Tag: celebrities

  • Kim Kardashian West Ditches Xanax, Ambien For CBD To Help Her Sleep

    Kim Kardashian West Ditches Xanax, Ambien For CBD To Help Her Sleep

    It’s the only way the mogul can wind down and sleep through the stress.

    Kim Kardashian West is a busy person. Between Keeping Up With the Kardashians, managing several businesses, raising four kids with musician Kanye West, and even meeting with Trump to speak on behalf of non-violent drug offenders, some may wonder how she handles all the stress.

    “How do I do it all? It is exhausting. I just say CBD. [laughs] But I do. I really that has gotten me through a lot,” Kardashian, 38, told People.

    CBD, or cannabidiol, is a chemical compound extracted from the same marijuana plants that many people smoke, eat, and vape to get high. However, CBD products lack the ingredient in marijuana that gets people high, THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), which CBD users, including Kardashian, actually don’t want to consume.

    “That’s not my thing. I got into CBD a few months ago. It’s saved my life. Even to sleep at night. I like the gummies,” confessed Kardashian. “I will just use a little bit and fall asleep [laughs].”

    In fact, she’s ditched some traditional stress management and sleep aid medications in favor of the stuff. “I don’t think I would take a Xanax or an Ambien again,” she proclaimed.

    The Rise Of CBD

    CBD has gained steam as of late, with many claiming that not only can it relax people’s weary minds, it can also help suppress cravings for people in addiction recovery. Even CVS is planning to carry CBD products in 800 locations.

    It would have been easy for Kardashian to stand by and reap the benefits of public, and government, opinion turning towards the legalization of marijuana and its extracts, but she did not. Kardashian has personally fought for the freedom of not one, but two low-level drug offenders.

    In June 2018, she personally met with Trump to commute the sentence of Alice Marie Johnson, who served time for passing messages on the phone to help drug suppliers and dealers communicate. Even Kardashian was surprised by the magnitude of her own success.

    “I spoke to the president… He let me know what was going to happen [with Johnson] and he was going to sign the papers right then and there and she could be released that day,” she recounted. “I didn’t know, does that happen right away? Is there a process? What is it? So he was going to let her go. He told me she can leave today.”

    She did it again for Jeffrey Stringer in May this year as a part of her vow to affect greater change in U.S. drug policy.

    “It started with Ms. Alice, but looking at her and seeing the faces and learning the stories of the men and women I’ve met inside prisons I knew I couldn’t stop at just one,” West wrote on a Twitter. “It’s time for REAL systemic change.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Demi Moore: Sobriety Lets Me Experience Life

    Demi Moore: Sobriety Lets Me Experience Life

    The “Ghost” actress details her journey to sobriety and her mother’s battle with addiction in her new memoir. 

    Actress Demi Moore is able to fully experience life now that she’s sober, according to the cover story of the October issue of Harper’s Bazaar.

    In the interview, she revealed that she has struggled with substance abuse for a long time, first getting sober in her 20s, but found herself struggling again in her 40s. In 2012, a woman called EMS on behalf of Moore, who seemed to be having a seizure after smoking an unknown substance.

    “She smoked… something… It’s not marijuana but it’s similar to incense,” the panicked woman said in the 911 call.

    Now, in her 50s, she is back on the sober train.

    “In retrospect, what I realized is that when I opened the door [again], it was just giving my power away,” Moore explained. “I guess I would think of it like this: It was really important to me to have natural childbirth because I didn’t want to miss a moment. And with that I experienced pain,” she added. “So part of being sober is, I don’t want to miss a moment of life, of that texture, even if that means being in—some pain.”

    Childhood Trauma

    Moore is set to release her memoir, Inside Out, soon. In it, she writes about her traumatizing experiences growing up with her mother who struggled with her own substance abuse problems. In the book, Moore recounted a time in which she was forced into a position where she had to revive her own mother after an overdose.

    “The next thing I remember is using my fingers, the small fingers of a child, to dig the pills my mother had tried to swallow out of her mouth while my father held it open and told me what to do,” Moore wrote. “Something very deep inside me shifted then, and it never shifted back. My childhood was over.”

