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Old 27-08-2013, 09:52 AM #6
dave_jee dave_jee is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 15
dave_jee dave_jee is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 15
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If she is drinking she isnt "in recovery for 4 years" she still uses
Is she cured now?
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/pe...s-6149869.html

How hard was it to beat drugs for good?
Ben Harper, Birmingham

I've now realised that drugs weren't my main problem. I am actually an alcoholic first and foremost. But it has been tough, especially when I was still surrounded by people who did drugs. A drug addict does not want to see the person next to them clean up their act. It's also taken a lot to build up my confidence and learn to be able to go out without that extra help. I wouldn't know about harder drugs like heroin - I never did that. But for me, it was a question of putting my mind to it. A craving only lasts for 15 seconds so you've just got to get through it.


Do people forfeit their right to privacy when they become famous?
Ruby Dwyer, by e-mail

I didn't try to become famous; I just happened to end up that way. I do think the press goes too far. I got quite angry a couple of weeks ago because I had to drive around for half an hour to lose the paparazzi when I was going to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. It's important that I protect the other people who are there. But I think I have definitely forfeited my right to privacy now because I'm just about to appear in a fly-on-the-wall documentary, in which my boyfriend and I will be filmed 24 hours a day. I accept that. The difference is that now I have nothing to hide.

Last edited by dave_jee; 27-08-2013 at 09:53 AM.
dave_jee is offline