Testimony of John Hemans |
My somewhat chequered career as a musician is documented here, in words and photos. The bands I played in had varying degrees of success, and through my career I guess I must have played just about every venue from Sydney to Perth (and all points in between!). There's a story behind each of these bands, and these days they're all like bookmarks of my life to me. In my testimony, you'll see how my life was completely revolutionised by an encounter with God. I hope my story touches you. If you'd like to contact me, drop me a line. |
..........My Testimony.......... I was brought up by Christian parents here in Australia, along with two brothers and two sisters. I went to good schools, got excellent grades up until I hit about 15, and generally had a normal, though very strict, upbringing. When I turned 14 or 15, I started to question everything my parents had taught me - I began to question the strict religious upbringing Id had, the values Id learnt, everything. I felt like I was just getting told what to believe about life, that my parents had set a course for me to follow, and that they expected me to blindly walk that course. I wasnt allowed to do a lot of things
that other kids my age could - listening to rocknroll music, watching any TV
programs that contained sex or violence, going to unsupervised parties, etc etc. At that time in Australia, the whole drugs
sub-culture from the 1960s was still going strong, and kids of my age who were
getting into this scene and alternative lifestyles thought we were finding a better and
more enlightened way of life than our parents had.
In that first year I embarked on what I
thought was a voyage of self-discovery - my friends and I would sit around
having what we thought were enlightened discussions under the influence of
various drugs - in that first year of drug use I tried pot, hash, hash oil, LSD and magic
mushrooms. Pretty soon I began to have some pretty weird
things going on inside my head - I would suffer incredible bouts of paranoia, thinking
that people were against me. A couple of times I had some pretty heavy LSD trips that I
had to be talked down from - I realise now that the effects must have been pretty close to
psychosis. I astral travelled a couple of times - floating above my body on my bed,
completely detached from the physical world. A few months later, I had a motorcycle accident, nearly losing my left leg in the process. I was in hospital for months and months, having operation after operation as the doctors tried to save my leg. All the time they pumped me full of pethidine, morphine and other narcotic painkillers, and I came close to a physical dependency at that point. I remember when I was finally released from the hospital, I was too weak to use my crutches, and my Dad had to carry me to the car to take me home.
My poor parents had been through so
much during this time, as they knew I had dabbled in the drug scene, but were not aware to
what extent. The thing was, I had discovered that there
was no enlightenment in these drugs, or in all the mystical practices and religions that
all my hip friends were into. Instead, it felt like there was this big black hole in the
centre of my being, a vacuum that kept screaming out to be filled. That hole in the centre of my being was still there, but I was starting to lose sight of any normal perspective I could have used to seek some help out of the mess. And all this time, at the back of my mind,
and at the heart of my desires, I could remember the first time I shot up heroin - that
warm wave that just enveloped my entire being, that seemed for a time at least, to put the
world where I wanted it - at my feet. As I began to move in these new circles, I discovered that people in the drug scene werent all peace, love and understanding, that terrible things happened in life, and a lot of them were done by people to each other. I was now 18, and my brush with the
hippie scene was well and truly over, as I saw a complete absence of the
ideals that the hippie movement claimed to stand for being manifested in real life.
The bass player in that band, his girlfriend and his brother were all heavily into the heroin scene, and I started hanging out with them, doing heroin occasionally at first, but mostly smoking dope and taking acid and mushrooms. But the more I hung out with them, the more heroin we did. Pretty soon I stopped taking any other drugs altogether, because I could never trust what was going to happen in my mind, whereas with heroin you always new how it would feel. The thing is, the first few times you try
heroin, you feel like the king of the world, but after that, the craving for that first
huge rush isn't satisfied as easily, and there begins the slide into addiction.