    Breaking The Cycle

    Now sober, she credits her three children, Rumer, Scout and Tallulah, and their father, ex-husband Bruce Willis, for helping her get her head on straight.

    “My daughters offered me an opportunity to start to change the generational pattern. To be able to break the cycles,” she revealed.

    Last year, she spoke at a Women’s Recovery House event where she was being honored.

    “Early in my career, I was spiraling down a path of real self-destruction, and no matter what successes I had, I just never felt good enough. I had absolutely no value for myself,” she said.

    “And this self-destructive path, it very quickly brought me to a real crisis point… Two people, who I barely knew, stepped up… and they presented me with an opportunity—that was more like an ultimatum—unless I was dead, that I better show up.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Toni Braxton’s Niece Died From Heroin, Fentanyl Intoxication At 24

    Toni Braxton’s Niece Died From Heroin, Fentanyl Intoxication At 24

    The Grammy award-winning singer’s niece passed away in late April. 

    Lauren Braxton, niece of renowned singer Toni Braxton, died of “heroin and fentanyl intoxication” at the age of 24 years old, according to the Chief Medical Examiner’s Office in Baltimore, Maryland.

    The specific manner in which Lauren died remains “undetermined.”

    Law enforcement, responding to a 911 call placed at roughly noon on Monday, April 29th, found Lauren unresponsive. Paramedics at the scene declared her dead.

    She was the daughter of Toni’s brother, Michael Conrad Braxton Junior. Toni herself was out of country at the time of Lauren’s death, attending the Tobago Jazz Festival in Trinidad and Tobago.

    “R.I.P. to my amazing niece Lauren “Lo Lo” Braxton…I’m still in disbelief and so very heartbroken Love you…always auntie “Te Te,” wrote Toni in an Instagram post mourning her niece’s death.

    The Braxton Family Posted Tributes Online

    Other members of the Braxton clan mourned Lauren’s death.

    “God sent me another angel! Rest in Heaven Lauren ‘LoLo’ Braxton,” wrote Trina Braxton in her own tribute post.

    The Braxton family shares the spotlight on their television show, Braxton Family Values. Toni, Michael, and Trina appear on the show alongside sisters Traci, Towanda, and Tamar.

    Tamar also took to Instagram to express sadness at the loss, sharing that this was the first time she has experienced the death of a family member in an Instagram live broadcast. The hit came at an especially bad time for Tamar, who is touring while still making appearances on Braxton Family Values

    “I’ve been M.I.A. because I just cannot bring myself to post about my niece. Like, I just can’t do it,” she said in her four-minute Instagram live video. “But what I did want to say is I want to thank everyone for sending their condolences.”

    As a result of the emotional stress and the busy schedule, Tamar announced she would not attend Lauren’s funeral service.

    Tamar Braxton Announces She Won’t Attend Lauren’s Funeral 

    “I don’t want my sisters or my family to get upset with me, but the things that’s been going on — this is the first time that anybody in my family has passed. Nobody tell you about going to the damn funeral. I don’t have time going to the funeral,” she continued in the video. “I’m still drained from that… It’s a lot. Everything happens in God’s divine order and you’ve got to respect it and praise him anyway.”

    Instagram users did not like Tamar’s reasoning.

    “Get..your a— up and go to the funeral for 2 hours then get back in your bed. I’m not hearing this excuse,” wrote one user.

    On Lauren’s Instagram account, users and fans have left messages of condolence by the thousands.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Bam Margera Shares His Rehab Struggles Through Social Media

    Bam Margera Shares His Rehab Struggles Through Social Media

    The long-struggling skateboard star aired his frustrations with rehab on the Internet, letting all his fans see how tough rehab can be.

    Bam Margera, the former star of Jackass, is struggling with the confines of his rehabilitation. As reported in The Fix, Bam entered rehab for a third time on January 2, 2019.

    Margera has struggled with drugs and alcohol since his youth, and the death of close friends from addiction has been a destructive force in his life. Ryan Dunn, a co-star of Jackass and one of Margera’s best friends, died in an alcohol-fueled, fiery car crash in Pennsylvania on June 20, 2011, alongside his friend Zachary Hartwell.

