Tag: celebs & sobriety

  • Demi Lovato Responds To Relapse Rumors

    Demi Lovato Responds To Relapse Rumors

    Hilton says a source told him that Lovato was “drinking margaritas and smoking weed” at a downtown LA restaurant.

    On a recent episode of his podcast, popular gossip blogger Perez Hilton claims that a source told him that pop star Demi Lovato is being “selective” with her sobriety. The singer suffered an apparent near-fatal overdose in July 2018 but is now in recovery.

    Here’s what Hilton had to say:

    I have a friend who has a friend who works in an establishment in DTLA. Demi Lovato was recently in with her new boyfriend and a group of friends. And what’s alarming to me is how public she was being. I’m told Demi was ordering alcoholic drinks and drinking them—specifically she was drinking margaritas. And there’s an upstairs rooftop area in this establishment and I’m told she was also smoking weed. Is smoking weed and drinking alcohol a red flag for Demi who has publicly stated that she’s sober?

    Her New Boyfriend

    Austin Wilson, the boyfriend that Hilton mentioned in his gossip report, has been seeing the singer since early November. Weeks ago, Lovato went public with their relationship on Instagram. Wilson, a 25-year-old model, is also newly sober. His mother took to Instagram back in May to celebrate his first year of sobriety in a post on his birthday. “I am so proud of you and grateful that you are doing so amazing!!!” she wrote.

    In fact, a source close to the new couple exclusively told US Weekly that “Demi’s friends approve of Austin and they’re both great influences on each other. Austin and Demi are both sober and it’s easy for them to connect and understand each other.”

    Demi Reacts

    Lovato appears to have caught wind of Hilton’s gossipy allegations. She took to instagram to post a simple, but seemingly pointed message: “Don’t believe the rumors.”

    In another Instagram story, Lovato announced that she will be taking a hiatus from social media to work on new music.  “The next time you hear from me, I’ll be singing…” she wrote. 

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Demi Lovato Reportedly Bonded With New Beau Over Sobriety

    Demi Lovato Reportedly Bonded With New Beau Over Sobriety

    The singer recently made it “Instagram official” with her new beau Austin Wilson, who is also sober. 

    On November 12, “Sorry Not Sorry” singer Demi Lovato took to Instagram to unveil something special: her new relationship with boyfriend Austin Wilson. In a caption under a black and white picture of Wilson kissing Lovato on the cheek, the pop star wrote “My ❤️.”

    A source close to the new couple exclusively told US Weekly that “Demi’s friends approve of Austin and they’re both great influences on each other. Austin and Demi are both sober and it’s easy for them to connect and understand each other.”

    Dating A Member Of Bachelor Nation

    Demi had previously dated Mike Johnson from The Bachelor Nation. Their fling was short-lived and ended in October.

    “They went on a couple of dates and texted each other every day, but it was never a serious, full-blown relationship by any means,” the source told US Weekly about Lovato’s time with Johnson. “There is absolutely no love lost between them. The timing just wasn’t right because they’re both so busy.”

    “I will say this, that Demi is amazing,” Johnson told US Weekly in mid-October. “I think that she’s a beautiful individual inside and out.”

    Demi has been very open over the years about living with addiction, bulimia and bipolar disorder. Her apparent overdose last June made headlines and the singer has been sober and working on new music ever since.

    Sober Together

    Her new 25-year-old beau is no stranger to addiction and sobriety himself. The model’s mother took to Instagram to celebrate his one-year sober milestone which also happened to be on his birthday back in May. 

    How the two met is still a mystery but there is speculation that they may have bonded over the loss of their mutual friend Thomas Trussell III, a model who passed away from fatal overdose in early October, according to Radar Online. Shortly after his funeral, Demi got a cursive “T” tattoo in honor of her late friend. 

    After announcing making her new relationship Instagram official, the pop star got back on the app the following day to announce that she is making new music. 

    “Recording a song for my loyal #Lovatics — the ones who support me and whatever makes me happy,” she wrote in a recent instagram story, according to People.  

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Danny Trejo Talks Long-Term Recovery: I Surround Myself With People Who Are Sober

    Danny Trejo Talks Long-Term Recovery: I Surround Myself With People Who Are Sober

    The prolific actor discussed sobriety, prison and AA in Variety’s recovery issue. 

