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Kitchener-Waterloo

Mom whose 2 sons died from overdoses says it's critical parents talk to their kids about drugs and addiction

Within the span of 10 years, Christine Padaric's two sons died of overdoses. Thursday is Overdose Awareness Day and she told CBC Kitchener-Waterloo she hopes people will remember those who have died, but also recognize many people are suffering silently with their addictions and need support.

Kids need a plan before something happens or theyre under the influence, Christine Padaric says

Two boys sitting on a rock beside the water. It's summer and they're wearing t-shirts and shorts and it's sunny.
Brothers Kurt, left, and Austin are pictured at a cottage in their younger years. Both died of overdoses later in life. Their mom, Christine Padaric, spoke to CBC Kitchener-Waterloo to mark International Overdose Awareness Day on Thursday. (Christine Padaric)

Christine Padaric has lived through a pain no parent would ever expect.

On April 12, 2013, her 17-year-old son Austin died of an overdose. He was at the house of a local drug dealer playing video games when someone encouraged him to snort morphine tablets. He started to show signs of an overdose, but no one called paramedics and he died.

Quin Kurtz, who pleaded guilty to manslaughter in 2015, wassentenced to two years less a day in jail and three years of probation.

Less than 10 years after Austin's death, Padaric's other son Kurt died from an overdose on Jan. 3, 2022. He was 29.

"Kurt carried so much guilt for Austin's passing. Like, he really felt that being the older brother that he somehow introduced Austin to drugs, to smoking weed," Padaric said in an interview with CBC Kitchener-Waterloo to mark International Overdose Awareness Day on Thursday.

"There was a three-year age difference between the two, but they were together all the time. They did everything together and their friends, they were intermingled. Kurt, I don't think, knew how to survive without Austin."

Teen boy and woman selfie
Christine Padaric took this selfie with her teenage son, Austin, in 2013. He died in April that year of an accidental overdose. (Christine Padaric)

'He turned into the naloxone guy'

The circumstances ofKurt's death were different, Padaric said. Kurt had social anxiety as a teen and she and her husband, Klaus, noticed Kurt withdrawing. He experimented with drugs, but he also sought help, including counselling and going to rehab.

In the last years of his life, he was a peer worker at the consumption and treatment site in downtown Kitchener.

Young man sitting on picnic table smiling for camera
Photo taken in 2020 shows Kurt at a cottage. Christine Padaric says she loves this photo of her son because 'he looks so healthy and happy.' (Christine Padaric)

"He loved working with people. He had such empathy for others and he turned into the naloxone guy," she said about the opioid rescue drug.

"He had dozens of kits in his apartment. He would get phone calls in the middle of the night from people saying that someone was overdosing and he would take a cab there."

Still, Padaric said, they were worried about Kurt.

"You try to find all the help you can get for your kids, you do everything you can, but you never feel it's enough," she said, noting she and her husband were constantly worried about Kurt relapsing and using drugs again.

Artwork showing three black ghosts hovering over an orange, yellow and green field at night with a moon in the sky
Christine says Kurt really liked to express himself through art. This piece is called Ghosts of My Past. (Christine Padaric)

Mother and sonwould have a 10 a.m. check-in from work every day and she'd go home at lunch if she hadn't heard from Kurt. When they went away, friends stopped in to see Kurt regularly.

"He hated himself as an addict, as a substance user, it really, really, really ate away at him and his self-esteem," she said.

Selfie of three adults
Christine took this selfie with her husband, Klaus, and their son Kurt at the cottage in 2021. Kurt died on Jan. 3, 2022. (Christine Padaric)

'It can happen to anybody'

Overdose Awareness Day, also called Drug Poisoning Awareness Day, is being marked with local events. The day ismeant to remember those who have died from an overdose and acknowledge the grief of the family and friends left behind. Padaric saidit's also a dayto recognize there are people suffering in silence.

Photo of teen boy
This photo of Austin was taken at Christmas in 2012 and his mom says it's one of her favourites. (Christine Padaric)

She saidit's also a dayto speak out and end the stigma around drug use. After the death of Austin, Padaric started to go into Elmira District Secondary School to talk to students about what to do in the case of an overdose.

"I figured if it can happen to my family, it can happen to anybody," she said.

"I just really felt that kids they need a plan, they need to know what to do before a circumstance happens or while they're under the influence or something."

That's a sentiment Rita Isley agrees with. The president of Wyndham House in Guelph saidit's important to talk to young people about drugs, addictions and overdoses because those conversations can have big impacts.

Woman speaks at podium, man seen in background
Rita Isley speaks during a funding announcement in Guelph on Aug. 22, when Wyndham House received federal funding to help with its youth hub program. (Kate Bueckert/CBC)

She said the big message for the awareness day is for people to know there is help out there and there are "many doors" people can go to in the community for support.

"Youth are an interesting but also important population to really keep in mind because their trajectory can change so easily with the right implementation of supports," she said.

"This is a population that for all intents and purposes on the surface looks like they're going down a really bad path, but with minimal interventions and the right supports, we can change that path and really change the direction."

Time to act

This year's theme in Kitchener for Overdose Awareness Day is: Time to remember, time to act.

The event at Victoria Park runs from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday and will include the community van operated by Sanguen, guest speakers, naloxone training, community partners, some refreshments and a moment of silence.

In Guelph, there will be a rally at city hall at 11:30 a.m. followed by speakers, a minute of silenceand a die-in at St. George's Square in the downtown core at noon.

A young woman walks by purple wooden markers in a field.
International Overdose Awareness Day is a painful, but necessary day, according to organizers and members of the community. Events have been planned in Kitchener and Guelph to mark the day. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

Padaric saidshe will be remembering her boys and hopes sharing their story will help others understand that it can happen to anyone.

"It's about knowledge. It's really about educating yourself so that you can communicate the right messages and you know how to find the help, because really you have to be your own advocate as a parent, as a friend, as a partner, you have to fight for the people that you love, to find the help for them, but in the end it's really up to them to make the decision to get help," she said.

"It's so hard to say. But for all that [Kurt's] suffered, I can only hope that that suffering is over and that he's happy and he's with his little brother."