Chelsea Pegue’s dad died suddenly from addiction and she had to learn to live without her best friend. This journey also led her to learn why addiction takes so many lives. This is her story and she is RESILIENT A.F.
Buy the books: https://theglobalresilienceproject.com/books/
About the Guest:
Chelsea Pegues is a freelance writer, proofreader and editor based in the Hudson Valley region of New York. Since losing her dad to alcohol use disorder in 2020, she is honored and humbled to speak about addiction and recovery as much as possible, in an effort to be a force for change and an advocate for those in need. Her desire moving forward is to apply her creativity and skills to projects that make a positive impact in the world.
Links:
Instagram.com/chelsea.elizabeth.writes/
linkedin.com/in/chelsea-pegues-7b63ab211
⚠️ Content Note: Some episodes may contain themes that could be distressing. Please take care of yourself while listening, and don’t hesitate to seek support from a mental health professional if needed.
About the Hosts:
Blair Kaplan Venables is a British Columbia-based grief and resilience expert and coach, motivational speaker and the Founder of The Global Resilience Project. Her expertise has been featured on media platforms like Forbes, TEDx, CBC Radio, Entrepreneur, and Thrive Global. She is named the Top Grief and Resilience Expert of the Year 2024 by IAOTP. USA Today listed Blair as one of the top 10 conscious female leaders to watch and she empowers others to be resilient from stages around the world. 'MyStory,’ which is a television show available on Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV+ and Google Play, showcases Blair's life story. She is the host of the Radical Resilience podcast and specializes in helping people strengthen their resilience muscle using scientifically proven methods and guides grieving high performers with her Navigating Grief Framework. The Global Resilience Project’s award-winning book series are international bestsellers, and her fourth book, RESILIENT A.F.: Stories of Resilience Vol 2, will be published in January 2025. In her free time, you can find Blair writing, in nature, travelling the world and helping people to strengthen their resilience muscles.
Links:
https://theglobalresilienceproject.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/blairdkaplan
https://www.facebook.com/blair.kaplan
https://www.facebook.com/BlairKaplanCommunications
https://www.instagram.com/globalresiliencecommunity
https://www.instagram.com/blairfromblairland/
https://www.facebook.com/globalresiliencecommunity
https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-global-resilience-project
Alana Kaplan is a compassionate mental health professional based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. She works in the mental health field, and is a co-host of the Resilient A.F. podcast. Fueled by advocacy, Alana is known for standing up and speaking out for others. Passionate about de-stigmatizing and normalizing mental health, Alana brings her experience to The Global Resilience Project’s team, navigating the role one’s mental health plays in telling their story.
Engaging in self-care and growth keeps her going, and her love for reading, travel, and personal relationships helps foster that. When she’s not working, Alana can often be found on walks, working on a crossword puzzle, or playing with any animal she sees.
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Transcript
In November, I realized that he had started drinking again. And
Speaker:I was Blair, when I tell you, Furious.
Speaker:I'd had it. He'd had a stroke. By this
Speaker:point, he had had pancreatitis so many times that the
Speaker:doctor looked at him in the eye with me in the room and said, if
Speaker:you touch alcohol one more time, you will die. And
Speaker:so he relapsed, and I couldn't
Speaker:handle it anymore. And the last time I spoke to
Speaker:,:Speaker:that morning just to say, like, hey, you know, are you. Are you okay?
Speaker:Are you alive? Pretty much. My dad and I used to be able
Speaker:to talk for hours about everything. This conversation
Speaker:lasted maybe three minutes because I just couldn't handle it. It was 9am
Speaker:and he was, like, hammered. And I remember the sound of his
Speaker:voice, like he was really straining. And he goes, all right,
Speaker:kiddo, I love you. Have a good day. And I'm like, yeah, I love you
Speaker:too. And I hung up on him. And that
Speaker:was the last time we ever spoke. Welcome back to
Speaker:another episode of Resilience AF with Blair and Alana. But you'll notice
Speaker:that this is not Alana. This is our dear friend
Speaker:Chelsea Pegues. In fact, Alana doesn't even know I'm recording with you, so
Speaker:she's going to be a little sad. So this is only going to be part
Speaker:one. This is going to be part one. Alana. I'm sorry. Don't hate me.
Speaker:So we were actually just with Chelsea. I don't know when this is airing, but
Speaker:we were just with Chelsea in New York in her home state near her
Speaker:hometown. Alana lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba. I'm in Kamloops,
Speaker:British Columbia. We've only met Chelsea in person a few weeks ago. We've been talking
Speaker:with her online for a while. Absolutely adore her. Every time she
Speaker:talks, I'm just, like, captivated. And I'm so honored that she is here
Speaker:today. So thank you so much for being here, Chelsea. Thank you for having
Speaker:me. No pressure at all to be captivating and
Speaker:charismatic. It's just your personality. You know what? Okay, so who's Chelsea?
Speaker:She's a freelance writer, but proofreader and editor based in the
Speaker:Hudson Valley region of New York. Since losing her dad to alcohol use
Speaker:disorder in:Speaker:as much as possible in an effort to be a force for change and
Speaker:advocate for those in need. Her desire moving forward is to apply
Speaker:her creativity and skills to projects that make a positive impact in the
Speaker:world. And what is so special about
Speaker:this specific story is that,
Speaker:unfortunately, I can relate. And.