    Bam Margera has taken to Instagram to filter his emotions while in rehab this third time. “Writing is one thing to do in rehab,” is the caption of the below post, published in Livewire:

    Dear Cocksuckers,

    I have spent enough time grieving over Ryan Dunn through alcohol. I’m 39 years old, the party is over. I don’t plan on drinking anymore. I have wasted too much time at the bar and all my friends who needed decades of help are now sober. I would like to join the sober parade. I hear the stories of other rehab patients telling me about there [sic] weeks or months of horrible detox. Well guess how many days of detox I had? ZERO!

    I am sick of people always thinking I’m drunk, crazy or fucked up. So if you plan on calling me to tell me that, you can go fuck yourself instead. I’m not going to suck anyone’s dick to stay on [skateboard company] Element and or prove that I am sober. I am sober. So keep printing BAM [skateboard] decks or don’t. Plant a tree or go bite the big one, every day is Earth day!

    Margera’s next Instagram post was as direct and emphatic:

    To whom it may concern,

    1. I don’t do well with not being allowed to Facetime my wife and kid
    2. I don’t do well with not being able to answer important calls with important people
    3. I don’t do well with not being able to go with everyone else to an outside AA meeting.
    4. I don’t do well with not being allowed to use the gym.

    I don’t understand why I can’t go on the Interweb like everyone else.

    1. My eyes hurt from reading, my wrist hurts from writing, ’cause there is nothing else to do.

    Recovery often involves relapse and it definitely involves struggling through identity and pain, so perhaps Margera’s open discussion of his personal issues is one step closer toward health and sobriety. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kim Kardashian On A Mission To Free More Non-Violent Drug Offenders

    Kim Kardashian On A Mission To Free More Non-Violent Drug Offenders

    Following her initial success, the reality TV star is gearing up to convince the Trump administration to do it again on a larger scale.

    Kim Kardashian West managed to commute the life sentence of Alice Marie Johnson, a non-violent drug offender, with a single meeting at the White House.

    The 37-year-old reality television star is back to present the case of Chris Young, 30, who received life in prison for drug possession after three strikes.

    However, this time she is expanding the scope, calling for a systematic change to stop drug criminals from receiving extreme sentences at a listening session headed by Jared Kushner.

    “It started with Ms. Alice, but looking at her and seeing the faces and learning the stories of the men and women I’ve met inside prisons I knew I couldn’t stop at just one,” West wrote on a Twitter post with photos of the meeting. “It’s time for REAL systemic change.”

    West spoke about Young’s case on the Wrongful Conviction podcast, sharing that Young has already been in prison for 10 years at this point.

    “Yesterday I had a call with a gentleman that’s in prison for a drug case, got life. It’s so unfair… It was just a crazy—there’s so many people like him,” she told the podcast’s host, Jason Flom. “His prior conviction to get him to his three strikes was marijuana and then marijuana with less than half a gram of cocaine.”

    Summing up all the drugs that Young was sentenced for, Flom calculated that the total weight of all the drugs Young was serving a life sentence for weighed less than three pennies.

    West also revealed in the interview that the judge who presided over Young’s case, Kevin Sharp, actually stepped down from his position because he felt the life sentence was “so wrong … [Sharp] was like, ‘I’m gonna make this right. I’m gonna step down and I’m gonna fight to get him out.

    West has reportedly been in touch with Kushner regarding minimum sentences for drug offenders. This new battle is likely to be long-fought, unlike her first success in freeing Johnson.

    “I spoke to the president … He let me know what was going to happen [with Johnson] and he was going to sign the papers right then and there and she could be released that day,” she recounted. “I didn’t know, does that happen right away? Is there a process? What is it? So he was going to let her go. He told me she can leave today.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Relapsing While Famous: Demi Lovato, Stigma, and Compassion

    Relapsing While Famous: Demi Lovato, Stigma, and Compassion

    “We would typically not blame a patient with a chronic medical condition for their problem; nor imbue the patient with shame over their offending organ—why do we seem to do this with addiction?”

    The news that Demi Lovato was hospitalized of a suspected drug overdose has sent her celebrity friends and fans into overdrive; they are full of praise and well wishes for the singer.

    The support offered has been a beautiful response to witness, and this outpouring of encouragement is the exact caring that Lovato needs right now.

