Former NBA Player Chris Herren, Struggles with Drugs & Alcohol

chris-herren

 Drugs and alcohol ultimately cost Chris Herren,  his professional basketball career.

Chris, along with psychiatrist and drug expert Julie Holland, encourage parents to talk to their kids about drugs at a young age.

Boston (CNN) — In the 14 years he lived as a drug addict, former NBA player Chris Herren had no shortage of moments that could have been his “rock bottom.”

The earliest may have come when he was only 18, shortly after Sports Illustrated hyped the local star’s matriculation to Boston College. Herren — then one of the most highly anticipated freshmen basketball players in the country — left BC after only one game after a positive test for cocaine.

Maybe it could have come a few years later, after he had transferred to Fresno State. Just days after one of the most brilliant games of his college career, he announced to a national audience at a news conference that he had once again failed a drug test.

Or maybe rock bottom came in 2001, when Herren’s family and friends joined the packed crowd at Boston’s Fleet Center to witness Herren fulfill his childhood dream of playing for the Boston Celtics. Even though he was in the starting lineup, Herren was nowhere to be found among the players warming up on the fabled parquet floor.

Instead, he stood in full uniform outside the Fleet Center in the pouring rain, waiting on a dealer just moments before the game.

Herren shot heroin into his veins before his mother’s funeral, bailed on his wife and newborn son in the hospital to get drunk, and even had to be brought back to life once after an overdose.

But it wasn’t any one of these moments that finally motivated him to get the treatment he needed to overcome his addiction. Herren did not have one singular moment of rock bottom.

“Addiction is rock bottom” he said in a recent interview. “I had 14 years of rock bottom.”

Now three-and-a-half years sober, Herren looks back at those dark moments of his life with glib honesty and an almost macabre sense of gratefulness.

Making that buy on a street corner in his Celtics uniform? “Just another normal day in the life of an addict,” he said.

Using heroin before a game? “I couldn’t play without it in my system.”

The overdose that almost killed him? “It was a blessing.”

Burying his mother while he was on heroin? “When I tell the story about getting high before my mother’s funeral — the looks of disgust people give me — those looks mean everything to me now.”

Herren said those looks of disgust help him stay on the straight and narrow because he had never before been on the receiving end of such confrontational shows of disapproval. No one had ever looked him in the eye and told him what he already knew: that he was a junkie.

“I used to tell myself that I was no good all of the time,” he said. “But it’s much harder to look someone else in the eye and say the same thing.”

When Herren was finally ready to dedicate himself to getting clean in 2008, he was met with a new challenge, one as daunting as kicking heroin, and one that he says helps perpetuate the cycle of addiction: the cost of effective treatment.

“Unless you have the very best insurance, you’ll only get eight or nine days,” he said. “You can’t expect someone to run the streets for 10 years and come out clean in 10 days.” read more