Speaker:Yeah, and I would love to, like, dive into
Speaker:your story and to talk about your dad. You said, you know, your dad died
Speaker:suddenly from addiction, and you had to learn to live without your best friend and
Speaker:understand addiction. And I'd love to learn about your
Speaker:story and starting off with, like, your dad, his name. Tell us about him
Speaker:and your life with him and. And tell us. Tell us all the things.
Speaker:Chelsea. Thank you. I love talking about my dad, honestly.
Speaker:My dad's name is Eddie Crusy.
Speaker:He went by the stage name Sticky with Two Eyes
Speaker:because he was a professional drummer. Wait, S t
Speaker:I K K S. T I K S T I I like two
Speaker:drumsticks. Cky Sticky. I love that.
Speaker:Yeah, he was. He was. Talk about creative. He was just
Speaker:the best. I posted about it the other day,
Speaker:but my first musical memory is of dancing around in the kitchen with
Speaker:my dad to Little Richard, I think it was.
Speaker:Tutti Frutti was the song. But I have just
Speaker:always had an affinity for early rock and roll and
Speaker:blues because of my dad. He. He was very
Speaker:Clint Eastwood. He was like a squinty guy, like, tall,
Speaker:squinty, mysterious. But. But his. Not his
Speaker:smile, but his laugh lit up a room. Like, he just
Speaker:had that deep belly laugh. And he was so engaging.
Speaker:But unfortunately, part of being a musician sometimes
Speaker:is drug and alcohol use. And
Speaker:my dad came of age in the Catholic school
Speaker:era of the late 50s, early 60s.
Speaker:And here in New York, that wasn't always such a good thing. There was a
Speaker:lot of physical and emotional abuse happening.
Speaker:And I think he went through a lot of trauma
Speaker:that he didn't speak about. Turned to
Speaker:alcohol at a very young age and sort of never looked back.
Speaker:So when he was sober, he was
Speaker:literally the best. We could talk forever and ever about
Speaker:anything. And when he was drinking, it was
Speaker:never physically abusive, but it was just. The
Speaker:level of obnoxious was just unbearable.
Speaker:Like, you. You just couldn't be around him. It was so
Speaker:ridiculous. And so,
Speaker:yeah, it was. The duality was really, really hard to deal with.
Speaker:From a very, very young age, I learned to be. And I'm
Speaker:sure, you know, you develop that hyper vigilance.
Speaker:You know, like you can tell from the second someone picks up the phone
Speaker:if they're in the bag or if they're sober.
Speaker:You learn to try not to exacerbate the situation,
Speaker:and you start walking on eggshells real early in
Speaker:life. Right. Yeah. So
Speaker:did you. Do you Want to. For this interview, should we call him Eddie or
Speaker:Sticky? Call him Eddie. I think that's more natural
Speaker:for me. Yeah, Eddie sounds like
Speaker:he was really fun, but also, you know,
Speaker:that the relationship could have been very challenging. Did you live in the
Speaker:same home as him? Yeah. So I grew up with both
Speaker:my parents in the same house, and
Speaker:it's something that I write about a lot. But I have this one
Speaker:core memory of our first Christmas
Speaker:Eve in the house that I grew up in. So we moved into a house
Speaker:when I was 8. And I don't know
Speaker:what started the fight, but my dad got drunk, my parents
Speaker:started fighting, and all of a sudden we're all in the kitchen and my
Speaker:mom is wielding a knife at my D. And
Speaker:I'm like, on the floor sobbing and screaming
Speaker:like, please, I can't take it anymore. Just got a divorce.
Speaker:Like, enough is enough. So I think
Speaker:my parents thought that moving to a house from an apartment and having
Speaker:a backyard and like, all the things would fix their marriage
Speaker:to back up a little bit. My mom really, really loved
Speaker:my dad. I have no doubt. But you can't
Speaker:marry a musician and then expect them not to play
Speaker:gigs and, like, be out at clubs and bars and
Speaker:restaurants and things like that. And my mom was very
Speaker:jealous, and my dad had a drinking, so there was
Speaker:always fuel on the fire. My dad and I used to escape a
Speaker:lot into the woods. We would go hiking all the time. We were
Speaker:constantly outside. We were in the park, you know, all of that. So again,
Speaker:it was so frustrating for me to have this man
Speaker:who was so gregarious, so smart,
Speaker:so well rounded and so talented,
Speaker:consistently risking everything for alcohol.
Speaker:His marriage, our family life, you know,
Speaker:he was a drummer, but by day he worked for Federal Express. He was a
Speaker:professional driver, so he was out delivering packages.
Speaker:And when I was 20 years old, I remember he
Speaker:had relapsed. He was drinking again because he would have long stretches of
Speaker:sobriety and then fall right back into it.
Speaker:I went down to the basement where his drums were, and I found a huge
Speaker:bottle of vodka hidden in his bass drum. Because
Speaker:no one will ever look there, like.