    Danny Trejo was 24 years old when he began his recovery journey. Now at 75, the prolific Machete actor and restaurant owner has more than 50 years of sobriety under his belt, something he got candid about for Variety‘s first issue dedicated to recovery.

    The Trejo’s Tacos owner is a proud member of Alcoholics Anonymous – a program he believes kept him out of jail and alive.

    “They tell you if you leave [Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymous], you will die, go insane or go to jail,” Trejo said. “And I proved that right. Every time I left, I went to jail.”

    Decades ago, while Trejo was serving time at San Quentin, he reached a turning point when a speaker (and former inmate) named Johnny Harris returned to share his story of recovery.

    “What Do You Have To Lose?”

    “That guy saved my life,” Trejo revealed. “He said, ‘Why don’t you join us? Before you do anything, just join us. Give it a try. What do you have to lose?’ It was kind of like an awakening. So when I got out of the joint, I went back to meetings.”

    So Trejo buckled down and did the work. He attended meetings and kept himself busy with various gigs, including working as a drug counselor. Then, 16 years into his recovery, Trejo’s life would take another life-changing turn when he got hired as an extra in the 1985 movie Runaway Train – the movie would mark the beginning of a long, successful Hollywood career. 

    “Everything good that has happened to me has happened as a direct result of helping someone else — everything,” Trejo said. “That’s the way I live my life.”

    And Trejo practices what he preaches. He has been a passionate recovery advocate who is vocal about the benefits of sobriety and the work it takes to maintain it.

    It’s All About Your Support System

    “I honestly believe this sobriety and being clean depends on your support system,” Trejo explained to Variety. “You’ve got this system of people around you that want you to stay clean and sober. If I’m driving down the street and I’m with somebody clean and sober and I say, ‘God, man, I sure could go for a joint right now or a beer,’ this guy will say, ‘Hey, wait a minute. … Let’s go to a meeting.’ … I surround myself with people that are clean and sober.”

    Trejo, who has appeared in nearly 400 film and TV projects, maintains his sobriety by attending meetings and keeping in mind where he was in his life when he was using.  

    “When I think about drugs … I think about having to shower with 50 men in prison. I don’t want to do that anymore. I don’t want somebody saying, ‘Hey, bend over and spread ’em.’ That’s what drugs mean to me.” Trejo said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Jamie Lee Curtis Talks Sharing Drugs With Dad, AA In Variety's Recovery Issue

    Jamie Lee Curtis Talks Sharing Drugs With Dad, AA In Variety's Recovery Issue

    “I am a very careful sober person. When I work, if there are no recovery meetings available, I make them.”

    The legendary Halloween actress detailed how she became addicted to painkillers and what led her to get help with Variety magazine for its first-ever recovery issue. 

    Like so many people with opioid addiction, Curtis’s dependency on painkillers began when she was given Vicodin after a routine cosmetic surgery for pain.

    “They gave me Vicodin as a painkiller for something that wasn’t really painful,” Curtis said. Her experience is all-too-common. The overprescription of opioids for post-operative pain is one of the driving factors behind the opioid epidemic. Nowadays, opioid prescribing guidelines and legislation are working to correct the course of the epidemic.

    Curtis also discussed how addiction impacted her family, including her father, actor Tony Curtis. 

    Sharing Drugs With Dad

    “I knew my dad had an issue because I had an issue and he and I shared drugs. There was a period of time where I was the only child that was talking to him. I had six siblings. I have five. My brother, Nicholas, died of a heroin overdose when he was 21 years old. But I shared drugs with my dad. I did cocaine and freebased once with my dad. But that was the only time I did that, and I did that with him. He did end up getting sober for a short period of time and was very active in recovery for about three years. It didn’t last that long. But he found recovery for a minute.”

    Similar to her father, Curtis was high-functioning in her addiction. 

    “I never did it when I worked. I never took drugs before 5 p.m. I never, ever took painkillers at 10 in the morning. It was that sort of late afternoon and early evening — I like to refer to it as the warm-bath feeling of an opiate. It’s like the way you naturally feel when your body is cool, and you step into a warm bath, and you sink into it. That’s the feeling for me, what an opiate gave me, and I chased that feeling for a long time.”

