Imagine you’re climbing, up and up, searching for the top. You don’t know how close you are or if you’re in the right place; it’s so dark, you just want to see. After a couple years you’ve slowed your climb, you’re tired and there’s no point. You’ll be left in the dark forever. One day you feel multiple pairs of hands, they’re pulling you up, and you’re blinded with harsh white light. You almost believe it happened in an instance. It’s apparent that you can’t ever go back, yet all you want is to go back; to reverse time. Then you blink, suddenly you’re falling, searching for something to grab onto. You’re falling back into the dark. Yet now some light is following you, one-third of the darkness once surrounding you replaced with the light. You’re falling for a day, for a moment you thought that your light exposure wouldn’t change, you’re able to reflect.
Roughly 28 hours passes of falling until suddenly you fall flat on your back. Bounced like a trampoline, you’re back to the light. Double the light is blinding you, you’re pushed again. Just like last time you fall, but this time two-thirds of the darkness is now replaced in light. You search again for something to hold on to. You’re able to catch hold of something. Now you're …show more content…
Therefore, I primarily started my research on Gale, looking up different components of my topic. I did however find one article on Issues and Controversies. I created my works cited from my sources and started to create my parentheticals. Whilst thoroughly reading and annotation I began to see addiction in a new light. I realized my passion towards learning, and researching this topic would help me throughout the creation of my I-Search paper. During my research on the effects of opioid addiction, the most intriguing things I discovered include different problems and syndromes, the statistics of usage with mental illness, and the effects of opioids on the