Speaker:So I emptied the vodka and I wrote him a really long letter. And
Speaker:I was like, please stop doing this. I cannot take it anymore.
Speaker:I love you. I don't want to see anything happen to you. This has to
Speaker:stop. I stuck the letter in the bottle and I put.
Speaker:Put it back in the bass drum. And I'm like, maybe he'll feel stupid now
Speaker:because he knows that I found it you know, he'll read the letter,
Speaker:he'll feel guilty, he'll stop. Two nights later,
Speaker:at four in the morning, my mom and I got a call that my dad
Speaker:had been arrested for dui, which is super
Speaker:problematic when you have a commercial driver's license. They
Speaker:frown on that. Yeah. So it put everything
Speaker:at risk. Everything. It put our house at risk. His job was at risk. It
Speaker:was a huge, huge stressor.
Speaker:Thankfully, his job turned out to be okay in the end.
Speaker:The marriage did not survive. When I was
Speaker:23, as I was getting married, my parents were getting divorced
Speaker:finally. And it was just always
Speaker:the roller coaster. Now
Speaker:in:Speaker:there was a long period right before the pandemic really started
Speaker:taking hold where my dad was sober and
Speaker:he was doing extremely well. And I was so happy
Speaker:because I had my son. By this point, My son was 6,
Speaker:and they were so close. And my dad loved children. He
Speaker:was so good with them. And everything felt good, like it
Speaker:was falling into place. And then the fucking pandemic
Speaker:happened, and the isolation
Speaker:and the fact that we couldn't gather for Thanksgiving, and, you know, all
Speaker:of the things really started taking hold.
Speaker:And in November, I
Speaker:realized that he had started drinking again. And I was,
Speaker:Blair, when I tell you, furious. I'd had it.
Speaker:He'd had a stroke. By this point, he had had
Speaker:pancreatitis so many times that the doctor looked at him in the
Speaker:eye with me in the room and said, if you touch alcohol one more
Speaker:time, you will die. Yeah. And
Speaker:so he relapsed, and I couldn't
Speaker:handle it anymore. And the last time I spoke to
Speaker:,:Speaker:that morning just to say, like, hey, you know, are you. Are you okay?
Speaker:Are you? Pretty much. My dad and I used to be able
Speaker:to talk for hours about everything. This
Speaker:conversation lasted maybe three minutes because I just couldn't handle it. It was
Speaker:9am and he was, like, hammered, and so I was like,
Speaker:listen, you know, I just wanted to check on you, make sure you're okay. I
Speaker:gotta go. And I remember the sound of his voice,
Speaker:like he was really straining. And he goes, all right, kiddo,
Speaker:I love you. Have a good day. And I'm like, yeah, I love you too.
Speaker:And I hung up on him. And that was
Speaker:the last time we ever spoke. A couple of
Speaker:days later, on December 23rd, I woke up in the morning and I went for
Speaker:a run, and the sun was rising, and
Speaker:the sky was the pinkest sky I'd
Speaker:ever seen, like, on fire.
Speaker:My dad's favorite Color was pink and it was
Speaker:Blair. It was like the world was consumed in fire
Speaker:and light and just brightness. I can't even
Speaker:properly articulate it. It was
Speaker:immaculate. And I literally stopped
Speaker:running and just started snapping photos of it. And I sent him a couple
Speaker:to his phone and I just got a really weird
Speaker:feeling. And then a couple of hours later, my mom called
Speaker:me and they were divorced again at this point, but they lived
Speaker:around the corner from each other and they remained best friends.
Speaker:And she calls me and she says, you know, nobody in the, in the building
Speaker:that your dad lives in has seen him in a couple of days. And somebody
Speaker:is complaining that there's a really foul odor coming
Speaker:from the hall. You know, do you maybe want to check on him?
Speaker:And I was so angry, I called the police and said, and I said,
Speaker:you know, do a wellness check on my dad, please. And
Speaker:I'm thinking, all right, they're going to bang on his door and he's going to
Speaker:be so embarrassed because maybe he threw up and passed out.
Speaker:And then they never called me back.
Speaker:And I'm like, okay, 20 minutes goes by and then almost an hour goes by
Speaker:and I'm like, why isn't anyone calling me back? And my
Speaker:husband and I looked at each other and I was like, no,
Speaker:that's impossible. That's ridiculous. So I hop in the car
Speaker:and I'm scooting down the parkway. And I had just
Speaker:gotten onto the parkway and my husband called me and he said,
Speaker:listen, I heard back from one of the neighbors and he's gone.
Speaker:And I just blacked out. I don't even remember the entire
Speaker:drive to getting there. I remember meeting the detectives at his
Speaker:door. And that's why no one called me back. Because when it's an unattended death,
Speaker:they have to investigate for fear of foul play.
Speaker:But he had drank himself to death.
Speaker:And unfortunately, you know, all
Speaker:of the things that come with the gastrointestinal
Speaker:problems, when that happens. And he fell asleep
Speaker:and never woke up essentially.
Speaker:And they wouldn't let me see him. I never got to see him.
