Joe Robison (1)
“At 15, I began to fire "T" (thc), and then it was coke, and then crank, and it ended up being anything that would break down, if it made me feel different (if it numbed my senses).”
Terri Hall
“One day, I had so much cocaine in my system that my muscles would no longer work. I couldn't stand or lift my arms. I thought I was going to die. I remember watching my chest, waiting to see my heart bust right out of my clothes.”
Stan Borley
“Cocaine, scotch whiskey, prostitutes and adrenaline offered a temporary diversion from my emotional wounds and distracted me from feeling the impact of the loss of the women in my life. But the more the decadence ensnared me, the clearer it became that this was the road to destruction and I had better change coarse in a hurry.”
Steve Ridenour
“I started chasing women, excessive spending, and drugs, particularly cocaine. After all, people with money did cocaine; it was the social drug that showed that you had money. Before long cocaine wasn't just a social thing, I became addicted and for the next 15 years, my life went into a downward spiral.”
Susan Stafford
“I wanted to be accepted in their group, so I shadowed whatever they did. My grades started to fail in high school. I went from an above average student to D's and F's. My friends taught me how to roll a joint of marijuana and sniff cocaine.”
Jody Hall
“For 10 years he would battle with crack cocaine; in and out of rehabs and often living in the street; eating out of dumpsters, begging for money, and sleeping on benches, in sheds, or wherever he could find shelter.”
Brenda Helzer
“Then one day he said let's go have on a drink. I saw no harm in it. Little did I know later that night I would be smoking crack.”