    Curtis described the moment her facade slipped in 1998. A friend witnessed her taking five Vicodin with a sip of wine in her kitchen and confronted her. “I heard this voice: ‘You know, Jamie, I see you. I see you with your little pills, and you think you’re so fabulous and so great, but the truth is you’re dead. You’re a dead woman.’”

    This stern warning didn’t deter her from using and neither would a later confrontation with her sister Kelly about stealing her pain pills. She finally decided to get help a couple months later after reading an article about recovery in Esquire.

    Her First AA Meeting

    Going to AA for the first time can be intimidating but there’s an added set of worries when you’re a Hollywood superstar trying to privately deal with addiction. 

    “I was terrified. I was just terrified that someone in the recovery community was going to betray my trust. But it is my experience that that doesn’t really happen and that my fear was unfounded. There is no guarantee in the world that someone won’t betray your confidence. There are also ways for people to get recovery help privately. There are ways for people to understand that public figures need privacy in order to be able to disclose and talk about this shameful secret that has dogged and plagued them their whole lives. 

    Now, Curtis is 21 years sober, something she doesn’t take for granted. She holds recovery meetings in her trailers when she’s working, if none are available.

    “I am a very careful sober person. When I work, if there are no recovery meetings available, I make them. I put a sign up by the catering truck saying, ‘Recovery meeting in my trailer.’ When I was in Charleston making Halloween, I was in a coffee shop near where I was living, and I met somebody in recovery, who told me, ‘Oh, those two ladies out on the patio are sober too. There’s a women’s meeting near here.’ I went out and introduced myself to the ladies, and a day later I was at a women’s gathering 100 yards from where I was living. Literally 100 yards. When I was making The Tailor of Panama with Pierce Brosnan and John Boorman, I was swimming in the Gatun Dam, but on my day off, I found a recovery meeting that only spoke Spanish, didn’t speak a word of English. I didn’t understand a word anybody said, but I went and sat down and met people, shook hands and talked.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Rob Lowe: My Sex Tape Helped Me Get Sober

    Rob Lowe: My Sex Tape Helped Me Get Sober

    Lowe discussed his sex tape scandal and journey to sobriety on The Jess Cagle Show.

    Actor Rob Lowe said that a 1988 sex tape that he made with an underage girl was one of the best things that’s happened to him in life, because it prompted him to get sober. 

    “What Am I Doing With My life?”

    Lowe made the tape with a 16-year-old, who he says he did not know was underage. When Lowe was sued by the girl’s mother, his career was disrupted. However, the tape and the ensuing scandal made Lowe, then 24, take another look at his behavior, he said on SiriusXM’s The Jess Cagle Show.

    “It’s one of the reasons why I got sober. I, like, woke up one day and was like, ‘What am I doing with my life?’” Lowe said, according to USA Today. “People talk about it, I go, ‘I think it’s the best thing that ever happened to me.’ Honestly, I do, ’cause it got me sober. Sober got me married. I’ve been married 29 years, and I have two great sons. I don’t think any of that happens without going through that scandal. I really don’t.”

    Celebrating 29 Years Of Sobriety

    Earlier this year, Lowe celebrated his sobriety on Instagram. 

    In March, he wrote, “Today I celebrate 29 years of sobriety. Thank you to all those who have inspired me on this wonderful, challenging and life-changing journey. If you, or someone you know, are struggling with alcohol or addiction, there CAN be a future of hope, health and happiness. And it comes one day at a time. #recovery #ItWorks.”

    In the Jess Cagle interview, Lowe joked that he didn’t take advantage of the tape like he could today. 

    “The problem was, I didn’t make any money off of it like everybody does now. I was too stupid,” he said. 

    It’s not the first time he has joked about the tape. In March he told Marc Maron, “The real (expletive) up was that I didn’t wait 20 years later to do it where it would have helped my career. 1 billion percent ahead of the curve.”

    Demi Moore Was His Sober Role Model

    While the scandal from the sex tape might have prompted Lowe to get into recovery, having sober role models was important in helping him see that recovery was possible. Earlier this month Lowe said that Demi Moore inspired him to see that life in recovery was possible. 

