Digital Social Hour - Overcoming Opiate Addiction I Cheree Ashley DSH #399
Episode Date: April 7, 2024Cheree Ashley comes to the show to talk about her journey of overcoming Opiate addiction. APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://forms.gle/D2cLkWfJx46pDK1MA BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@Digital...SocialHour.com SPONSORS: Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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There's a lot of different ways to perform an intervention
depending on what the situation is.
The intervention's for the family, not just the addict.
Are they going to change? Nobody's going to change.
We have to feel the repercussions.
We have to feel the consequences.
Make their addiction more uncomfortable.
It's more likely that they're going to want change.
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And here's the episode.
All right, guys, we got Cherie Ashley here from California.
Thanks for coming on today.
Thanks for having me.
Of course.
What a powerful message and story.
I'd love to dive into it with the drug addiction and all that.
So what age did you get involved with that kind of stuff?
My addiction hit pretty hard at about 1920.
So college, except I wasn't going to college. No, I wasn't going, I mean, I was going to college,
but I wouldn't show up, you know, it was just, yeah, just was not capable. School just wasn't
my thing. Um, it's funny because like now if I study,
if I'm interested in it, I love it. But then, yeah, just my priorities were not straight,
you know. So I had a pretty bad breakup and that's where the opiate addiction started.
And it just went downhill super quickly for me. And was it first alcohol into opioids or did it
just start off with opioids
right off the start? Yeah, I definitely smoked a lot of like in high school, out of high school,
drank occasionally. I wouldn't say like I drank a lot, definitely more of a stoner for sure.
And so the opiates was just more so like that numbing, like, sure, I'll try it. I was
going through a hard time and then just getting addicted to numbing those emotions. You know,
people say weed isn't a gateway drug. What do you think about that?
I think it definitely is a gateway drug. I mean, and that's I mean, we can have a full discussion on what that actually means.
But for any mind altering substance, right?
If you are, regardless if it's legal, I mean, look at alcohol, it's legal.
That's the most dangerous one we see too in my facilities that I just feel if you are
already chasing after something that's mind altering, It's just opening up the door to trying other
substances that are mind altering. Agreed. Yeah. Cause people say it isn't, but I mean,
I was on weed and I feel like it's that first step and it just gets worse.
Yeah. 100%. And especially for kids, it's like your mind isn't developed completely, you know? And so you're, you're putting a stop to what you're
able to take in educational wise. Like you can't grasp everything if you're sitting there and
you're high, you know? And so for people to say that it's not, and it's okay. I mean, that's where
it starts. And now these kids are putting it in vape pens. And now, you know, before it was just
like weed and putting it in a bowl, you know,
and you smell like it, you look like it, like there's so many obvious signs where now they're
able to just to carry it around in their vape pens and you have no idea. It doesn't smell like
anything. You don't smell like anything. So I just feel like it's just getting worse.
And who even knows what's in the actual pen? I mean, exactly. Probably nothing healthy.
Yeah, exactly. And your brains are developing until 26, right?
So when you're smoking weed, who knows the long-term effects of that?
Right, exactly.
Yeah, and nowadays with schools too, we're just seeing a lot of overdoses.
And, you know, there's fentanyl being put into weed.
There's pills that are, you know, pressed and laced with fentanyl.
So it's just not what times used to be when kids were recreationally using and messing around with stuff.
Yeah, before if someone offered you it, no questions asked, you could just take it.
Now it's like I might die if I take this without testing it.
Yeah, exactly.
Pretty scary.
It's very scary.
It's very scary.
And I think we could just – all we can do is really talk about it and be open.
I feel when I was younger, there wasn't social media platforms.
There wasn't things to look on YouTube to learn about it or you know what I mean?
It's one of those things where you're using drugs and you're trying to hide it as best you can.
You weren't really informed too much.
You had the D.A.R.E. programs.
But yeah, nobody wanted to listen to them.
You know, I actually won my D.A.R.E. speech in but nobody wanted to listen to them. You know,
I actually won my dare speech in fifth grade. Did you? Yeah. Do you remember writing those?
Yep. Yeah. My class voted me and I was so nervous to give the speech in front of the whole school.
