Pubdate: Thu, 20 Jan 2005 Source: Register, The (MA) Copyright: 2005, Tri-Town Transcript Contact: http://www2.townonline.com/barnstable/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3597 Author: Joe Burns MUSEUM OFFERS OPTIONS FOR RECOVERING ADDICTS Not too long ago Darrell Gray was looking at a 2 1/2-year-jail sentence, but on Tuesday Gray was at the Cape Cod Museum of Art looking at works from its collection and at a drug and alcohol-free future. The reason for Gray's turnaround was the Gosnold BAND Drug Court Treatment Program. BAND is the acronym for Barnstable Action for New Directions Program. It was created by Barnstable District Court Presiding Judge Joseph Reardon in conjunction with Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O'Keefe and Ray Tomasi, president of Gosnold, which provides treatment for substance abuse. "I had my third OUI ... and I was looking to reduce my jail time," Gray says. "I went into drug court thinking I would just do this program and beat the jail time and what it's done is change my life." Gray was not alone in seeing his path turned around by the program "I was doing really bad things before I came in here and now there's nothing but positive things in my life," says Shannon Treanor, who like Gray was one of 25 to 30 men and women who came to the Dennis museum as part of their court-mandated sentence. The purpose of the visit was to give them an opportunity to see beyond the limits that substance abuse has placed upon them. "What we're trying to do is help them create a dream in their lives," says BAND director Jud Phelps. "We're trying to get them to think about life in a different way. One of the ways we like to do that is to expose them to different cultural activities" BAND case manager George Gritzbach saw this as a way of bringing joy back into their lives. "If you take people who were actively addicted and take drugs out of their lives you have to fill up that hole," Gritzbach says. Sitting down to a lunch of ham sandwiches, Lays potato chips and Poland Springs bottled water, they relaxed as Gritzbach, an accomplished musician, set the tone with his guitar. After lunch they were given a painting demonstration by Robert Douglas Hunter, who used it as an opportunity to draw parallels between art and life. "Focus on the details - not only in painting but in all aspects of life," Hunter says, advising his audience to "keep it as simple as possible for as long as possible." Following the demonstration all were given a guided tour of the museum. Reardon, who addressed the group earlier, says the museum program was just as he had hoped it would be. "It's a dimension in life that we wouldn't get in court," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager