I don’t see discussing the possibility - based on prior history- denigrating. Most of us are careful to state *IF* she relapsed, but most posts I’ve seen are open to other possibilities.
A year or two ago, a young man from my hometown disappeared from his college campus approx. 70 miles away. He was last seen on video in the wee hours riding his bike on a road that leads off campus. He visited home a week or so earlier for the winter break. Friends, family reported he was in good spirits. Doing well in school.
Initial thoughts were that he was a victim of a crime. (University located in a major metropolitan area.) Since he was riding late at night, many theorized that he was struck by a drunk driver and left roadside or, worse, hidden.
We later learned that in during his adolescence, he struggled with- and was treated for - depression. Everyone close to him thought that was behind him. Knowing this information added to information used during a search. The young man tragically was found in a deer stand in the woods. Coroner ruled it a self inflicted gunshot wound.
Had we not learned of his past struggles which clearly did not define him, searchers would still have their eyes focused on the ground, in ditches and culverts, rather than in the trees where he was ultimately found.
Exploring the possibility of drug relapse (or in the case I mentioned, mental illness) doesn’t denigrate, but rather shines a light on what many people feel they need to hide. It’s time to remove the stigma or addiction and mental illness and let those know who suffer from either that they are not disposable, they are not invisible, nor are they forgotten. JMO