Yeah. Oh my gosh. That was a joke. It didn't work. No, it doesn't. Well, I mean, it's like a kind of a scare tactic too, right? It's like you have the police come in and like speak on it
where I feel now
like if you can actually have stories of people who've gone through it or struggled with addiction
and can just get on a real level with these kids like they have you know a little bit more
insight to wanting to learn about it like they want to hear about it they might be able to relate
to it so I just feel like now it's like we have to be able to talk more on it publicly and let kids know that they
can ask those questions. And it should be in school curriculum. It shocks me that it's not
like they're still do sex ed and that's still part of, you know, the curriculum you have to
pass this, but why aren't we doing drug education? We're seeing more overdoses than teen pregnancies nowadays. Wow. That is scary. Yeah. That would be way more relatable if they
took a former drug addict, brought them in the class once a year, twice a year. Exactly. And
shared their story. Absolutely. Like what the reality of it is. Yeah. I think that would work
way more than a cop that doesn't give a shit comes in, talks about this and you could tell
they don't care. mean well it's kind
of like going to treatment you know if I remember going to treatment when my addiction you know got
so bad it ended up leading to and then IV user and it just downhill spiraled really fast but the
ones who I could relate to who are like I've sat in your shoes I'm you know a year sober I'm five
years sober even those who were a day longer than me,
I was inspired by them,
because you're just trying to get through it
versus somebody who goes to school and gets a PhD
and has all this school and has zero experience.
Instantly, it's like a shut off.
You don't even want to hear what they have to say.
It's like one of those things,
like unless you've been through it,
I don't want you to try to tell me
what I need to do to overcome this. For know, that's how I felt about my business
professors in college. Cause I'm like, why are you teaching this? If you have no business that
you started, right? Like I can't take you serious. It's the same with everything, right? Exactly.
It's very true. Yeah. And especially with business too. I mean, I learned as I went,
you know, I did, didn't have anybody really even teaching me. It's like,
it's through all the trials and errors, you know, fails that someone becomes successful in my
opinion. Absolutely. So with your addiction, did it start right away or was it a gradual
kind of incline? Um, well, I went to treatment when I was almost 23 so it was pretty short-lived is the way i
would say now now that i you know i'm a counselor and have a couple treatment facilities like i see
people that come in and they've been doing it for 10 years or they've been in numerous programs
um i feel like it hit hard for me and that that's what I needed because it probably I would have
been one to overdose and it would have taken me and so just all the consequences that you could
have I feel happened you know getting arrested um back then drug charges were felonies and
honestly I'm thankful for that because I feel nowadays it's a slap on the wrist therefore
there's no consequences oh i didn't know that
it's a misdemeanor so have drugs on you what yeah even if you're selling it it's not like back then
just having enough for yourself where clearly you're it wasn't for sale that was a felony
charge even just having paraphernalia was a felony. Really? Yeah. I remember in Jersey, if you had a certain amount of weed, it was a felony.
Right.
Well, now it's legal.
That is crazy.
Times have changed.
And so for me, it was towards the end of it, I had gotten arrested.
My mom had actually called the cops on me.
And I was at a baby shower and I was like, okay, she's going to be at this location.
If there's an officer's number that I can text or call when she leaves,
have them pull her over for a traffic stop, whatever.
Her mom snitched on you?
Mm-hmm.
And you didn't know?
Mm-mm.
Wow.
No, she was terrified to tell me about that.
She didn't want to confront you?
No, and she didn't want me to be upset with her,
but I thank her every single day for making that phone call
because she saved my life. If it wasn't for that day that day, who knows where I would be. And that was
12 years ago, you know? And so it was, it was terrifying, but I had already had previous
charges for having drugs on me and it was okay. There's no bail. Like you are, you're on a
probation hold and you're going to, you're going to sit there. And it was treatment or prison, two years in prison.
So, of course, no brainer.
I'm like, I'll go to treatment, whatever that looks like, wherever it is.
I don't care.
Take me.
And then, you know, my program was seven months long.
Nowadays, I mean, we're pulling teeth just to get somebody to get authorization from insurance for three weeks in residential.
And their mind is barely, barely clearing up.
I mean, they're physically barely even starting to feel better from withdrawals.
So it's just crazy the times we live in with how bad everything is getting and the lack of support that people have when they want to get help.
Yeah.
It's sad to see in the insurance stuff, most of them don't even cover it to a certain degree,
right?
No.
No.
If somebody has been to treatment 15 times, the way I look at it is they need help.
You know, there's something going on that the last handful of programs are not working
and insurance is saying they've been
a treatment too many times or I'm going to authorize it.
Damn.
You know, and it's like, no, you guys got it backwards.
If you would stop just giving two weeks and actually authorize good amount of time for
them to get under their belt and mandate it, it would be a different situation.
Yeah.
Because to clear a 10 year cycle, you need more than two weeks. Absolutely. You're going a different situation. Yeah. Cause to clear a 10 year cycle, you need
more than two weeks. Absolutely. You're going to need months. Yeah. I mean, it was months. I mean,
five months, six months for it to, you know, where the thought would come and then it would go
without sticking there. It took a long time. So when people sit there and be like, I'm great,
I'm better, I'm detoxed. I'm like, you know. Yeah, you see a lot of them return, right?
It's like almost jail kind of once they get out, a big percent come back to a treatment center.
It becomes a vicious cycle.
Yeah, definitely.
A lot of them relapse in there.
And I heard some of them even they're taking the drugs inside the centers because security is not that good.
Well, what's hard is we can only search so much, right? So like what we train our team is being able to recognize the signs.
If, you know, we can't cavity search people so we can search all their belongings.
We can search their person.
We can say you can't bring cigarettes in unless it's unopened.
However, we can't cavity search.
So if they're smart, they're going to put it in places we can't search.
But there's signs that we can't cavity search. So if they're smart, they're going to put it in places we can't search.
But there's signs that we can look for. You know, if an opiate addict is coming in and they're refusing to take their subs, which is Suboxone, which is what helps with the opiate withdrawals, that's a big red flag.
You know, and so if people and the team is not up to par with what to look for, then yeah, it's easy to sneak it by.
Yeah, that makes sense.
So the staff have to be a step ahead of everybody that comes through the door.
Yeah. What do you think about interventions? Because you see them on movies and stuff.
Do those actually work?
They do. I've been doing interventions for over 10 years. I'm a certified intervention
professional. I've done hundreds across the country. And, you know, there's a lot of different ways to perform an intervention depending on what the situation is.
A lot of times, you know, when somebody is in their active addiction and a lot of times I would say the family is the interventions for the family, not just the addict.
Right.
It's a broken system within the family.
There's a lot of enabling, codependency, denial.
There's a lot that's going on with the loved ones
and support system that they don't even realize.
It's one of those things,
well, they're the ones on drugs, fix them, right?
Well, if you're 22 years old
and you're using drugs in mom and dad's house
and they're paying for your car
and paying for your phone
and letting you do whatever the heck you want, are they going to change? Nobody's going to change.
We have to feel the repercussions. We have to feel the consequences to say like, okay,
this is no longer fun. This is becoming uncomfortable. So assisting families with
setting those boundaries and putting new systems in place that can kind of make their addiction
more uncomfortable, it's more likely that they're going to want change. Yeah. Yeah. They're interesting to me
because I feel like if I got sat down and like people were just attacking me, I don't know if
it would work on me. Yeah. Because you're reacting not logically. Right. Right. Because I had a
Xanax, a little Xanax phase, two months of my life. And I don't think I would have listened to anyone on that.
Right.
What made you change?
Near-death experience.
So that for me was like, because I ran out of my prescription and I started having withdrawal, had a seizure.
I was like, wow, I almost died at 21.
Like this needs to change.
But see, that's a consequence.
So that's like some people have their own.
What is intervention, right?
It could be being in a hospital because you had a seizure and now you're in the ICU and you're on life support.
That is intervening on that.
Now it's becoming between your health.
Some it's for me.
My intervention was legal.
Getting arrested.
It terrified me like five days too long in jail.
I never want to go back.
