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Barry Keoghan reveals key turning point in addiction struggle

Barry Keoghan reveals key turning point in addiction struggle

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Barry Keoghan, the Oscar-nominated actor, has openly shared his struggles with addiction and that he has been to rehab for treatment after losing many of his family members to drugs.

Barry Keoghan has opened up about his addiction struggles(Image: AFP via Getty Images)

The moment his driver took him to rehab is remembered by Barry Keoghan. The 32-year-old actor made an interview with a magazine earlier this month about his addiction struggles.

The actor from Marvel’s Eternals allegedly showed persistent injuries from drug use to his arms, which the Hollywood Authentic report claimed he showed as “proof” of what he had endured. Barry shared in his wrenchingly honest conversation that a driver was the one who saved him from harm when he took him to a UK rehabilitation facility.

The actor shared a close friendship with Niall, the driver who took him on a plane before driving him to a hospital for treatment. According to Barry, “Niall literally drove me, took me on a plane himself, and took me to the rehab in England,” he said.

I returned to see her. It was nice to see the staff once more and for them to notice my improvement. They expressed a lot of emotion in it. I’ll be forever grateful.

Barry praised his friend for assisting him in getting aid, saying, “When I say that Niall is the best, I mean it because no one else put me on the plane, by the hand, literally got on the plane with me.”

Barry Keoghan has opened up about his addiction struggles
The actor thanked a friend for driving him to get help(Image: Getty Images for Valentino)
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Debbie, Barry’s mother, passed away in 2003 due to addiction, and Barry has publicly expressed his shock at the loss. Barry explained how drug use had an impact on his family and how his father, two uncles, and a cousin all perished.

In a diary entry attributed to his late mother, Barry said, “Well, tonight went well for me, so I hope I have the strength to not touch anything tomorrow.”

He added: “I got to read that at Christmas. I sent a picture to my brother, because he was in rehab over Christmas. I sent him that picture of her last page. I said ‘Just look at that. You’ve got a chance now.’ You can feel the pain in this.”

Barry spoke to Louis Theroux on a podcast show last year about his memories and heartache over his mother. He sadly remembered how addiction “came to her” when he told the presenter about his mother.

You don’t forget those things, he said, “That kind of haunts me still.”

You don’t forget waiting for the new family to come and play with you in the playground they have in the office, see if it’s going to work, and then accompany them to a whole new area and a whole new home, he said. […]

“And you know, the car travels there are haunting, and I don’t blame her,” she said. It’s a disease.

She was lovely, Barry said. She had dark hair, a beautiful figure, and was almost six feet tall. Like every single person chased her, this incident, like many families, caught her. It’s heartbreaking to see how people’s lives are deteriorating and how vulnerable people are to both the recovery they’re currently in. My mother was caught, my uncle died of it, and also my father was caught.

She simply couldn’t look after us, he continued. […] My father was absent, so we were taken into care without anyone knowing. No one knew that until she told my grandmother, which I believe she was too embarrassed to do so. the various homes in total.

Continue reading the article.

Source: Mirror

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