Musings about being a mother, having a mother, and mourning while making a marriage work. And books, because where would we be without them?
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Thursday, October 21, 2021
Time to Talk about Suicide, especially with our children

Thursday, September 23, 2021
My Press Kit
BIO
Lanette Sweeney's debut collection, What I Should Have Said: A Poetry Memoir About Losing A Child to Addiction, was published by Finishing Line Press in August, 2021. Sweeney is grateful the book is allowing her to share two messages: first, medication-assisted treatment saves addicts’ lives and should not be stigmatized, and second, a life rich with joy and meaning is (eventually) possible after even the most devastating loss.
Sweeney’s
essays, articles, short stories and poems have appeared in daily newspapers, print
and online literary magazines (including Rattle,
Amethyst Review, Gyroscope, Tigershark, Blue Collar Review, Please
See Me, Foliate Oak Review, and Misfit Magazine), as well as in anthologies (including Prima Materia, Silkworm, and the Center for New
Americans annual review), and in textbooks, including several editions of the popular college-level women’s
studies textbook Women: Images and
Reality published by McGraw Hill. Her essays, blog posts and book reviews can be seen on her website, https://www.lanettesweeney.com
After working as a fundraiser, teacher, waitress, reporter, editor, and non-profit executive, Sweeney is grateful to now be a full-time writer thanks to her wife's support. She and her wife and their small-pet army (which consists of a dog, cat, kitten, and puppy) live in South Hadley, MA, in the house where their wedding was held 16 days before Sweeney's son overdosed. Sweeney has one surviving child, a daughter, 29, who is a teacher.
What I Should Have Said: A Poetry Memoir about Losing a Child to Addiction recounts a mother's grief, guilt, sorrow, and search for meaning after her 26-year-old son's death by overdose. The book is divided into the stages of grief, with sections on denial and depression, anger, bargaining and, eventually, acceptance. Sweeney's son's poems appear throughout the collection, often in seeming conversation with his grieving mother's words. The author hopes the book demonstrates that even the most devastating grief can result in post-traumatic growth and that medication-assisted treatment saves lives and should not be stigmatized.
Both poets and laypeople have given the book excellent reviews, calling the poems "beautifully crafted" and "poignant." Multiple reviewers noted that once they started the book, they couldn't put it down. The president of Bereaved Parents of the USA said "every grieving parent will relate" to the book and noted it helped her process her own grief about her son's death. The book can be ordered from local bookstores, Amazon, Bookshop.org or Goodreads.com.
PRESS RELEASE
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
OCTOBER 10, 2021
CONTACT: Lanette Sweeney, (845) 527-6616, lanettesweeney@gmail.com
VIRTUAL READING SCHEDULED FOR NOV. 4TH:
AS OVERDOSES
SKYROCKET, NEW BOOK OFFERS
COMFORT TO GRIEVERS, HOPE TO ADDICTS
South
Hadley, MA, USA – Following the nation’s worst year ever for overdose deaths, a
timely new poetry collection, What I
Should Have Said: A Poetry Memoir about Losing a Child to Addiction, aims
to bring comfort and encouragement to addicts and their families. The author, along with another mother and author who lost her child to addiction, will be reading from their books in a virtual event hosted by the Odyssey Bookshop on Thursday, Nov. 4th at 7 p.m. You can register for that reading here.
Lanette
Sweeney’s debut collection describes the pain of watching her son suffer with
addiction as well as her enormous grief and guilt following his overdose death
in 2016. Fortunately, the book also offers hope to families suffering a similar
loss or struggling with a child still in active addiction, as Sweeney lyrically
recounts her journey toward post-traumatic growth and grief recovery, as well
as what she’s learned can save addicts’ lives.
“I have two messages I’m eager to share with
this book,” says Sweeney: “first, that most addicts need medicine to keep them
alive, so taking medicines like Methadone and Suboxone should not be shameful;
and second, that it is possible to restore peace and joy to your life after even
the most devastating loss.”
What I Should Have
Said
was released last month by Kentucky-based publisher Finishing Line Press. The
book is organized into sections on the stages of grief and includes 20 poems by
Sweeney’s late son, Kyle Fisher-Hertz, showing his move from the innocence of
childhood to the eventual despair of his addiction.
“My
son wanted to get better,” Sweeney recalls. “He attended every recovery program
he could get into. But then he turned 26, my insurance didn’t cover him
anymore, and the Medicaid insurance he got as a replacement didn’t cover the
monthly shot that had helped him stay clean.”
Sweeney’s
son spent the week before his death pleading for help from the only recovery clinic in the state where he was then living, Nevada, but he was
refused the drug he requested, Vivitrol, which is a monthly shot that blocks
opioid receptors and reduces cravings. (A desperate addict’s quest to stay
clean long enough to get the shot is depicted in the new film Four Good Days, starring Glenn Close and
Mila Kunis.) At the time of Fisher-Hertz’s death nearly five years ago,
Medicaid in 29 states didn’t cover that medicine, whose generic name is
Naltrexone–and Fisher-Hertz, like many addicts, was reluctant to take Methadone
or Suboxone, the maintenance drugs he was offered. Instead, he died of an
overdose of street drugs three days later–less than three months after turning
26 and losing his mother’s private insurance.