    Speaking on The View, Lowe said that Moore, “was the first person I ever knew who got sober. She was a huge inspiration to me. It was the ‘80s, we were all doing our thing. I just remember thinking, ‘If that girl can get sober, anybody can.’”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Talk Sober Parenting, Wine Memes

    Dax Shepard & Kristen Bell Talk Sober Parenting, Wine Memes

    The celebrity couple discussed “mommy juice,” vacationing with others who imbibe and wine memes in a recent interview. 

    Celebrity couple Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard spoke of parenting without relying on alcohol to relax and making the “wine mom” memes work for them while living mostly sober lives in an interview with HuffPost.

    Shepard himself has been totally sober since 2004, and while Bell still has an occasional drink, she doesn’t imbibe as much as her friends. Shepard does get jealous sometimes, though.

    “We vacation almost exclusively with three other families who all have kids, and certainly at night, I’m super jealous of them because I’m like, f**k yeah I would love to drink something that turned down the volume of everyone in this house,” Shepard explained. “So I’m a little bit jealous in the evenings.”

    But then the hangover-free morning comes.

    “At 6:45 when we’re all up, I’m like, Oh I’m crushing right now. I feel great. And they’re miserable. And those voices are three times as loud with a hangover.”

    Shepard is trying to focus on the positives, such as those high-energy mornings with his young kids Delta Bell and Lincoln.

    Wine Memes In Online Parenting Communities

    Kristin Bell, meanwhile, may not drink every day, but she’s found a way to relate to the “mommy juice” memes that online parenting communities love.

    “So, the wine memes, for me, they’re all-encompassing in the fact that they represent, ‘Remember that you’re an adult. It’s OK if your kids are stressful and annoying. It’s OK to take time for yourself,’” she said. “But to me, that doesn’t necessarily ever mean alcohol.”

    Instead of always turning to alcohol, Bell finds comfort and stress relief in her husband.

    “I personally don’t have wine every day, but my wine is Netflix and cuddling with my husband or our date night.”

    Dax Doesn’t Mind Being Around People While They Drink

    Embracing a sober or mostly-sober lifestyle has spread into something of a trend, with an increasing number of celebrities trying it out. Bell and Shepard have been at the forefront, often speaking out about the benefits and challenges. Thankfully, their friends have been supportive and Shepard doesn’t find it difficult when others drink around him.

    “Dax has never been triggered by people drinking around him,” said Bell. “In fact, our friends are usually sensitive to it, and they look to me like, ‘Is it OK if I pour myself a drink?’ And Dax will notice and say, ’Oh no listen, I lost my privilege of drinking, but you didn’t lose your privilege. I think you should have a drink.′ So I’m very lucky there.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Elton John Crashed A Rolling Stones Concert While High On Cocaine

    Elton John Crashed A Rolling Stones Concert While High On Cocaine

    In his new memoir, the sober icon recalls some of the shenanigans he got into in the midst of his cocaine addiction.

    Most people in recovery have embarrassing stories about what they did while high or drunk, and Elton John is no different.

    The legendary singer, who has been sober for 29 years, recalled in his new memoir the time he crashed a Rolling Stones concert because he was high on cocaine. It was 1975, and John was joining the Stones on stage to sing one song — “Honkey Tonk Women.”

    However, when that ended, John was convinced that he should stay put for the rest of the set.

    “If I hadn’t been coked out of my head when the Rolling Stones turned up in Colorado and asked me to come onstage with them, I might have just performed “Honky Tonk Women,” waved to the crowd and made my exit,” John wrote in Me, which is out later this month. The Daily Mail published an excerpt of the book.

    A Keyboardist Named Elton

    John continued, “Instead, I decided it was going so well, I’d stay on and jam along to the rest of their set, without first taking the precaution of asking the Stones if they wanted an auxiliary keyboard player. For a while, I thought Keith Richards kept staring at me because he was awestruck by the brilliance of my improvised contributions to their oeuvre. After a few songs, it finally penetrated my brain that the expression on his face wasn’t really suggestive of profound musical appreciation.”

    It was then that John realized his mistake. “I quickly scuttled off, noting as I went that Keith was still staring at me in a manner that suggested we’d be discussing this later, and decided it might be best if I didn’t hang around for the after-show party,” he wrote.