You know, that, that worked for me where some people can go to jail and be like, Oh, this is
no problem. It's easy. It's cake. It's a break, you know? So it just depends on that individual.
And if it's comes to an intervention with a professional entering your home,
it's finding those things. Like I've seen it work with a cat, like we're going to take your
cat away. And they're like, no, not my cat, you know, and then they go to treatment. So it just
depends on on the situation. Because, yeah, sometimes I've had people run and throw drinks
in my face. And, you know, I mean, of course, nobody wants to go to treatment, especially when
you're in active addiction and you want to get angry and upset. But if the family sticks to those healthy boundaries more times than not,
it is very successful because deep down inside we're hurting, right?
It's just so deep.
We can barely admit it to ourselves, let alone admit that to our loved ones.
Like I need help.
It's very rare that somebody raises their hand and says, I have a problem.
I need to go to treatment.
Usually it takes some sort of consequence or situation, life death experience to say,
whoa, this is scary. This is a problem and I need help.
How packed are these treatment centers right now? Because it seems like this is a major problem. It is a major problem. I mean, it just depends. I mean, I feel like it goes in ebbs and flows, ups and downs. I've seen
holidays, for example, where it's really busy and people don't want to be alone and they go to
treatment. And I also see where it's really slow because everybody wants to wait for their New
Year's resolution to get better, you know? So, I mean, it just, it depends. But what's bothersome
to me is that there's so many people out there who are struggling, who want help, who don't have the resources.
Right. Because insurance won't cover it or they can't afford it because it is pretty expensive.
It's very expensive. Yeah. Treatment's not cheap.
You know, I mean, the staff you're paying for doctors, nurses, counselors, 24-7, you know, technicians around the clock.
So it's not cheap to go to a private program.
And then ones that are state-funded have extensive waiting lists.
And then you have the government who's over there supporting addiction,
providing housing, food stamps, burner phones.
Now they're paying people.
Now they're paying to stay stuck in their addiction.
Crazy.
It's absolutely crazy.
So what do you think the fix is then?
Well, I think that the government needs to wake up and realize if they're going to spend $14 million to shut down an old hotel in San Francisco and turn it into a housing unit for the homeless.
Yeah, I saw that.
Use that money to put them into treatment.
Make it mandated.
I know in the state of Florida, you can, you know, the Marchman Act is a mandated program
where you can't leave treatment.
Like, why are we not doing that here?
Oh, you can't leave once you start?
Right.
Wow.
That is interesting.
Where California, it's an at-will state.
So you can leave whenever.
Exactly.
And that probably doesn't work as effectively.
No, because if you're having a bad day
and you're craving, see ya.
There's nothing holding over your head.
You know, I wanted to leave treatment on a daily basis, but it was either suck it up or get arrested and go to prison.
So it's like that kept me in it.
But what if I didn't have that hanging over my head?
I probably would have walked too.
Yeah.
You know, I would have been one of those vicious cycles in and out of treatment constantly. Then you have the ones who have insurance and now they're utilizing their insurance to.
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Keep a roof over their head. So in and out, in and out, take a break, go to treatment,
go back out, go on a sick run, go back in, you know, so it's just trying to break the cycle.
It's it's hard, but it's going to take a lot of us speaking up and talking about it and saying like, this is not helping. It's making it worse it worse yeah I think another part of it is the
accessibility of these drugs is so easy there should be another fix there because you probably
just hit up your friends and got whatever you needed well yeah they're selling it on snapchat
now like that's crazy you know where you can just get drugs on snapchat like what I didn't even know
that yeah yeah I'm learning that I'm learning that with these kids now. I mean, it was so easy in college.
Yeah.
So imagine now with social media.
Yeah.
Times 10.
Yeah.
In college, I could get whatever I wanted.
Right.
Well, now because Snapchat, I don't use it, but they, I mean, the story erases.
Oh.
Right?
Interesting.
So you're able to post it or send it to somebody.
Yeah.
And then once you open it, now it's gone.
You can't
reopen it so they're communicating this way versus having it in a text message or a phone call where
you can track it right well they could probably track those too i'm sure they have to be on to
something with that but it's like now it's just becoming easier and easier alcoholics i mean it's
worse now that there's instacart, DoorDash that's delivering alcohol.