Speaker:And that was it. That was the end of a 35 year
Speaker:friendship. And it's like when
Speaker:that happens, you're just so angry. You're so
Speaker:angry. Why did you. Why was this so much
Speaker:more important than me, than my son, than
Speaker:your family? It was like. And that's
Speaker:why the sky was so pink that day, because he was gone
Speaker:already. And he was like reaching out to me is how I feel about
Speaker:it. Now in the wake of that
Speaker:is when you start searching for
Speaker:answers, you know, as a griever,
Speaker:and it becomes, well, what do I do now? How do I. How do I
Speaker:grieve? What am I supposed to do?
Speaker:And, you know, there's no. There are no stages. There
Speaker:is no formality to it. And then
Speaker:all of a sudden, it's almost like the
Speaker:universe algorithm knew what I needed.
Speaker:And you start looking online. And then
Speaker:I found the Dopey podcast, hosted by Dave Manheim, which is
Speaker:all about drugs and addiction. And
Speaker:through Dave, I found the author, Aaron Carr,
Speaker:and she is a recovering heroin addict. And,
Speaker:you know, through. Through all of these little chains, I
Speaker:started becoming more and more educated about addiction and what it actually is
Speaker:and what it means. And the fact that,
Speaker:no, it's not more important than anything. It
Speaker:is a disease. It is a trick of the mind, if you will,
Speaker:that unfortunately, you can't escape from. And it
Speaker:doesn't mean that anything is more important than you or your love for that person.
Speaker:It's just, God, you know, if I
Speaker:could wave a magic wand and have one wish, it would be to erase addiction
Speaker:from the surface of the planet, because, you
Speaker:know, it's a disease. It's like cancer. It's. It's a disease.
Speaker:It's a disease, and it ruins a lot of people's
Speaker:lives. Yeah. Yeah. And
Speaker:I just want to say, oh, my gosh, like, I just want to reach through
Speaker:the screen and give you a big hug and, like, thank you.
Speaker:You know, Eddie's with us, and the gift of that bright pink
Speaker:sky is. Is. Is a really
Speaker:beautiful. You know, I guess
Speaker:pink lining, silver lining. I like that. A pink
Speaker:lining to that. To that moment. And, you know, I
Speaker:think it's when it comes to addiction, and then, like, I'm not sure what
Speaker:you really understood about it before, but it sounds like you and I were on
Speaker:similar paths in the sense of. But my parents divorced when I
Speaker:was really little, and my dad stopped being in my life. He was in and
Speaker:out of my life, and, you know, Blair, I'll come to your birthday party and
Speaker:not showing up, or I'll pick you up for dinner and not showing up. And
Speaker:I came to the conclusion my dad stopped loving me, and we were very close.
Speaker:So I grew up thinking my dad didn't love me, and that obviously
Speaker:did a number on my mental health. But in my 20s, I decided to just
Speaker:accept him for who he was and forgive him and whatever relationship he
Speaker:was able to give me, like, I will just take it. And we developed this
Speaker:beautiful relationship where I learned about Addiction and that he was unwell. And,
Speaker:you know, every time I got got together with him, you know, he'd come visit
Speaker:me, and we lived in different cities. I'd understand more and more. And
Speaker:what I learned was that he loved me that entire time. And all
Speaker:I needed was an adult to say, your dad loves you. He's just not well.
Speaker:And that probably would have changed a lot of things in my life and
Speaker:in my formative years on how I maneuvered the world. And
Speaker:I really do understand and watch not only the addiction. Like, my dad didn't
Speaker:die suddenly. He's almost died a few times. His addiction was crack.
Speaker:It started off with cocaine, then injecting, and then crack. And, like,
Speaker:he tried to get sober a few times, and it was very hard,
Speaker:and it didn't really work. But that slowly killed him with
Speaker:COPD and then eventually lung cancer. And, like,
Speaker:regardless of, you know, addiction taking you suddenly from an
Speaker:OD versus slowly killing you,
Speaker:like, we have to know as a society that it's a disease. It needs to
Speaker:be treated like a disease. Maybe at one point, there was the
Speaker:choice to. To pick up the bottle or to try the drug,
Speaker:but some people's brains are not wired in a way where they can
Speaker:stop. And I get that because I'm almost seven years sober because
Speaker:I'm wired like my dad. Yeah. Yeah. And that's why I
Speaker:think this conversation, you know, in honor of Eddie is so important,
Speaker:because, you know, I feel like we're both vintage
Speaker:millennials. Born mid-80s, right? Yeah. Yeah, 85. Me
Speaker:too. Yeah. So we're the same age, same. Same thing. So my
Speaker:millennials. Yeah. I say we're vintage millennials. But,
Speaker:like, I love it, you know, when someone's like, oh, you're a geriatric
Speaker:millennial. I'm like, I'm not a dinosaur. Like, no,
Speaker:elder. I'm like, I am not wise enough to be an elder. I'm vintage.
Speaker:Now remind me your dad's name again. I want to say Jacob. Leonard.
Speaker:Leonard. Thank you. I don't know where I got Jacob. From, but, yeah, so he.
Speaker:It's funny. My dad was a drummer. Oh, nice.
Speaker:Not a professional drummer. He drummed in a band. His nickname was Rocco, but, like,
Speaker:eventually ended up in the gemology diamond industry, and someone
Speaker:introduced him to cocaine, you know, but, like, I. And
Speaker:there's a lot about my dad I don't know. Like, a lot. Like, I'll never
Speaker:know. I only know the tip of the iceberg, and I only know what has
Speaker:been shared. And there's Lots of things I've learned that I wish I didn't know.
Speaker:And. But like, I think then, like, our parents in that
Speaker:generation, like, they didn't really know that much about addiction.
Speaker:Anything and anything, really. I hate to say it like that,
Speaker:but it's true. Because I think. I think my
Speaker:dad always thought that the only option for an alcoholic
Speaker:was Alcoholics Anonymous. Yeah, I think he
Speaker:really. And of course, you know, with Alcoholics Anonymous, what do they
Speaker:start out with? The Serenity prayer. And by that point, my dad was
Speaker:so adverse to anything religious
Speaker:adjacent, you know, anything of that nature, he was, like,
Speaker:automatically turned off because of his prior experience in
Speaker:his formative schooling.
Speaker:And so he never sought alternative methods. He
Speaker:never sought therapy of any kind. He was so
Speaker:turned off by it. So there's. That. There's the mental health
Speaker:aspect of the boomer generation and not speaking about
Speaker:it, keeping everything bottled up inside. And, you
Speaker:know, also too, my grandmother, my dad's
Speaker:mother drank herself to death as well. So it's like.
Speaker:And much like you, I'll be four years sober on January
Speaker:1st. That's my sober birthday, too. Nice. Oh, my
Speaker:God. Twins. So Chelsea and I are the same.
Speaker:Or you just separated ever?
Speaker:But, yeah. And much like you, it's. I just. I. I thankfully did
Speaker:not suffer that way. But I started thinking, you know, what is this really bringing
Speaker:to my life? What is this doing for me? I don't want my son
Speaker:to ever have the memories that I have of the smell
Speaker:of the Carlo Rossi bottle at the. Wow. I just got real New York with
Speaker:that one. I don't even know what that means, but I believe you. Carlo
Speaker:Rossi is our jugs of wine. It's like a
Speaker:cheap wine that you can buy at, like, you know, the corner store for six
Speaker:bucks or whatever. But it was always sitting at the bottom of our pantry.
Speaker:And I just have this very vivid memory of it as a
Speaker:child. I just didn't want my son to
Speaker:have those core experiences, and I didn't want to ever have to worry.
Speaker:God forbid there's an emergency in the middle of the night if I'm passed out
Speaker:drunk, you know, who's. Who's driving. Yeah. I just
Speaker:didn't want it to ever be a problem. But
Speaker:Matthew. I've been watching a lot of Matthew
Speaker:Perry interviews lately, and
Speaker:I love what he said. Very recently, in one of them,
Speaker:he said that it is an allergy of the body.
Speaker:I think he said it's an allergy of the body and a weakness of the
Speaker:mind. Something to that Effect. And
Speaker:whether or not anyone listening wholly agrees,
Speaker:I'm inclined to agree. Because the more I started learning
Speaker:about addiction, the more I thought to
Speaker:myself, well, yeah, obviously, because there are some people
Speaker:who can smoke a cigarette and then never smoke again. There are some people
Speaker:who can do coke casually and like never
Speaker:worry about it. And with alcohol, there are people who can have
Speaker:a sip of wine here and there and it never becomes a problem.
Speaker:And then there are people like our dads.
Speaker:You know, my dad couldn't. He needed to feel
Speaker:that buzz. He would always say, I like the way it makes my head feel.
Speaker:It just. I need that buzz to tap in.
Speaker:And so I'm really inclined to agree with that. And I think what you
Speaker:said hits the nail on the head. You need someone, when
Speaker:you're an outsider to tell you the love is there,
Speaker:the relationship is there. Unfortunately, the person
Speaker:that you love is very unwell. My
Speaker:husband, I used to get so mad at him because he loved
Speaker:my dad. They were very close and he would go and
Speaker:visit my dad and just sit with them. And if my dad wanted to have
Speaker:a little drink or something, my husband would just sit with him and let him
Speaker:do it. And I'm like, why are you feeding into this?
Speaker:And my husband always said all the time, because one day he's not going to
Speaker:be here. And I don't want to look back and have that
Speaker:regret. Wow.
Speaker:I really wish I had been that
Speaker:open minded to understand
Speaker:that medically assisted treatment is a thing
Speaker:that some people need certain drugs to
Speaker:survive. And that's okay. It doesn't mean that you're
Speaker:falling behind or that you're not sober and you're not not recovering,
Speaker:that some people will get physically sick,
Speaker:it'll be worse if they don't drink. So maybe they do need to have,
Speaker:you know, doctor, specified doses of alcohol throughout the day just
Speaker:to keep them standing upright and functioning in the world. Yeah. There's
Speaker:all different modalities to recovery. And
Speaker:even if they make me uncomfortable, that's
Speaker:okay. I. My discomfort is
Speaker:nothing compared to what someone suffering with addiction
Speaker:is going through. Exactly. Yeah. And
Speaker:I'm just gonna have to learn to live with it. Yeah. And like,
Speaker:it's interesting that you say that, like harm reduction is so important. Right.