I was also starting to drop the pretence of being a casual heroin user - I even found a perverse cool in being a junkie. I was starting to associate with people who have that desperate edge to them, people whose drug addiction was the be-all and end-all of their lives. Now, also, the line between right and wrong began to blur as my need for heroin escalated. Initially I had things under control, holding down jobs occasionally, but more and more heroin became the focus of my life - I started resorting to dishonesty to pay for it, then outright theft - from my parents, friends, everyone I knew. By 1979 I was in big trouble - Id been kicked out of home, my girlfriend had nearly died from all the heroin wed been taking, and I weighed about 7 stone. As my habit got worse and worse, my dealer set me up selling for him, and I made enough money for a while, but pretty quickly it was all just going straight in my arm. After losing everything I owned, I straightened out for the first time - taking barbiturates to numb the horrific withdrawal pains. My folks let me move back in, and I found a job.
Things went OK for a while, but once youve had heroin everything else seems to pale in comparison, and that desire never seems to let you go. Pretty soon I was hanging out with my old friends again, using heroin as often as I could get it, and wandering aimlessly through life. I used heroin, cocaine and amphetamines, in
that order of preference, whenever I could, with a few short breaks now and then, for the
next 6 years. I travelled all over Australia, playing in bands, chasing sex, drugs and
rocknroll. In that time I also graduated to speedballs - heroin and cocaine
mixed together, because heroin by itself wasnt enough for me anymore. In that year alone, I had already spent close
to $100,000 on heroin and cocaine.
That was the only time in my life where
I stayed off serious drugs for any length of time - even though my wife and I divorced a
year later, I kept straight, kept my job, and just occasionally Id have a line of
coke, though I did some serious drinking in that time. Then in 1994, after 8 years of never
touching, or ever really considering touching, heroin, I woke up one morning, and I had a
craving for a speedball of heroin and cocaine. This desire, which I had thought was dead,
awoke in me like it had never been away. I lasted two weeks, and then I was into it
again, like Id never been away. I headed straight for Sydneys red light
district, and within a couple of hours I was back to being a junkie. This time I went to
desperate lengths to conceal what was going on. My girlfriend left me, though she fought
hard to keep me away from the drugs, and for the next three months I got stuck into it. I managed to stop using again, but now I had
a worse fear - the knowledge that I had no control over this thing - that though I could
fight it off successfully from time to time, it was always going to be there, and that one
day, this thing was going to kill me.
I managed to pull out of this
tail-spin, but my idea of getting it together was to become a pot dealer - I
knew so many people that liked smoking pot that I found it easy to make money from it. By
the end, I was making a steady $1500 to $2000 a week, and sometimes up to 4 or $5,000. I didnt take drugs, I drank moderately, I had it together. Then things happened to bring things to a
head - my girlfriend split up with me, and that started the ball rolling. Now something or someone was speaking to me,
right in the place where all the heroin, cocaine, amphetamines, alcohol, sex and
rocknroll had gone - that hole in my being that I could never fill. It was a devastating experience for
years, every time a bad memory had popped up, I had pushed it away, pretending not to
remember too many of the specifics of the horrible things I had done. Now though, I had no
choice and I had to face the person I had become.
At this point, a friend of mine told me
I needed to get my relationship right with God, and thats when I realised what was
going on that it was God showing me the person I had become. All I had to do was surrender. It was the hardest thing I think Ive
ever done. I had been a rebel all my life. To have to admit that you have completely made
a mess of your life is an extremely humbling thing to have to do. Im not going to tell you that its all been sweetness and light since I accepted Jesus as my personal saviour and redeemer, because its a hard and narrow road to obey God, but at the end of the day I know in my heart that its true - That God cares about every one of us, even
though we deserve nothing, and to prove it He sent his only son to be tortured, humiliated
and killed by the likes of you and I, and that that death brings us eternal life if we
just humble ourselves and ask for it. Only God can do that. Thats what God has done in me, and He is working a continual miracle in every aspect of my life. John Hemans |
Copyright: Copyright (c) 1996-2005 Michael Fackerell · · Generator: TopicTree 0.8 · Generated: 18 Mar 2010, 06:06 pm AEST · Last modified: 2005-05-22 08:08:02 · 71 ms · Treasures in jars of clay...
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