So now people are like, OK, well, I don't have to drive to get it.
I could just have it delivered to my door. Right. And then show a fake ID.
And then if I'm not getting it from this store, let's say you get banned.
You can just get it from other places. Wow. I didn't even think about that.
But yeah, that's so easy. You could just show a fake ID at the
door and no one's going to question it
because they're not scanning those.
Exactly.
Getting alcohol is way too easy.
Way too easy. There was always that
debate of the drinking age. 21 was too high.
What do you think? Is 18
because other countries it's 18?
I think you're still a baby at 18.
Canada is 18, I believe. That's crazy. I think you're still a baby at 18. Yeah, Canada's 18, I believe.
Yeah, I mean, that's crazy.
I mean, they say that you're an adult at 18,
but kids can't go be on their own at 18 nowadays.
You know, my son's 10.
In eight years, I'm like, no way.
You know, they're just trying to figure life out,
let alone, okay, here, you need to be kicked out of your parents' house
or put on your own, whatever, however parents look at it.
And you can go ahead and drink legally at that age.
I don't see that being very successful for a lot of kids.
So you got three kids.
At what age do you think parents should start talking to their kids about this type of stuff?
I get asked that question a lot.
And I feel when you feel your kid is mature enough to have that conversation.
All kids have different maturity levels.
My son, who's 10, is very mature.
And I feel like if they start asking questions, that's the time to start talking about it.
Because if they're asking questions already and you're not being open and honest with them,
they're going to ask that question to a friend and they may not get the right answer that they should be getting. Right.
So, you know, my son has known about what drugs are at a fairly young age. I mean,
he's been raised around my facility since he was a baby. But, you know, he's over there telling
his friends at school, make sure your mom's checking your candy because you make sure there's not fat and all in it, you know.
But and some may be like, oh, my gosh, it's too young.
I don't care.
He's very well aware.
You know, he's going to think a little bit.
He didn't think twice before trying something that if he had no idea what drugs were.
Yeah.
And they're exposed to it in public school.
Of course.
I remember in middle school, people were smoking weed where I'm from.
Well, in all the songs.
Now songs are talking about how cool it is and drugs are different colors.
So it's promoted to be a good thing, not a bad thing.
And so if these kids are listening to this music and it's their favorite rapper that they look up to
and they're rapping about sex and drugs, I mean, of course the kids are going to be like oh that sounds fun i'm curious about that you know
they don't have any knowledge and education about what it is then they're going to be tempted i had
to stop listening to rap music i used to love it in high school and college but i cut it out
it's different now yeah now i feel like there's too much programming. Oh, yeah. 100%. It's not clean music.
Like, it's like I hear music from, you know, the 80s, 90s.
I'm like, this was good music.
That's all I play now.
90s, 2000s music.
Totally.
It was actually like music with substance.
No messaging.
Right.
People were just singing about whatever they wanted to.
Now it's like, what am I going to subconsciously influence with this song?
Right.
Crazy.
It's crazy.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Or bashing other people through their songs and it's becoming,
you know,
it promotes drama.
Yeah.
Social media is,
yeah,
I'm glad we grew up without it.
Yeah.
School was a lot better.
I think.
Yeah,
I agree.
I agree.
I just feel like we,
you know,
should be educating our kids,
our youth.
I mean,
in so many different ways,
I really wish that they would incorporate meditation, you know, maybe we won't use the
words anxiety and depression, but when you're feeling anxious or sad, you know, how do you
cope with that? How do you get through those types of things to set our kids up for success?
And of course, you know, academic and all those things are important to learn.
But setting them up for how to save money, how to write a check, those types of things I feel should be incorporated in our schools.
Absolutely.
Do you send your kids to a public school right now?
They're in private.
Nice.
Yeah.
I mean, it's sad.
I mean, I grew up in a really small town and the amount of gang violence now
and guns, it's crazy.
In Cali? Oh yeah.
You can't even own a gun there, I thought.
You can.
You can own a gun.
I don't know if we have.
Yeah, we have concealed carry.
I just meant like out here
you could just buy it in Vegas.