    This overwhelmingly positive response is a very different reaction than we normally associate with people falling off the wagon. Our society has painted the ordinary (non-celebrity) person with an addiction—whether it be to drugs, alcohol, sex or some other negatively perceived behavior—who loses their sobriety as a monster, as someone who cannot fix themselves, as a loser, as an undisciplined and unhealable soul.

    How many Internet memes have been generated that show the unforgiving and unflattering face of addiction? How many ill-conceived jokes about addicts relapsing have you heard? How often do you see mockery of those who have lost their fight? Or a sense of them being not strong enough to withstand the urges we all face?

    But the reality is that relapses are oftentimes part of the process, even for those who have spoken about their recovery. Just because someone has stood up and celebrated their recovery does not mean they will never possibly have a setback.

    Demi Lovato has been open about sharing her struggles through addiction, eating disorders and bipolar disorder. In her music (her song “Sober” details her ongoing struggle with sobriety), her interviews and social media accounts, Lovato has never shied away from speaking her truth. She is proud to be a mental health advocate and has spoken about how she knows her music has helped other young women struggling with some of the same issues that she has.

    Lovato’s openness in sharing her fight and the help her art has provided for others is all the more remarkable considering she was on the Disney Channel when she first entered rehab. There were many pressures and expectations upon her young shoulders and no one would have blamed her for wanting to keep that part of her life private.

    But admitting that the struggle continues after a setback can be the hardest part. Often, as a culture, we are not gung ho on offering people second chances, and especially not third or fourth chances.

    What’s that famous saying? Hurt me once, shame on you. Hurt me twice, shame on me.

    As a society, we can be unforgiving when it comes to people relapsing, but we seem to be much more sympathetic and forgiving with celebrities who struggle with addiction than we are with our ordinary peers.

    There is an unwritten social contract that we follow with celebrities that allows them to loom larger in our minds than normal, everyday people. We see them as larger than life while at the same time feeling intimately connected to them, as though they are family. We feel we know them.

    And we do know them when they share their personal demons with us. We recognize our own struggles and feel buoyed up by their example of openness and honesty.

    Could Lovato’s suspected relapse be an opening for a new understanding of the addiction cycle and conversation about the role of relapse in recovery? Perhaps her experience can shine a light on why no one deserves to be stigmatized for their illness.

    Of course, this goes for all mental health conditions, whether the diagnosis is addiction, bipolar disorder, depression, schizophrenia or others. Historically, our culture has stigmatized people with mental illness so that they feel embarrassed or that they need to hide their condition. It is only in recent decades that more individuals have been brave enough to come forward and speak about their struggles.

    Lovato’s overdose can serve as an example and a beacon to help people understand that addiction and other mental health issues are illnesses which aren’t always cured on the first, second or even third try.

    The fact that wealthy celebrities, who often have the best treatments and practitioners at their fingertips, still suffer relapses shows us how devastating mental health conditions can be. How can we expect our neighbors—who have those same diagnoses but may be struggling to make ends meet—to fare any better than our most celebrated and privileged?

    Many individuals prefer to suffer in silence rather than seek help because of this prejudice. They would rather live with often debilitating diseases rather than expose themselves to the potential stigma that comes with admitting they need help.

    What can we do to help alleviate the suffering of those around us?

    We can read and learn more about addiction and how difficult the road is to recovery and we can work to understand that the road is not always without bends and turns and sometimes brief exits.

    “Research has consistently shown addiction to be a chronic/relapsing disease, where multiple treatment episodes are often necessary, and that recovery may be a cumulative and progressive (non-linear) process,” says Dr. David Greenfield, Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at University of Connecticut Medical School and a specialist in addiction medicine. “We would typically not blame a patient with a chronic medical condition for their problem; nor imbue the patient with shame over their offending organ—why do we seem to do this with addiction?”

    We can have compassion for those who struggle and sometimes fall in their recovery, which will help alleviate their feelings of shame. For those closest to us, we can be supportive without enabling them or being codependent. The celebrity outpouring of love and caring through social media is an example of how compassion can be expressed through this modern tool.