Speaker:And like, I know friends, I have, I never
Speaker:went through aa. I, I
Speaker:basically stopped cold turkey. I have been to meetings to support other sober friends
Speaker:and I actually have been to one person and it was a Jewish
Speaker:AA meeting I took my dad to and it was his first meeting
Speaker:ever in Fact, the person running it gave him a book about the 12 step
Speaker:program in Judaism and the serenity prayer in English and in
Speaker:Hebrew. And when my dad died, he had very little things to his name with
Speaker:just a couple drawers. And when he moved into his like, final, like hospital
Speaker:room, he actually had that with him. So now I have it. But
Speaker:I have a lot of friends who have different journeys in sobriety. And
Speaker:the harm reduction approach, I believe, can still be considered sober. Because.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah, because, yeah. And I think it's
Speaker:about us being open as a society and learning about all of this
Speaker:instead of just judging. You know, when you drive down the street and you see
Speaker:people on the street, maybe they're bent over using fentanyl or they're passed out.
Speaker:It's like they're not really choosing that life. They're so mentally
Speaker:unwell, they're so, they're, they're sick.
Speaker:And looking at it with empathy and compassion instead of through the lens of
Speaker:shame is so important. And for us, being born in the 80s,
Speaker:raised in the 90s, our parents, their parents, the community
Speaker:I was raised in, like, it was more like disappear and hide it. Not
Speaker:like, how can we help? So if you and I can raise awareness of these
Speaker:conversations and bring, bring the issues to light,
Speaker:it perhaps will, you know, one listener at a time, et
Speaker:cetera, if their perception can change just a little bit to have more
Speaker:empathy and compassion, you know, the world can be a lot better of a
Speaker:place and more people will get the support they need. Yeah,
Speaker:absolutely. And I love what you just said, that
Speaker:the people that are bent over on the street aren't using because they want
Speaker:to be freezing cold on a street corner with people gawking at them. And
Speaker:you know, it's kind of like to. If someone approaches my window in
Speaker:traffic and asks for cash, I hope
Speaker:that you're using the cash to maybe get yourself something to eat or whatever,
Speaker:that would be great. But if you're shaking and you're getting physically
Speaker:sick because you need a nip of something and you go and you do that,
Speaker:I mean, if it keeps you alive for one more day,
Speaker:maybe that's one more day where you'll see something else later on that will
Speaker:inspire you to get help. You know, I never know
Speaker:what steps you're taking. And
Speaker:so, yeah, if I have cash on me, I'll give it. And I say that
Speaker:to my son. You know, he was with me the other day when that happened,
Speaker:and I, I was able to give this gentleman a ten dollar bill that I
Speaker:happen to have on me. And I was so glad that I had
Speaker:cash because he so clearly needed it. Yeah. And my
Speaker:son was like, oh, that was nice. And I'm like, listen, what he. It's his
Speaker:money. Now, what he does with it is totally up to him, but I hope
Speaker:that he finds a way to go toward healing.
Speaker:Yeah. And not hurting. And it's interesting that you did that. So my dad really
Speaker:needed a lot of help at the end. Like, when he learned he was terminal,
Speaker:like, he had a lot of brain damage because, like, no oxygen to the brain.
Speaker:And he got to a point where, like, he needed a lot of support. And,
Speaker:like, I stopped giving my dad money.
Speaker:And if he needed things like groceries, I would just send him groceries.
Speaker:Right. But it's interesting that you say that, because for me, why,
Speaker:first of all, never have cash because. No, it's so rare. It is so
Speaker:rare. I felt really good. If someone is standing somewhere, like, outside a coffee shop,
Speaker:and I have that ability, you know, I'll ask them, like, are you hungry? Like,
Speaker:do you want me to get you something? And I will. I will. I don't
Speaker:give out cash because. Well, I don't even have cash of my own.
Speaker:But I will offer. Like, I will if I am in a place
Speaker:where I can offer to or if I'm at a
Speaker:restaurant. And I. I don't do this as much because I. Where I live now,
Speaker:it's not like this, but when I was more urban center, you know,
Speaker:like urban dwelling, if I had leftovers, I always took them. And if someone
Speaker:was hungry and they wanted them, I would give them my leftovers. And
Speaker:I mean, I think it's like, even the having that compassion of, like, getting a
Speaker:hot cup of coffee or hot chocolate or tea to someone who needs it, you
Speaker:know, if they say no, I just want money. That's on them.
Speaker:Yeah, sorry. You have the money and you want to give it to them. That's
Speaker:cool, too. Like. But I mean, it's also about starting with
Speaker:that compassion, right? Like, looking at that person who needs that help.
Speaker:Not. Not with the lens of shame, but. Yeah. Not like.
