Matthew Perry is laying all of it out. In a brand new interview forward of the discharge of his new memoir, he says his opioid dependancy went next-level when he started stealing drugs from the open homes of strangers. In a clip you possibly can view HERE through The New York Post, Matthew, 53, admitted to Diane Sawyer within the Friday, October 28 ABC interview that he wanted 55 drugs a day to maintain his harmful dependancy to prescription drugs. “I had to wake up and realize that I had to get 55 of them, or I was gonna be really sick,” he informed Diane. “So I did all sorts of things, I had a bunch of doctors, and fake migraines, and all that stuff. I guess the weirdest thing I did, was on Sundays, I would go to open houses, and go to the bathrooms in these open houses, and see what pills they had in there, and steal them.”
At the time, he informed Diane, he rationalized the theft. “And I think they thought, ‘Well, there’s no way that Chandler came in and stole from us,’” Perry he stated. Diane additionally broached the subject of the actor’s ingesting downside, and associated how co-star Jennifer Aniston confronted him. “And she says, ‘we know you’re drinking,’” Diane stated. “Yeah,” admitted Perry. “Imagine how scary a moment that was. And I said, ‘how? I thought I was hiding it so well.’ And she said, ‘we can smell it.’ But I wasn’t in a position to stop, you know? And that’s what addiction is. But she was the one to reach out the most. You know, I’m really grateful to her for that.”
Matthew’s newest admission comes on the heels of a number of intimate revelations that may be present in his upcoming memoir, Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing, which hits cabinets on November 1. His many confessions embody feeling “unlovable” whereas relationship Notting Hill star Julia Roberts, having a deep crush on Jennifer earlier than Friends premiered, virtually dying after his colon burst as a consequence of drug overuse, secretly relationship Cameron Diaz, and having a bizarre preoccupation with Keanu Reeves being alive.