Walk in and buy it. First week I moved here, I was like, are you could just buy it in Vegas walk in and buy it oh you don't have oh
wow yeah first week I moved here I was like are you gonna run a background check or anything
no they did run one okay it was so easy wow I literally walked in the store and bought a Glock
and had it a week later yeah see no can't do that I went to buy a gun not too long ago and um
my husband gets a notification that his gun's ready
to get picked up and i get denied i'm like what because my felony charges back in the day i was
like oh wow those never got cleared yeah not for a gun damn so that's interesting uh-huh wow well
at least they're doing their job running background checks. Yeah, I mean, for sure. But then at the same time, gangsters and, you know, people who are going to go use it for to kill somebody, they're not going and getting a legal gun.
You know what I mean?
They're just going and picking one up in an alley.
For real.
So it's like at the same time.
Yeah.
Banning it doesn't fix it.
No, I don't feel it does.
Yeah.
There's always that debate, but it just never made sense logically, because if you ban something, people are going to sell it in the black market.
You saw it with alcohol back in the day.
Yeah.
Well, now they have the black market for pills too, which is crazy.
So people are able just to order prescription pills and have it delivered to their house.
And, you know, they're not labeled.
So it's just, it's, yeah.
Yeah, you can buy that shit from India and stuff, I heard. Mm-hmm. For super cheap.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, we've had people come in, teachers even, come in and they're ordering it because they're
scared to buy it from a dealer.
Wow.
So they feel like it's safer to, you know, be in the comfort of their own home, go on
the internet and have it delivered to them.
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
You mentioned you had ADD earlier, right?
Yeah.
So they tried telling me I had that in first
grade and they wanted to put me on all these meds. Did they do that to you too? No, no,
that's a good topic because I, I, I don't know if I'm so much joking about it or I've, I mean,
I've always had it right. And so, but my mom was like, I'm not taking her to go get assessed by a
doctor to get put on a ton of different medications.
So I definitely have that in me where it's like constant, hard to sit still, hard to focus, but I've learned the tools to be able to cope with it versus medicated.
Right.
So did you ever take medications at that age?
No.
So my mom, my dad wanted me to get on them.
My mom didn't.
She wanted me to be kind of natural.
So I never got put on.
But I feel like they just try to do that to a lot of kids just because they're active in class or jittery or whatever yeah i mean my kids are the same way especially my boys are all over
the place jumping around you know what i mean yeah but i mean when it comes to medications
there definitely are people qualified to be on medication. So I don't want to say like no meds across the board.
However, I feel like on a professional level,
we have to be doing more thorough assessments
than a five-minute conversation.
Oh, you can't sit still in class.
Okay, here's a prescription, right?
Oh, you have anxiety?
Here's a prescription.
Like we need to be assessing that a little bit more.
Luckily, I went to a program that was a non-medication program. Like they didn't
believe in psych meds. And I feel fortunate that I was able to overcome an opiate addiction without
having a crutch of a long-term maintenance program of Suboxone or methadone. Not saying that that's for everybody, but I could have easily just been thrown on this
and said, hey, this is better than the alternative of injecting 10 times a day.
And sure, in the looks of it, it would have been.
But then now I'm getting put on something that I'm being told I need to be on long term
when clearly, you know, fast forward to now, I never took
anything. I never needed to be on anything. Right. So how are we determining who is appropriate and
who's not appropriate for long term medication treatment? Wow. I didn't know they put you on
another drug to get off of a drug. It's like a never ending cycle then. Exactly. Wow. Yeah. That's
the thing with all these commercials with the side effects.
It lasts like 30 seconds.
Yeah.
And it's like,
then you got to take another thing for those side effects.
And it's like,
by the time you're 60,
you're taking 20 things.
The whole commercial is just all the side effects.
If you take this drug.
And they fund all the TV networks.
So they're half their ads.
And it's like,
wow,
they control the narrative pretty much.
Right.
Exactly.
When I make certain posts on social media, it'll be like fact check.
Right.
Like what?
It's like crazy, man.
Yeah.
It's scary time.
It is.
It is scary.
And so the medications, I feel like we definitely need to, because look at how many kids could
be just screwed up and put on meds.