Speaker:Not why are you doing this? But what happened to you? Yeah, Like,
Speaker:I. And of course, you know, there are people that
Speaker:will approach you and you can kind of tell, like, yeah, you
Speaker:can suss it out. You know, I'll leave it at that. But you can always
Speaker:suss it out, like, when someone is. Is really in need of
Speaker:help. And I always, you know, say that to my son. We
Speaker:live. There's a program in our area called
Speaker:Search for Change. And it
Speaker:houses people who are kind of in transition from
Speaker:being in a mental health facility because of drugs or addiction,
Speaker:you know, any sort of addiction, and then they're.
Speaker:They're kind of getting back on their feet. So I hate to use the term,
Speaker:but like a halfway house kind of deal for people who are transitioning
Speaker:back into mainstream society after
Speaker:really hitting pretty much rock bottom because of addiction.
Speaker:And there's someone that we see pretty
Speaker:often in the neighborhood, and he.
Speaker:When my son was smaller, he used to call this gentleman Big
Speaker:Beard because he's very tall, and he just has
Speaker:this huge, like, Santa Claus beard. Yeah. And so one
Speaker:day we're driving by and we see him. My son goes, hey,
Speaker:there goes my boy Big Beard. And I'm like, oh, my God.
Speaker:So the next time we were walking to the park, we happened to see this
Speaker:gentleman, and he said hello to us, and we kind of struck up a
Speaker:conversation. And I said, you know, can I ask you your. Your actual name?
Speaker:Because my son calls you big Beard, and I feel like
Speaker:that's not appropriate. And he laughed. He had this,
Speaker:like, such hearty, joyous laugh. And it reminded me of my
Speaker:dad. And you could tell, like, he was enjoying the interaction,
Speaker:and he just. Well, we got a human connection. Yes, he got a
Speaker:kick out of the connection. And we. We really formed, like, this
Speaker:special bond with him. So now we see each other, we say
Speaker:hi. You know, we. We have little conversations here and there. He loves our
Speaker:dog. You know, it's. It's a nice little bond.
Speaker:And recently, something happened to him, and he suffered a break.
Speaker:He had a relapse, and he suffered, like, a really bad break.
Speaker:And I heard that he went for treatment, and he was gone.
Speaker:I mean, we didn't see him for at least three months, and I was starting
Speaker:to get really nervous. I thought something horrible had happened to him. And
Speaker:then one day, he just popped up in our local park again, and he was
Speaker:there, and we were so happy, and he was so happy to see us. And
Speaker:it was like, are you okay? And he's so thankful
Speaker:that someone thought of him and asked about him. And, you know,
Speaker:it sucks, man. Like, mental health sucks when
Speaker:you are suffering in that way and no one acknowledges you
Speaker:and you feel invisible. I can't imagine
Speaker:how that feels. And going back, you know, to my
Speaker:dad, it breaks my heart when I think about
Speaker:the fact that he was alone. You know, it breaks my heart
Speaker:to think about the fact that he might have been alone for a couple of
Speaker:days. I. I acknowledge his death date being December
Speaker:23rd, because that's the day that I found out that he was
Speaker:gone. But I don't know for sure. I don't know
Speaker:how long he was gone. And that
Speaker:is the worst part, that I told him I loved him before we
Speaker:hung up the phone that day, but it was so flippant and
Speaker:petulant and not at all what I would have said
Speaker:if I had known that it was the last time I was ever going to
Speaker:speak to him. That's hard. That's the worst.
Speaker:That's the worst part. My dad was my hero.
Speaker:I hope he died knowing that he for sure did.
Speaker:I know that he did, but I really hope that he did.
Speaker:Chelsea? Yeah. Oh. I just. I'm hugging you.
Speaker:And the thing is, regardless of how you say it,
Speaker:I love you, or I love you, like, in frustration.
Speaker:Like, I had a mom where I said that a lot, too, in frustration. The
Speaker:tone obviously matters, but the words are still there in the sense
Speaker:of, like, I love you, like, but right now, at this moment, I don't
Speaker:like you. You know what I mean? Like, precisely.
Speaker:Right. And I think from what I'm gathering,
Speaker:you know, you're always Eddie's little girl, and, like, always, you know, best
Speaker:friends. And so that's implied. Like, you love each other. And
Speaker:he for sure knew that. And
Speaker:it's just so heartbreaking that that's how he went. And,
Speaker:you know, I. I really hope this conversation brings a light to people who
Speaker:are still navigating parents who are alive
Speaker:with addiction, you know, and
Speaker:maybe pick up that phone or go sit with them or maybe invite them to
Speaker:go to a meeting of sorts. Yeah. You know,
Speaker:reminder that. Remind them that you love them. And, you know, we
Speaker:can't control other people. We can control what we do. Right. And
Speaker:it's. It's just a hard world. And, you know, unfortunately,
Speaker:now, even with the. More, like, designer drugs, there's a lot of people who live
Speaker:deep in addiction. And it's not just parents.
Speaker:It's friends. It's, you know, kids.
Speaker:It's. It's a lot of people. People we don't know, neighbors. And,
Speaker:you know, we have to choose how we navigate that. And, you know, in
Speaker:honor of Eddie, what advice do you have
Speaker:for those who are maybe navigating
Speaker:a relationship with a parent who have an addiction or alcohol use
Speaker:disorder, specifically? I.
