She shares that her use escalated to 80 pills a day, noting, “It took more and more to get high, and I honestly don't know when your body decides it can't deal with it anymore. But it does decide at some point.” Her addiction shifted from recreational use to something destructive, as she sought relief from emotional pain.
Lisa Marie began taking opioids after her C-section and later used them to help her sleep, feeling shame about her addiction while raising her two young children. After being hospitalized for her addiction, she entered rehab and chose to undergo bariatric surgery. However, her daughter, Riley Keough, felt that Lisa Marie wasn’t ready to embrace sobriety.
While Lisa Marie avoided narcotics after rehab, she struggled with what Riley described as “the post-rehab cocktail,” which led to another hospitalization for a seizure. Riley writes that her mother was deeply affected by this experience.
In an interview with PEOPLE, Riley discussed the challenges of writing about her mother’s addiction and the impact of her brother Benjamin’s suicide in 2020, also related to addiction struggles. Through the memoir titled From Here to the Great Unknown, Riley hopes to shed light on who her mother truly was, sharing a relatable narrative of love, heartbreak, loss, and family. Lisa Marie aimed to inspire others with her story, and now Riley shares that same wish.
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