to live an alcohol-free life, he will most probably be spending quite a bit of his time placed behind bars.

Jesse said that he grasped what the magistrate was pronouncing but he still claimed that placement in the county jail was not the most realistic punishment. The judge saw things in an entirely different way and said that it was his professional duty to keep alcohol dependent persons off the streets who drive and drink and who receive a DUI. To support this statement, the magistrate listed some long-standing, highly researched alcohol statistics that stressed some of the adverse consequences that are associated with abusive and hazardous drinking.

Even though Jesse comprehended that he drank in a hazardous and excessive manner, he never believed that he was an individual who was addicted to alcohol. So it was a real bombshell when Jesse started to experience alcohol withdrawal symptoms approximately five hours after getting placed behind bars.

To manage his alcohol withdrawal symptoms in a safe and sound manner, Jesse was taken to a drug and alcohol treatment hospital for alcohol detox and then returned to the city jail. While in jail Jesse undertook alcohol therapy but due to the fact that he got this therapy as something that was forced upon him, he was unsuccessful in taking ownership of his excessive and hazardous drinking.

When his time in jail was over, the magistrate without uncertainty announced to Jesse that he would be under careful observation and would be mandated to take random breath alcohol tests.

Jessie’s Hazardous Drinking Stops Him From Living in a Productive and Mature Manner

After hearing how Jesse failed to take ownership of his drinking circumstances and how he reluctantly followed the therapy code of behavior while behind bars, the judge knew that it was basically a matter of time before he would be seeing Jesse once again in court about his abusive and irresponsible drinking behavior. As the magistrate reflected on Jesse’s circumstance, he couldn’t help but think about how some individuals never use their intellect and discover how to live in an adult and accountable manner.

An Old Relationship Motivates and Inspires Jesse to Totally Change His Life

But something happened in Jesse’s life that completely changed his harmful lifestyle. One day when he was at the grocery store buying cigarettes, he met Alice, a girl he hadn’t seen since the third grade. After exchanging pleasantries, Alice openly told Jesse that due to her alcohol and drug addiction she was fortunate to be alive.

When Jesse asked her what happened to change her life, she explained to Jesse that when her cousin Jackie passed away from a drug overdose, this help her see the destructive and devastating life she had been living.

She stressed the point that the first thing she did after her cousin’s funeral was to begin going back to the church she attended when she was in junior high school. That was twelve years ago and with the help, support, and guidance of her preacher and other people who attended her parish, she began going to Alcoholics Anonymous and she also got alcohol and drug rehabilitation at the free clinic. Alice told Jesse that despite a few rough moments, she is at last on the road to long term sobriety and feeling a sense of happiness and joy for the first time since she was a young adult. When Jesse accepted Alice’s invitation to attend her church she was pleasantly surprised. After going to roughly five or six sermons, for the first time in his adult life, Jesse started thinking that perhaps there was hope for him and that he could at long last address his drug and alcohol problems and begin living a more successful and healthy life.

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