Travis Interview (Fentanyl Addict)

In this episode I talked to Travis a homeless addict from Independence Missouri. Who came from a two parent household and fell astray to drug addiction. Early in his childhood and falling into depression after the loss of both his parents. He shares some of the horrors of being on the streets and how he affords his lifestyle.

Пікірлер: 19

  • @FloatingThroughTheRealm
    @FloatingThroughTheRealm7 ай бұрын

    Travis, if you’re out there… don’t let this take you. Find the will to ask for help.

  • @grifyn882
    @grifyn882Ай бұрын

    this podcast was so inevitable i have to see and heard it

  • @PlayerToBeNamedLater1973
    @PlayerToBeNamedLater197319 күн бұрын

    I lost my parents and a brother all within a span of 3 years and that was the period when I started to take drugs and drink but I didn't really realize til I got clean that I was running from my emotions. I just knew that I felt happier when I was high. But I never did heroin because I was afraid of it. Even before it was likely to be fentanyl I was scared of it. I grew up in a family of musicians and I associated heroin with dead musicians . So when I got addicted to Dilaudid and Oxycontin I inevitably spend a lot of time sick because I didn't consider heroin an option no matter how sick I felt. I met lots of women being a musician and one of them came to me one day and said she was pregnant and I needed to decide if I was going to be in her and the child's life or keep living like an idiot. So I stopped taking drugs and made music my hobby instead of my job so I could get away from the temptation and be a father . I had to deal with a lot of the things I'd been avoiding by living irresponsibly. I'm lucky I have my health and two great kids and a good wife now. I'd have none of it if I had kept on partying all the time

  • @akia1222
    @akia12227 ай бұрын

    People with addiction issues can be extremely unpredictable… be safe out there

  • @InevitablePodcast1

    @InevitablePodcast1

    7 ай бұрын

    Thanks I will, I try to keep in mind that they're people too and try to help them as much as I can.

  • @creamydistortion

    @creamydistortion

    Ай бұрын

    Fuck you for being mean

  • @VellSoSaucy93
    @VellSoSaucy935 ай бұрын

    How do you pick who you’re going to interview

  • @monkiesbanana321
    @monkiesbanana3217 ай бұрын

    Thank you for interviewing Travis. The more we know about what we can all face, the better

  • @InevitablePodcast1

    @InevitablePodcast1

    7 ай бұрын

    Your Welcome, Yes it is my mission to document real life stories and testimonies. So that it can help people make better choices with their future. Aswell as get people help that need it.

  • @villainsarentborntheyremade
    @villainsarentborntheyremade7 ай бұрын

    Seems like buddy made sum mistakes early in life and just said screw it

  • @akia1222

    @akia1222

    7 ай бұрын

    You’re right! It’s definitely “life’s” fault for this guys bad decisions. GIVE ME A BREAK! His life sucks because of all the bad decisions HE MADE. An unwell population is an easily controlled and manipulated population Why should people (like this guy being interviewed) try to change (aka get clean) when they are being continually enabled? Since when it become “okay” to openly use IV drugs, or use them at all for that matter. Why are we okay with letting our fellow humans live on the street looking like zombies? Most importantly, why is OUR American government okay with any of this? We need to demand better from a government that supposedly has the interest of the people “heart.”

  • @InevitablePodcast1

    @InevitablePodcast1

    7 ай бұрын

    That's possible, I think when he's ready to make that change he will and won't look back.

  • @creamydistortion

    @creamydistortion

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@InevitablePodcast1Fuck that smoke mad crack

  • @creamydistortion

    @creamydistortion

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@InevitablePodcast1just smoke crack