"Teen Wolf" Star Colton Haynes Marks Sober Milestone

"Teen Wolf" Star Colton Haynes Marks Sober Milestone

“Teen Wolf” star Colton Haynes turned to substance abuse after falling on hard times but is now cleaning up his act.

Colton Haynes has achieved six months sober after going on a week-long bender to help cope with his divorce as well as the death of his mother in the same year. Recently, he told Attitude Magazine about his sober journey, which included four months of rehab.

Haynes’ week-long bender came after he divorced Jeff Leatham, his husband of less than one year, and his mother, Dana, dying of cirrhosis of the liver within 2018. However, his struggles with substance abuse began long beforehand, as early as 2016 when he came out as gay.

“I came out, and in a way, my downward spiral started,” Haynes said. “I felt extremely free but at the same time the amount of attention I was getting was making me spin out of control.”

But he really hit bottom in 2018.

“At that point, I fell apart. My brain broke,” Haynes recalled. “I was doing a massive comedy for a studio, showed up to work and got fired on the first day. They said I looked as if I had ‘dead in my eyes’ and I did.”

He continued to spiral into darkness.

“I was drowning in my own s–t,” Haynes confessed.

He hit his rock bottom during his week-long bender.

“I locked myself in a hotel room at the Waldorf Astoria in Beverly Hills for seven days and was found in my room with these insane bruises all over my body,” he recounted. “It looked as if somebody had beaten the s–t out of me. I couldn’t walk, so I was falling everywhere. I almost ruptured my kidney, ended up in the hospital, ended up in 5150 psych hold. I was on such a destructive path that I could not function.”

He ended up with partial vision loss in one eye and suffered two seizures, which inspired him to seek treatment.

“I’m always going to be in recovery,” he said. “There are so many people struggling out there, but not a lot of them talk about it. Life is much more beautiful than I could have imagined.”

In the past, Haynes has revealed his struggles with mental health in his published diary entries.

View the original article at thefix.com

By The Fix

The Fix provides an extensive forum for debating relevant issues, allowing a large community the opportunity to express its experiences and opinions on all matters pertinent to addiction and recovery without bias or control from The Fix. Our stated editorial mission - and sole bias - is to destigmatize all forms of addiction and mental health matters, support recovery, and assist toward humane policies and resources.

Exit mobile version