Or I mean, how do you look at it now?
Are you thankful that you didn't get put on meds in first grade?
Because who knows? I mean, I would have had no emotion because I was also on Accutane for seven months. Have you look at it now? Are you thankful that you didn't get put on meds in first grade? So thankful because who knows?
I mean, I would have had no emotion because I was also on Accutane for seven months.
Have you heard of that one?
I was just a zombie.
Yep.
That thing f***ed me up, man.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I'm trying to live as natural as possible.
For sure.
Yeah, because it fogs up your mind.
You know what I mean?
So it's like if there's other remedies to be able to take to to fix things without having to be
on a prescription is better you know but there of course there's people that need to be on those
medications yeah but in general i think they're definitely just giving them out like candy when
i went to get my xanax all i said was and i probably needed at the time but i just said i
had anxiety he gave it to me within five minutes. I was out the door with Xanax.
Exactly.
Without any education on if you take too much or take too long, what could happen?
You know what I mean?
Like you said you had a seizure.
And he never mentioned any of that.
Exactly.
If the doctor would have said, okay, I'm going to give you a prescription, but let me let
you know that if you take this consistently every single day for the next 30 days and then you decide to stop taking it cold turkey, you're at risk of having a seizure.
You probably would have thought twice about taking that prescription or ask for an alternative.
For sure.
Right. then it's easy for an addict to be able to justify now. Well, you know, I want to get off alcohol,
but I want to stay on my Xanax or I want to stay on this because my doctor prescribed it to me.
We hear that all the time. My doctor prescribed it to me. Well, your doctor is just a legal drug
dealer. Yeah. That's all they're doing is just, you know, handing it out to you and not letting
you know that this is harmful. Yeah. And a big, I think a big problem is we're taught growing up that doctors are to be trusted.
Right.
And you should go to them for health advice.
And that's really not the case with a lot of them.
They're not there to prevent anything.
Right.
They're there to just put a bandaid on the problem.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And that's where then we're having to clean it up and we're having to fix these issues and now we're dealing with the internal
anger and trauma and anxiety and trying to counsel them through these emotions when for years they've
just been going to the same doctor who's putting them on all this crap yep and it's making our jobs
much harder to be able to work with them and get them through that because now they're going through
all these different types of consequences or they've had a seizure or they've you know their
kidneys are failing um you know they have cirrhosis or whatever it might be that nobody told educated
them on this prior yeah it's such a shame and you probably get a ton of veterans those guys are put
on all sorts of medications yeah they get out yes tons. Tons. And same lack of resources too. Yeah, the VA
probably won't pay for treatment centers,
right? Right. I mean, we're seeing that with a lot
of different insurance carriers
like the process to say, okay,
we're going to cover treatment
but first you need to
do our outpatient virtually.
Bail that
numerous times and then
we'll give you the referral.
That doesn't make sense.
No, not at all. But because they don't want to pay for the residential
part of treatment. So it's making it really difficult. And by that time,
you know, they're either really, really bad off, and they probably would have had a better chance
of getting sober if they would have done it a lot sooner than failing the outpatient part of it,
and then coming in.
Yeah. I want to end off with a quote from your website that I thought was interesting.
Balance. It's not what you think.
So with balance, the book that I wrote, I wrote that about six years ago, I was pregnant with my
youngest. I have a lot of moms in particular that come to me and say how do you do it all how do you balance
everything you know I'm pretty hands-on with my kids like even being out here today I'll be home
for dinner wow you know it's like I juggle it and do the best that I can thanks to my ADD but
you know being able you don't have to just be a mom and not fulfill your goals and
your dreams. And you also don't have to just be somebody who works and decides that they don't
have time to have children. You could balance and have it all. You can do both. It's just trying to
figure out what's a good system for yourself. Yeah, I love that. Where can people find out
more about you and the treatment centers?
So you can go best ways, probably social media,
Sheree underscore Ashley. And there I will have links to the facilities.
Perfect. We'll link it below. Thanks for coming on.
Yeah, thank you.
Yeah. Thanks for watching, guys. As always, such an impactful episode.
And I will see you guys tomorrow.