Broken Open: What Painkillers Taught Me about Life and Recovery

William Cope Moyers

Broken Open: What Painkillers Taught Me about Life and Recovery

Broken Open: What Painkillers Taught Me about Life and Recovery

William Cope Moyers

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Description

On a damp and dreary Saturday night in October 2015, William Cope Moyers stood in front of 40,000 people on the National Mall in Washington, DC. The crowd had gathered for an unprecedented rally to prove with their faces and voices that addiction to substances does not discriminate and people by the hundreds of thousands do overcome it. But William had a secret: As he spoke inspirational words of healing and hope to people in recovery, he was addicted to opioids. And nobody knew it but him.

William didn't know something was missing until it happened. He'd been in recovery for alcohol and drugs for years. He was a recovery activist and a spokesperson for the gold standard of treatment and recovery organizations. He was a model leader and follower of Twelve Step programs. But, still, he slipped. And his slip lasted a few years. Privately, he was addicted to painkillers while publicly saying he was in recovery from alcohol and drug use. So, was he still in recovery? How could this happen to someone who did everything "right"? How did it go so wrong?

With brutal honesty and introspection, William shares what happened after sobriety--after he'd published his candid and shocking memoir, Broken, in 2007. While he no longer frequented or passed out on the floor of crack houses, his life of sobriety wasn't perfect. But his recovery was strong, or so he thought. Unfortunately, the opioid epidemic was stronger. It broke him. He was Broken Open.

Broken Open could be one long story of self-justification. Instead, William takes a courageous look at his recovery and concludes that people in recovery need to take a broader view than he once did. Recovery isn't black and white--it's not you're either sober or you drink, you're clean or you take drugs. It's not success or failure. It's not the Twelve Steps or nothing. Those all-or-nothing approaches don't work for all of us as we continue our life journeys, something which William now understands very well, because he made it through to what he considers a fuller, more evolved recovery.

Against the odds, this story has a happy ending. William had the tools and perspective to see where he was and eventually find his way out...not because his recovery community noticed he needed help and offered a way through it, though. Instead of help, he encountered condemnation, secrecy, and closed doors. When he found a solution for his new addiction, the support system he once relied on wasn't open to it. The people in his support system were closed off to the possibilities that enable people to find more success in recovery than ever before. He hopes his story will help others who find themselves in the same place. Not in black-or-white thinking, but in the gray. Because that's where life happens.

About the Author

William C. Moyers is the vice president of public affairs and community relations at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. As the organization's public advocate, Moyers carries messages about addiction, treatment, and recovery to audiences everywhere. Using his own story, Moyers highlights the power of addiction and the promise and possibility of recovery from it. He has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Larry King Live, Good Morning America, and National Public Radio, and his work has been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Newsweek. He has written four books, including Broken, a New York Times bestseller that remains in print. Between 2008 and 2016, Moyers wrote a weekly column on addiction-related issues for Creators Syndicate, based in Los Angeles. Moyers was born in 1959 in Fort Worth, Texas, and was a print reporter in the 1980s and a journalist for CNN until 1995. A year later he joined the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation and has been there ever since. Moyers is the father of three adult children. He lives in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Critical Reviews

"William Cope Moyers' memoir Broken Open: What Pain Killers Taught Me About Life and Recovery, is a moving, totally compelling, fascinating book.

As writers, bearing witness is the most important thing we do, and William Moyers has done just that with a vividness, honesty and brilliance that is rare."--Susan Cheever "author of My Name is Bill: Bill Wilson - His Life and the Creation of Alcoholics Anonymous"

Publishing Information

Publisher: Hazelden Publishing & Educational Services
Pub date: 2024-09-03
Length: 260 pages

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