According to Tech, using marijuana led him to harder drugs such as Ecstasy before finally receiving a wake-up call.
"My kids man. I remember my young little girl Rainbow, she couldn't be more than three at the time...I don't f*cking know...she was looking at me and it felt like she knew that I was high man," Tech explained in an interview. "I was like, 'Man, I cannot die on this drug.' And my business was getting way more important and I had to be here. My partner Travis got us a lot of money and it would have just been a waste. I recall getting in the deal and somebody said they had to make sure they weren't about to do a deal with a drug addict that was going to kill himself. And a lot of my fans were like, 'Yeah, we're going to lose him like we lost Jim Morrison.' I was hearing sh*t like that. I wrote songs about it, and I got off of that sh*t, and I didn't turn back." (Complex)This week, Public Enemy's Flavor Flav revealed his past battle with fighting addiction.
"I [was] a drug addict for 18 years; only six years clean. The worst mistake I ever made was experimenting with drugs. I was always more of a follower instead of a leader. Being around the hood, you're following, you always wanna have a big name for yourself and you don't wanna be no punk. Whatever my friends were doing I chose to do. It was the worst experiment that I could do in my life, but would I change it to this day? No. The reason why is because I got to learn about addiction. I got to live through all of that, so that way I could be able to teach about it and hopefully people learn how I made my mistakes and they [don't] make the same mistakes that I made." (XXL Mag)Shady Records rapper Cashis recently came clean about his recent struggle with addiction.
"First time I met [Eminem], in the studio inLast summer, Grammy-winning rapper Eminem said his past drug addiction had a damaging effect on music making.Detroit , I had a vial of like 80 Valiums and I popped em all in like a day and a half. He was like "D*mn, dog you might wanna get some help. Let me know, I can help you out, discretely,' " the rapper explained. "I was like 'Nah man. Where I'm from, what would I look like?' I got off it my own, and later on, I found out -- like the rest of the world -- Em was getting off of it. During that time, I just quit talking to everybody dog. I didn't talk to no friends, family." (Baller Status)
"I had to learn to write and rap again, and I had to do it sober and 100 percent clean. That didn't feel good at first...I mean it in the literal sense. I actually had to learn how to say my lyrics again -- how to phrase them, make them flow, how to use force so they sounded like I meant them. Rapping wasn't like riding a bike. It was [as much] physical as mental. I was relearning basic motor skills. I couldn't control my hand shakes. I'd get in the [recording] booth and tried to rap, and none of it was clever, none was witty and I wasn't saying it right...It was four or five months after I'd been clean when I started to get a glimmer of my writing skills back. I don't remember what song I was working on specifically, but I do remember getting feeling back in the music. I realized I wanted to do this again." (New York Post)
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