“I
foolishly didn’t think he should take maintenance drugs, either.” Sweeney says.
“When he called me to say he was thinking about taking one because he didn’t
know what else to do, I stayed silent, and he knew I didn’t approve. When he
died three days later, I knew I had discouraged him from taking the one thing
that might have saved his life, and my guilt was devastating. I wish I’d known
when he was alive that he had a terminal disease that needed medicine to treat
it.”
Poet
LeslĂ©a Newman, author or editor of more than 70 books, calls Sweeney’s poems “poignant” and “beautifully crafted.” She
says she “read this collection straight through with [her] heart in [her]
throat” and adds: “Reader, prepare yourself: once you start reading What I Should Have Said, you won’t want
to stop.”
Praise
for the book comes from outside the poetry world, as well. The president of the
board of Bereaved Parents of the USA, Kathy
Corrigan, lost two sons and says “Every grieving parent will relate” to the
feelings expressed by Sweeney in this “deeply moving” and “honest” work.
Reading the collection, Corrigan says, helped her process the grief she felt
over losing her second son, who died two years ago from alcohol addiction.
Corrigan said she appreciates that the collection “sheds light on the darkness
and stigma attached to the disease of addiction and [reminds] us that our
children were/are so much more than their addiction[s].”
The
U.S. had been starting to turn the tide on overdose deaths in 2019, but then the
pandemic arrived, causing isolation, 12-step meeting cancellations, the
slashing of addiction treatment programs, new economic stresses, and fresh
grief. As a result, the monthly overdose
death rate shot up 50 percent in the early months of the pandemic, to more than
9,000 deaths a month; prior to 2020, U.S. monthly overdose deaths had never risen
above 6,300.
The
annual overdose death rate also rose to heartbreaking new heights last year;
the CDC anticipates that when the final numbers are in, more than 90,000
individuals will have died of an overdose in 2020 (80 percent from opioid
overdose) – up from about 70,000 the previous year.
Sweeney’s book can be ordered directly from the author or from local bookstores or Bookshop.org or Amazon or from the publisher at https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/what-i-should-have-said. Sweeney is available to do readings from her book and take part in panels or Q&As via Zoom or other event platforms at schools, bookstores, libraries, recovery programs, harm-reduction centers, and any other venue interested in hearing her story and words of encouragement. For more information or a review copy of the book, contact Lanette Sweeney directly at lanettesweeney@gmail.com or on her website lanettesweeney.com.
* * *
Sources
for Statistics:
https://www.commonwealthfund.org/blog/2021/spike-drug-overdose-deaths-during-covid-19-pandemic-and-policy-options-move-forward citing CDC statistics
https://www.overdoseday.com/facts-stats/ United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime.
BOOK COVER
PRESS LINKS



Thursday, September 2, 2021
Honoring Kyle by Remembering His Worst Day
Monday, August 31st, was International Overdose Awareness Day, and I marked the day with a short online event in honor of my son, Kyle David Fisher-Hertz, who died of an overdose when he was 26. This is an essay that captures much of what we covered in that event.
Last year the pandemic was not kind to addicts. A record number of Americans, more than 90,000 sons and daughters, died of a drug overdose in 2020, more than in any previous year--and 20,000 more than the previous year, when it seemed we were finally turning the tide and beginning to stem the steady increase in overdose deaths that had plagued us for the previous decade. This graph shows how fatal overdoses steadily climbed, with the previous peak passing 60,000 in 2017. The numbers rose to more than 80,000 dead the next year but dropped back down to 70,000 in 2019 before surging last year, with a huge spike in the first months after we were all sent into lockdown.
When I told my daughter I would be opening the event by saying a few words about the overdose epidemic, she wondered what new thing I could say when so much has already been said about this issue. But I believe that even though we are years into this epidemic, the two main messages I want to share in both my new book, What I Should Have Said: A Poetry Memoir about Losing a Child to Addiction, and in this essay, are still not familiar enough to most people.
The first message is that medication-assisted treatment saves lives. No one should be judged or stigmatized for taking Methadone or Suboxone or following any other medical plan to stay off street drugs. I wish I had known this myself when my son was alive. He and I wanted him to get Vivitrol, a monthly shot that blocks opioid receptors and cravings and doesn’t allow you to get high--but he had just turned 26, lost my insurance, and discovered that the state health insurance he had in Nevada didn’t cover that drug, which has the generic name Naltrexone. The clinic would only offer him Suboxone or Methadone.
My son (shown here, sober at my wedding, 16 days before he died) called me the weekend before he died to say he thought if he couldn’t get the Vivitrol shot, maybe he would just take the Suboxone they were offering him. Tragically, I maintained a stony, judgmental silence, letting him know I would be disappointed in him if he went on maintenance drugs. I thought he was “better” than that. I thought he could just stop. I didn’t realize his disease was terminal until it killed him.
