The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Saved by my Gran

JANET RESCUES JORDAN FROM DRUG ADDICT MOTHER... NOW HE’S A DENTIST

- By Janet Boyle

GROWING up on a tough housing estate with a mother caught in the grip of heroin addiction, the prospects for Jordan Bain looked bleak.

At the age of seven, open use of heroin at his home in Milton, Glasgow, was so commonplac­e that he believed all mothers were habitually injecting it.

With no father around to help raise him, and social services stretched to the brink, it would have been all too easy for him to descend into the same chaotic world of crime and addiction that gripped many of the ’90s Trainspott­ing generation.

But, 15 years later, high-flying Jordan is about to qualify as a dentist after being rescued by his granny Janet, who encouraged him to devote hours and hours to his studies at school then university.

Jordan, 22, said: “I thought nothing of my mum disappeari­ng to the toilet to inject.

“My gran was horrified when I described in great detail what was going on at home.

“There was no way she would leave me to grow up in that environmen­t. “She rescued me. “My gran is so pleased I’m going to be a dentist and drugs didn’t ruin my life too.

“I know she could have gone up the career ladder in her own job, but she sacrificed it all. I owe her everything.”

Jordan went to the city’s Springburn Academy where, thanks to his hard work and the stable environmen­t of support offered by Janet, he got four As and a B in his Highers.

Now he’s on the verge of graduating from the University of Glasgow – its leafy surroundin­gs just a short drive from his home but in many ways a different world.

Jordan said: “People are surprised that housing schemes can produce dentists.

“I got a taxi to the dental hospital last month and the driver couldn’t believe I wasn’t a patient.

“Some people might have written the children of addicts off, but I am proof that there is life after drugs.”

Jordan never knew his dad as he’d left his mother, Caroline, before he was born.

Like many other housing estates across Scotland in the late ’80s and ’90s, Milton was caught in the grip of heroin addiction.

Crippled by high levels of unemployme­nt and with little prospect of the suffocatin­g social depravatio­n being reversed, the drug and its dealers took hold.

Fortunatel­y for Jordan, he wasn’t born addicted. He said: “I am proof that it’s possible to survive and do well.

“By some miracle I wasn’t born addicted to drugs and my mother was allowed to keep me.

“Her doctor and family hoped she would cope, but the first months of my life were dire.

“She was a single parent with a serious drug problem, I never knew my dad as he’d left before I was born.”

Thankfully Jordan’s gran Janet was able to step into the void created by addiction, and give him the opportunit­y to thrive.

He added: “Heroin became my mum’s first priority and her life spiralled out of control.

“When my gran and aunt Donna discovered I was being looked after by a complete stranger they intervened. They waited until she was out buying drugs and I was taken back to gran’s.”

His mum promised to stop taking drugs and Jordan was allowed to return home at weekends.

But, it soon became obvious she wouldn’t be able to break free of addiction.

Jordan said: “At seven I thought injecting drugs was what normal mums did.

“When my gran realised the extent of the problem, the use of drugs in my home, I was never allowed to return and I lost touch withmum.

“She lives near me but we rarely see each other.”

With the security of his loving gran, Jordan began to blossom at school.

Sitting on her mantelpiec­e is a touching picture of a little smiling Jordan, graduating from nursery.

Perched on his head is a scholar’s cap carefully made with paper and cardboard. In his hands he clasps a pretend university scroll.

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 ??  ?? Jordan gives gran Janet a big hug to thank her for being his rock from his earliest years to graduation.
Jordan gives gran Janet a big hug to thank her for being his rock from his earliest years to graduation.
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