Reid, who prefers to be known only by his first name, said his drug problem started when he was 16. He found an old prescription of 5mg Percocet from his dad’s desk drawer. He took four from that bottle.

According to Reid, that was all it took to send him looking around the house for more painkiller prescriptions. “After a year and a half I ate every prescription in my house, replacing them with Tylenol or something,” Reid said.

Before that, he was a well-rounded high school student. He played every sport his school had to offer and received good grades. According to Reid, he was from an upper-middle class family, with both parents at home. He didn’t have any more strife than any of his friends. “Just normal teenage stuff,” he said.

At first, he said, his drug use was recreational. But when he moved away to college things changed: he had found a dealer. By age 20 he had spent $20,000 on OxyContin alone.

After realizing he was heading down a bad path, Reid decided to stop using altogether. Then his best friend Meghan died after being stuck by a vehicle. After three months of sobriety, Reid relapsed and was worse off than before, he said.

“One day my dealer didn’t have Oxy, and only had heroin. I didn’t really want to get it because I was scared as f–k of heroin,” Reid said. “But when you’re at rock bottom you do dumb shit so I figured, ‘f—k it, my life is awful anyways, I might as well try it’.”

Soon, after he saw a friend shooting up OxyContin, and he began shooting up as well. He spent a majority of his senior year of college shooting up, until he ran out of money.

Reid’s story is not uncommon. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, painkillers are the most commonly abused drug in America. Their research suggests that painkiller addiction is the open door for heroin abuse.

According to Foundation for a Drug Free world, next to marijuana, painkillers are the most commonly used drugs amongst teenagers. “One in 10 high school seniors in the United States admits to abusing prescription painkillers,” the organization reports.

Furthermore, doctors and rehabilitation therapists report that prescription painkiller abuse is one of the most difficult addictions to treat.

The Partnership for a Drug Free America explains that The Medicine Abuse project is a five- year national action campaign aimed to prevent half a million teens from prescription drug abuse. They published a story about a fictional girl named Katie, who is addicted to painkillers and turns to heroin to feed her addiction.

The story, which also comes as an infographic, is a tool which uses statistics and facts about prescription drug abuse to help parents, educators and communities as a whole understand the plight of prescription drug abuse.

The PDFA website offers suggestions for parents on how to talk to their children about drugs and drug abuse. Addicts often steal unused prescriptions of other people, found in medicine cabinets and drawers. So the PDFA website tells parents to make sure their prescriptions are secure and in a place where only they know the location.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), stress is often a contributing factor to an addict’s relapse. NIDA explains that addiction can be treated with “evidence-based interventions” that help people to stop using drugs. Treatment is not a cure though, and only through consistent treatment can an addict gain control of their life.

According to NIDA, treatment begins with detox, or the body clearing itself of the drug. Since drug detox can be extremely painful for the patient, it is often done in a hospital setting, with doctors administering various medications.

After the detox process, it is recommended that the patient stay in a long term rehab facility. Here, where the patient receives the actual treatment they need in therapy to find the roots of their drug use, and to find new ways to cope with stressors in their life.

The NIDA website explains that people cannot stop using drugs on their own because “repeated drug use changes the brain.” This includes the part of the brain that enables you to exhibit self-control.

Even if a person desires to quit, the rewiring in the brain makes quitting alone very difficult. NIDA also lists step by step how to find affordable treatment, not before stating that the first and most important step is asking for help.

Eventually, Reid, 23, realized he couldn’t keep going on the way he is, so he asked his parents for help. Afraid of the stigma, he didn’t admit to his parents that he was addicted to heroin, opting instead to tell them it was painkillers.

He felt as though his parents didn’t understand his problem or have the resources to help him, so he decided to do it on his own. He quit cold turkey. Reid described the withdrawal as his “soul getting ripped out.”

“It’s something I never want to experience again,” Reid added. After 70 days of sobriety, he relapsed after his father left his painkiller prescription on the kitchen counter. Reid ingested the entire bottle.

Reid began to understand that chronic pain, which heroin has numbed him from, has made it difficult to stop using. After receiving the diagnosis for his chronic pain, he was able to manage it properly and stopped using drugs.

When he was using, he attributed his drug use to “just liking to get high.” After seeing counselors, Reid says he is learning more and more about himself and his addiction. He has learned that it wasn’t about “just liking to get high,”; instead, drug use was due to his depression and issues with low self-esteem, he said. “I was just so broken, and I still am to a degree, that I couldn’t see the truth,” Reid said.

On day 11 of sobriety he decided to get a shot called Vivitrol, from his doctor. It makes him incapable of being drunk or getting high. He now goes to a rehab group once a week, while he finishes his business degree in graduate school. He also attends therapy and while he still has his ups and downs, he does not see himself using anytime soon, he said.

Now 79 days clean, Reid said he just wants to move on with his life. “I won’t let heroin addiction ruin my life for good,” Reid said. “I won’t give up, I just want to be happy and enjoy my life,”