Since then, I have had the opportunity to visit a methadone clinic, where I saw dozens of healthy young people run in, take their daily dose, and run back out to take their kids to daycare, to get to their jobs, to go on with their lives. If you love an addict, please know he or she has a deadly disease with an incredibly high relapse rate, as high as 97 percent without medically assisted treatment. I still think Naltrexone shots are a miracle; they now have shots that can block opioid receptors for up to six months at a time, and I hope more state insurance covers that medicine than when my son was trying to get that shot. But if the miracle shots are not an option, going on Suboxone or Methadone will provide the addicts we love and want to stay alive a bridge to wellness. We should be celebrating the people who go that route, choosing to live and giving themselves an opportunity to function again. I wish I had understood this in time to have not failed my son when he asked my advice. Instead, I believe my silence discouraged him from pursuing that solution, so instead of going back to the clinic, he got street drugs and took them until they killed him three days later.
My second message is for the millions of parents, siblings, friends, cousins and other loved ones who lost someone to an overdose in the past five years. Though early grief will shake you to your core and make you question whether you can go on, I am here to tell you you can survive and learn to carry your grief with grace if you just hang in there and practice self care like it’s your motherfucking job. You can have a life of peace and even joy after even the most profound and devastating loss. Post-traumatic growth is real. No one wants to be driven to their knees by loss and trauma, but all of us can, in time, with a lot of hard work on ourselves, allow our worst experiences to open our hearts and bring us closer to our true spiritual selves.
And now I want to say a few words about what killed my amazing, brilliant son Kyle: He died not only because he was an addict but because he cared so much about what other people thought of him that he spent the last 10 years of his life always trying to one up himself and act crazier and more death defying than he had the day before. He started rehab “only” addicted to crack, but he probably thought he wasn’t as hardcore as the other addicts were until he was as addicted as everyone else to the most deadly drug of all, so he let the other guys in rehab teach him how to shoot heroin. I have an essay on my website about toxic masculinity--which is what Kyle was demonstrating when he kept risking his life to appear cool--and how it contributed to Kyle's death
But beyond that I want to say please, if you’re a young person who hasn’t done drugs yet, please don’t let yourself be swayed by your desire to impress anyone. If you’ve done some drugs, maybe dabbled in alcohol or marijuana, but haven’t yet done the deadly trifecta (crack, meth, and heroin), please don’t try to play it cool if someone offers you one of those. Please know you are loveable without laying your life on the line to look like what someone else wants you to be. No high is worth what you will be doing to your life if you take any of those drugs. And I am a person who has enjoyed drugs myself, so I am not saying this to discourage you from pleasure. I am saying this to save your life and protect your mother from tragedy.
At the end of our event, anyone who wanted to name and let us recognize someone they loved who
died of an overdose, was invited to do so, and we wound up talking about a dozen or so other people who had died by overdose. I especially wanted to remember two of Kyle's friends, one who died four months before Kyle did, Peter Parise (left), someone Kyle admired and felt a kinship with-- and whose death probably made Kyle feel more hopeless than he already did. Our sons' connection led to a friendship between me and Pete's mom after their deaths that has meant a great deal to me as I navigated these years of grief. And Samantha Owens, a beautiful young woman with whom Kyle lived in Las Vegas for a while, both of them and their third roommate all shooting heroin together. I had hoped in the intervening years maybe Sam (below) had gotten clean, but instead she died this year of an overdose.My son, just like Pete and Sam and all the other people we remembered that night, was more than his addiction, and even though we remembered Kyle on overdose awareness day, I want him to be remembered for more than his overdose. He was an incredible friend, a wonderful brother, grandson and son, a great skier, a lover of books, a comedian, a rock climber, a doting daddy for the few months he spent in his daughter's life, a poet and humor writer, a curious conversationalist and a fearless dancer. He lit up all of our lives, and since his light went out, we have all had to struggle our way out of the darkness.
I feel blessed I was able to include more than 20 original works by Kyle in my new poetry collection about him (which is available for purchase from me, local bookstores, Bookshop or Amazon). The poems of his that his friends read showcase his talent but also show how desperate he was to get well. The fact that Kyle will never write another word and isn’t here to read his own poems aloud to us is tragic, but I am so grateful that five of his good friends agreed to gather online with 50 more of us to read and listen to his poetry. We read five poems because on September 20th of this year, Kyle will have been gone five years.
and, below, Dwight, a house manager here in Western Mass who had to call the cops on Kyle when he discovered him using heroin in the house. He drove them all crazy, but they all still loved him. They each said a little about Kyle, in words I found moving and inspiring. and then each read one of his poems. You can watch a recording of the event here: https://youtu.be/AbXbzdwd3h0
At the end of the event, Kyle's little sister, Jamie, read aloud from a text exchange she'd had with Kyle the year before he died. The words she shared (in the text displayed below) most vividly brought my son back to life and showed how smart and funny and wise he was, and why we all kept hoping he was going to be OK. I hope the event and this essay helps someone else say "Yes! That's a great idea," when their loved one talks about using medicine to help them stay clean -- because that's What I Should Have Said.

Monday, March 29, 2021
YOU CAN ORDER MY BOOK NOW!
Hello, wonderful reader friends! I am so excited that my book is suddenly, magically available for pre-sales at https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/what-i-should-have-said!

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