Adán was a man trapped in an insatiable search for euphoria. From a young age, he sought ecstasy in drugs, believing that each trip would bring him closer to the truth of his existence. He felt like an explorer in a universe where pain and joy intertwined, but reality soon proved to be a labyrinth in which he lost himself deeper and deeper.
His first experience with drugs came at the age of seventeen. A friend offered him a small packet of white powder that promised an astral journey. Adán, with his heart racing in anticipation, inhaled the substance. In an instant, everything changed. The walls of his room began to vibrate, colors intensified, and an unlimited euphoria flooded over him. He felt invincible, as if he could fly. But that sensation didn't last. Upon waking, he found himself alone, surrounded by shadows created by his own fears.
Each time he consumed, he created a new Adán: one more reckless, more audacious. Parties became rituals where madness and happiness alternated, where every line of cocaine was a rope binding him closer to his demons. Euphoria was addictive, but when he woke up, reality always hit him harder. The cycle of pleasure and pain led him to an existence where time faded away, and memories were just echoes of what he had been.
In a moment of clarity, Adán looked in the mirror and saw a stranger. The vacant gaze, sunken eyes, and pale skin reflected his true essence: a soul trapped in the snare of its own pursuit. He tried to escape that labyrinth, but each attempt only dragged him deeper into madness.
One night, after an intense party, he found himself on a rooftop. The city shimmered before him, but the beauty turned into horror. At that moment, he realized the abyss was calling him. With an ironic smile, he decided to let himself fall, embracing madness as his only companion.
Adán was an addict, caught in a cycle of self-destruction. His story intertwines with that of Kurt Cobain, an icon of rock who struggled against addiction and depression, ultimately becoming trapped in the abyss of his own mind. Cobain, like Adán, sought freedom in music, but the price was his life, leaving an echo of sadness in all those who once admired him.
"Drugs promise heaven, but hell is what they deliver."