    His Relationship With Cocaine

    John then went on to explain his fascination with cocaine.

    “There was something more to cocaine than the way it made me feel,” he wrote. “Cocaine had a certain cachet about it. It was fashionable and exclusive. Doing it was like becoming a member of an elite little clique, that secretly indulged in something edgy, dangerous and illicit. Pathetically enough, that really appealed to me. I’d become successful and popular, but I never felt cool.”

    In the late ’80s, John said that his partner at the time, Hugh Williams, prompted him to get help.

    “I noticed he was shaking. ‘You’re a drug addict,’ he said. ‘You’re an alcoholic. You’re a food addict and a bulimic. You’re a sex addict. You’re co-dependent.’” John wrote.

    At that point, he decided to seek treatment for all his addictions: ”Getting help wasn’t straightforward, as I needed to be treated for three addictions at once: cocaine, alcohol and food,” he wrote. 

    Nearly three decades later, John has maintained his sobriety, and still stays away from people who are doing cocaine.

    “I never felt like having a line, and I still can’t bear being anywhere near people who are doing it,” he writes. “The second I walk into a room, I know. I can just sense people are on it — from the way they’re talking, their voices pitched slightly louder than they need to be, not really listening — and how they’re behaving. I just leave — because, quite frankly, it’s a drug that makes people act like assholes. I wish I’d realized that 45 years ago.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Kat Von D Visits Bam Margera In Treatment Program

    Kat Von D Visits Bam Margera In Treatment Program

    The LA Ink star got candid about her own journey to sobriety after spending quality time with Margera.

    Tattoo artist Kat Von D visited Bam Margera in rehab, and reflected on her own recovery in a recent social media post.

    Von D (born Katherine Von Drachenberg) shared a video on Instagram on Monday (Oct. 7) of the two sketching quietly side-by-side. Margera, a regular cast member of MTV’s Jackass, is in a 90-day treatment program for substance use disorder following a tumultuous year that culminated with his September appearance on Dr. Phil.

    Kat Von D revealed in her Instagram post that she also struggled in her past. Back then she was on the receiving end of a friend’s support.

    Her Journey To Sobriety

    “Getting sober was not easy for me,” she wrote in her caption. “Even though it’s gonna be 12 years in July that I celebrate being clean from drinking and drugs, I still clearly remember the physical pain from withdrawals, the profound desire to die, and the overwhelming sense of loneliness I felt that day I decided to quit.”

    “On day two of detoxing, I was failing to talk myself out of killing myself when a friend came over, and found the most pathetic/vulnerable version of me on my apartment floor,” she wrote. “He said, ‘Come on, Kat. Get up and let’s draw.’ I managed to scrape myself up somehow, find a piece of paper and whatever pencils were laying around. Looking back, I realize he was just helping me put one foot in front of the other. Maybe it was just a distraction, or maybe it was his way of helping me refocus on the one thing that has always saved me from myself. Either way, it’s what I needed at that time, and I am so grateful to that friend.”

    Now on the other side of recovery for over a decade, Von D was able to pass on this kindness by reaching out to Bam in his time of need.

    Supporting Her Close Friend

    “Yesterday, I got to visit my friend [Bam] who’s publicly shared about his current attempt at rehabilitation (which is the only reason I would ever share this). And man, it was beautiful to spend time together and draw!” she wrote. “I’m so proud to see bam sincerely trying to make such meaningful changes—as hard as it is being away from family and home.”

    Having endured her own dark times, Von D was able to empathize with Bam. “No one ever sees the struggle, or the ugly painful moments that take place behind the scenes unless you’re in it yourself.”

    She ended her post with words of encouragement. “Thank you, Bam for always being there for me. I’m so fucking proud of you, and I can’t wait to see all the amazing things you’re gonna do.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Artie Lange Expresses His Love For Howard Stern Post-Rehab

    Artie Lange Expresses His Love For Howard Stern Post-Rehab

    “He had no choice but to let me go. I was gonna die and he tried to get me help, he got me into rehab a couple of times and I would leave.”

    Comedian Artie Lange recently emerged from a lengthy rehab stint and he wants to apologize to Howard Stern for his past behavior, Page Six reports.