Speaker:I think the best thing to do. A therapist recently
Speaker:told me she was talking about my
Speaker:mom, but I think this applies to
Speaker:specifically children who are dealing with an addicted Parent,
Speaker:you don't have to sit with them for a long time. You know, you
Speaker:don't have to go visit them for hours and hours or a full day or
Speaker:anything like that. You can show up for your person and it could
Speaker:be a 10 minute conversation just to check in and bring them, you
Speaker:know, a sweet treat or something you think that they'll like and just
Speaker:say, hey, you know, I just, I just wanted to see you face
Speaker:to face, make sure that you're okay, you know, and you
Speaker:can set your limits based on your mental health
Speaker:because you're going to reach a point where you are going to
Speaker:realize, unfortunately, that either recovery is
Speaker:an option or it's not.
Speaker:And before your person is gone, I think the
Speaker:trick for the child is to do your best,
Speaker:if you can, to make peace with that
Speaker:and sit with that person as long as you possibly can
Speaker:without hurting your own mental health and just
Speaker:show up a little bit at a time until
Speaker:the day comes where you don't have them
Speaker:anymore. And that might sound a little dark and it might sound
Speaker:a little depressing, but I kind of wish that someone had said that
Speaker:to me. I know that my husband tried, but
Speaker:I, I think, I think he was
Speaker:absolutely right. You know, your days are numbered because
Speaker:addiction is a thief. And not everyone will recover.
Speaker:But you're going to be left behind and you're going to need to find
Speaker:solace in your own actions. And
Speaker:I spent so much time beating the shit out of
Speaker:myself after my dad died, thinking that I was
Speaker:the most rotten person on the planet. And
Speaker:I, obviously that's not true because I loved him very deeply.
Speaker:But I think that educating yourself, doing what
Speaker:you can to read up on what addiction really means
Speaker:and then just saying like, hey, I have five minutes to talk to you on
Speaker:the phone. I just want to tell you I love you and see how you're
Speaker:doing today. If you can show up and person, show up in person, set
Speaker:your own limits. But just, just do your best to be there
Speaker:because you'd rather do that than beat
Speaker:yourself up. You know, as grievers, we're going to have
Speaker:plenty to deal with. You don't want to should yourself to
Speaker:death as well. Yeah, I think that's beautiful. That's
Speaker:helpful. That's very helpful. I, I, I mean like, that's a huge
Speaker:part of like my resolution with my dad was just like accepting what it was.
Speaker:And then when he was terminally ill, we lived in different cities.
Speaker:I made him message me every morning when he woke up and we started off
Speaker:Our day just saying hello to each other, and it was something so simple. Oh,
Speaker:that's beautiful. You know, my sister didn't have a relationship with him, but once
Speaker:he was terminal, my sister and him had a talk, a
Speaker:virtual talk, every Sunday. You know, you get to choose that.
Speaker:But you're right. Like, Chelsea, that's such beautiful advice, and
Speaker:I really, really appreciate you sharing. I know it's just the tip of the
Speaker:iceberg and that we're gonna have you back to talk
Speaker:more. I love that, because I know you. Have more stories because I heard them.
Speaker:I heard about your tattoo stories and other things, and I.
Speaker:I think it's. You know, we're just gonna leave that cliffhanger for our listeners,
Speaker:but I. Is there any final words you'd like to say before we
Speaker:wrap up? Well, so one thing. When you say,
Speaker:as my dad would have said,
Speaker:here's the character, I would just say thank you
Speaker:so much for what you do on this platform and
Speaker:for giving us a space to tell these stories. Because, again,
Speaker:it is so important. If you are
Speaker:out there and you're suffering with addiction and you're striving for
Speaker:recovery, it can be done. It's going to suck.
Speaker:It's going to be painful, but you are so worth it
Speaker:because there is someone on this planet who loves you so much and does not
Speaker:want. Want to talk to the air
Speaker:and hope that you can hear them. We want you here on this plane
Speaker:with us. And again, like you said, Blair, I think
Speaker:you put it perfectly when you said, lead with compassion. You just never
Speaker:know. And. And everyone, all of us, even you and
Speaker:I, sitting here today, we are one mistake away
Speaker:from a totally different life. And you just never know.
Speaker:Right? So that's what I would say. Just love each other.
Speaker:As hard as it can be sometimes, just love each other because our time
Speaker:is finite. That's very wise
Speaker:and so beautiful. And you want to get more of Chelsea in
Speaker:your life. Her links are in the show notes.
Speaker:Yeah, she's. She's absolutely amazing. So please follow her. And thank
Speaker:you so much for joining me today on our podcast. Thanks
Speaker:for having me. And thank you to everyone who tuned in to another
Speaker:episode of Resilient af. Just remember, you are
Speaker:not alone. It is okay to not be okay. Life is full of ups
Speaker:and downs. Like, put one foot in front of the other. Take things one moment
Speaker:at a time. We are here to hold your hand and be that light in
Speaker:the darkness. And just remember, you are
Speaker:resilient. Afghanistan.