    But Lovato’s friends are not the only ones sharing the love; her fans are sending messages of support, too.

    How Demi Lovato speaks to the public about her reported relapse can have real consequences for the greater conversation society needs to have. Hopefully, she will use her celebrity status to continue the dialogue with her fans about addiction; at the same time, she may express a need for privacy and time for reflection.

    The real opportunity for change will occur around the water coolers at work or on our social media feeds. When we can openly discuss mental health conditions—not as signs of weak moral character or evidence of being less than or incapable—but as true illnesses which require assistance from all corners—financial, family and friends, and sociocultural—we will then be truly supporting not only the celebrities amongst us, but our neighbors and ourselves as well.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • YouTube Creators Detail Their Mental Health Struggles

    YouTube Creators Detail Their Mental Health Struggles

    “My life just changed so fast. My anxiety and depression keeps getting worse and worse. This is all I ever wanted, and why…am I so unhappy? It doesn’t make any sense. It’s stupid. It is so stupid.”

    For many, having a YouTube channel with millions of subscribers would be a dream come true. From the outside, it looks like a fun way to avoid having a real job and rake in a ton of money. But it’s certainly not as easy of a life as it looks. There’s a lot of pressure to keep cranking out content to keep your channel going, and there’s no promise of a steady income.

    As Engadget reports, a number of YouTube creators have been speaking out about their mental health struggles. One YouTube creator, Elle Mills, who has over one million subscribers, posted a video called “Burnt Out at 19,” where she said, “My life just changed so fast. My anxiety and depression keeps getting worse and worse. This is all I ever wanted, and why the fuck am I so unfucking happy? It doesn’t make any sense. It’s stupid. It is so stupid.” 

    Many YouTube creators also feel the pressure of having to constantly crank out content without a break. Jacques Slade, whose channel has close to one million subscribers, tried to take several days off and relax, but he panicked. “I don’t have content for the next four or five days,” he said to himself. “What’s that gonna do to me? What’s that gonna do to my bottom line? When I come back, are people still gonna watch my videos?” 

    Where people with “regular” jobs can count on a regular paycheck, people with YouTube channels make money depending on how many ads their videos have, the length of the videos, and how many people are tuning in. With Google’s ad guidelines, videos can be removed for trivial reasons, which can cut down on a creator’s income. And it isn’t just the pressure of cranking out new videos that can take its toll. There’s also the fear of not staying relevant with a very fickle audience.

    As Karen North, a professor of communication at USC explains, “For YouTubers, the entire relationship [with their audience] is based on what they upload. Therefore there’s a tremendous amount of pressure to maintain not just the quality but the image that they manufacture on a daily basis… [If someone is] absent due to illness or vacation for a few days, audiences want entertainment, and they won’t just wait for next week’s episode. Instead they’re going to go search for something else to fill their time.”

    One full-time YouTube creator, Sam Sheffer, still recommends taking mental health breaks from social media, “even if that means not uploading for two weeks. As long as you do things with the right intent and come back strong, things will work out.”

    To try and make YouTube a healthier environment for creators, the company has now set up a $4.99 membership fee for some channels and others can sell merchandise from their pages to boost their income as well. (You have to have at least 100,000 members to charge the membership fee, and you have to have over 10,000 subscribers to sell merchandise.)

    There has also been an effort to provide YouTube creators with mental health services, and there have also been support groups at events like the VidCon conference.

    One YouTube creator says, “I’d like to see YouTube take a more active and actionable role in helping creators outside of the platform, which itself still needs a lot of work.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Puddle of Mudd’s Wes Scantlin Celebrates 11 Months Sober

    Puddle of Mudd’s Wes Scantlin Celebrates 11 Months Sober

    Though his past is plagued with substance-fueled meltdowns, Scantlin is ready to stay clean and move on.

    Wes Scantlin, the lead singer of the band Puddle of Mudd, is celebrating 11 months sober following his public struggle with substance abuse.

    “The last year has been… Getting out of incarceration and then going to CRI-Help in Burbank, California, in North Hollywood, that was awesome — it was really great,” Scantlin said in an interview with Rock Titan. “I’m 11 months sober now almost to the day, and I feel great. And we’re just playing shows and rocking.”