    Lange went on the YouTube show AftershockXL and explained, “I feel terrible. I’m going to call him one of these days.”

    Lange’s mishaps with drugs were often hilarious fodder for The Howard Stern Show, but Stern became rattled when Lange attempted suicide and backed away from commenting on Artie, even when the comedian trashed him publicly.

    Taking Responsibility For His Actions

    Now Lange says, “There should be no guilt on Howard’s part. Howard did nothing wrong. All Howard did was try to help me. I love him so much. It’s a shame that anyone in my life would feel any guilt. I f—ed up.”

    Lange knew he was putting Stern in a difficult position, and that Howard gave him an incredible gig that any comedian would kill for.

    “All he did was give me the best job ever and I take full responsibility,” the comedian explained to New Jersey 101.5. “He had no choice but to let me go. I was gonna die and he tried to get me help, he got me into rehab a couple of times and I would leave… he was in my crazy life, and I don’t think he knew what to do after a while. When a junkie is in your life and you care about them, they start to rip your heart out.”

    Stern Speaks

    Stern admitted to the New York Times magazine, “I choose my words about Artie carefully, because I love him. It wasn’t a clean break. It was many years of wanting Artie to get help. I know that a lot of fans want me to talk about Artie and feel it’s a cop-out for me not to. I’ll take that. I don’t want to do anything that would rock his boat. I get sad talking about Artie. He was a tremendous contributor. But we had to move on.”

    Earlier this month on Twitter, Lange announced his return from an extensive rehab stay, and he wrote, “Great to be home! 7 months 14 days but one day at a time. Lots of new stories to tell. Will announce some new tour dates on Friday. Thanks for the support. Love you all.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • John Goodman On Depression, Addiction

    John Goodman On Depression, Addiction

    The prolific actor, who’s been sober for 12 years, has been candid about his past struggles with alcoholism and depression.

    John Goodman of Roseanne and now The Conners has struggled with depression since gaining widespread fame in the late 1980s, according to a report by Amo Mama. He also battled alcohol addiction for decades, avoiding treatment until the problem got out of control and his wife got him into treatment in 2007.

    Heavy Drinking Affected His Job

    He spoke on this in a 2018 interview with Willie Geist of Today, revealing that he missed a rehearsal because he was still drunk from a weekend out with friends.

    “I was shaking, I was still drinking, but I was still shaking,” he said. “I had the clarity of thought that I needed to be hospitalized.”

    Now 12 years sober, Goodman is starring in the second season of The Conners, which premiered on Tuesday.

    Goodman’s mental health and substance use issues began after the success of Roseanne launched him into tabloid-worthy status.

    Dealing With Fame

    The actor had a difficult time adjusting to the new level of fame and scrutiny, calling it “very unnatural.” He had such a distaste for it that after the show ended, he moved his family from Los Angeles to New Orleans in an effort to escape from the unwanted attention.

    “I’d had it with show business, publicity, tabloid stuff – I’d just had it,” he told The Guardian in 2015. “I kind of wanted to get her, my daughter, away from that.”

    Unfortunately, by that time, Goodman was already in the grips of alcohol addiction. Though he never suffered an overdose, he admitted that “there’s many times I could have gone under” in terms of some type of “misadventure.”

    Now, however, Goodman says he only drinks in his dreams.

    Roseanne’s Cancellation 

    Though he’s doing well with his sobriety, Goodman still struggles with depression from time to time. He revealed in 2018 that he went through a depressed period that lasted about a month after the Roseanne reboot was canceled following racist comments from the show’s namesake, Roseanne Barr, about former senior advisor to Barack Obama, Valerie Jarrett.

    “I was brokenhearted, but I thought, ‘OK, it’s just show business, I’m going to let it go,’” said Goodman. “But I went through a period, about a month, where I was very depressed. I’m a depressive anyway, so any excuse that I can get to lower myself, I will. But that had a great deal to do with it, more than I wanted to admit.”

    The reboot was quickly re-crafted into a spinoff, The Conners, in which Roseanne dies suddenly of an opioid overdose following a hidden addiction and the family has to move forward without her — something many Americans could identify with at the peak of the opioid crisis.

    View the original article at thefix.com