    Prior to these clean 11 months, Scantlin was raising all kinds of trouble with the law. Last September he was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport for trying to bring on board a BB gun, resulting in being banned from LAX unless he absolutely had to travel for work. In January of 2016 he was arrested for allegedly breaking into a house he used to live in and vandalizing it. Compounding his legal troubles, he managed to miss court dates for both of these incidents.

    Scantlin also had a drug- and alcohol- fueled meltdown on stage during a March 2016 concert in England. In a video of the event, Scantlin can be seen sitting on a wooden chair shirtless and flicking off his band mates as they abandoned him on stage. He rambled into the microphone as the crowd, growing increasingly annoyed with his antics, yelled expletives at him. Eventually, someone cut off his microphone but the damage had been done. These meltdowns, which reportedly included the singer taking swigs of liquor from a bottle and bragging about being high on cocaine, were a regular feature of Puddle of Mudd shows during that year, enraging fans and provoking a crowd in Ohio into booing the band off the stage. In Versailles, he was so intoxicated they forced him to sit down and lip sync most of the show.

    In 2015, Scantlin was arrested six separate times, including one incident where he led sheriff deputies in Minnesota on a high speed car chase with speeds reaching 100 miles per hour before he was arrested for DUI. The breath test revealed a blood alcohol level over four times the legal limit.

    But now that he’s clean, he reflects on where the idea of being a rock star came from.

    “I saw Van Halen in 1984, on the ‘Jump’ tour, and I was, like, ‘I wanna do that,’” he said. “But you don’t see all the other stuff that goes with it. So I’ve learned to deal with it. And I’ve got a great family, and they’ve been behind me and supportive the whole time. And all the fans are all supportive. It’s good to stop doing something that’s killing you.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Ambien Makers To Roseanne: Racism Is Not A Known Side Effect

    Ambien Makers To Roseanne: Racism Is Not A Known Side Effect

    Rosanne Barr blamed the sleep medication for a tweet where she compared a former White House aide to an ape.

    After an offensive tweet that cost TV star Roseanne Barr her rebooted show, she tried to lay the blame on the sleep aid Ambien.

    “muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby=vj,” read the original tweet by Barr, referring to Valerie Jarett, a former Obama White House aide.

    The reaction came swiftly, with public condemnations of the tweet leading to the cancellation of her recently rebooted television show, Roseanne.

    Barr apologized, mentioning that she was “Ambien tweeting,” referring to the drug’s alleged tendency to lead users to engage in bizarre behaviors. Sanofi, the pharmaceutical company that produces Ambien, shot back.

    “While all pharmaceutical treatments have side effects, racism is not a known side effect of any Sanofi medication,” the pharma company’s representatives tweeted.

    Still, experts confirm that it is indeed true that tweeting while on Ambien isn’t a great idea.

    “People could text or tweet while on Ambien and not remember,” said Dr. Rachel Salas, an associate professor of neurology at the Sleep Medicine Division at John Hopkins Medicine. She adds that while using sleep medications, people should avoid sleeping close to their electronic devices.

    Ambien has been blamed by many for a range of strange sleepwalking incidents.Golfer Tiger Woods was found asleep in his car on the highway with Ambien in his system.

    A woman in a class action lawsuit against Sanofi-Aventis claimed that she “ate hundreds of calories of food, including raw eggs, uncooked yellow rice, cans of vegetables, loaves of bread, bags of chips and bags of candy” under the influence of Ambien.

    The claims aren’t always so harmless. Robert Stewart, who went into a rehab and nursing home in North Carolina with a gun and shot eight people to death and wounded two others, was able to escape the death penalty and receive life in prison instead after his lawyers successfully argued that he was under the influence of Ambien at the time.

    Such incidents have raised concerns at the FDA, which recommends the dose be lowered from 10 mg to 5 mg. They also warn that besides the strange behaviors, Ambien can cause nausea, vomiting, muscle cramps, diarrhea, and abnormal thinking alongside changes in behavior. In some cases, hallucinations may manifest.

    “Visual and auditory hallucinations have been reported as well as behavioral changes such as bizarre behavior, agitation and depersonalization,” the FDA warns.

    View the original article at thefix.com