Logo
Fuel
ISSUE #34.20 • CULTURE •
Hot Seat

Nic and David Sheff


When It Comes To Meth, Father’s Not Like Son.

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 7 comments
Recently in "Hot Seat"

August 20th, 2008
Craig Allen | Home Depot employee wins gold medal…for philosophy.0 comments

August 13th, 2008
Thomas Frank | The left’s brain on what’s the matter with Obama.2 comments

August 6th, 2008
Julius Achon | A Portland runner’s Olympian survival story.1 comment

July 30th, 2008
Dylan Goldsmith | The one-man operation Captured By Porches isn’t a microbrewery, it’s a nanobrewery.5 comments

July 16th, 2008
LaJean Lawson | She follows the bouncing breast.4 comments

July 9th, 2008
Darrel Lee | Portland pastor builds near-term empire, fears long-term locusts.3 comments

June 11th, 2008
Steven Wax | Reading this may result in warrantless wiretapping.0 comments

June 4th, 2008
Richard Preston | The Hot Zone author talks Ebola, self-cannibals and getting into the soup.1 comment

May 21st, 2008
Abrahm Lustgarten | Riding the rails to Tibet on the eve of the Beijing Olympics.5 comments

April 30th, 2008
Alice Feiring | Why wine geeks need to tell Robert Parker to cork it.0 comments


TWEAK CHIC: Authors David And Nic Sheff.
IMAGE: Bart Nagel
BY JOHN MINERVINI | jminervini at wweek dot com

[March 26th, 2008]

By the age of 18, Nic Sheff was addicted to meth. It wasn’t pretty. He was skeletally thin, his arms were full of holes and green with infection, he broke into relatives’ houses and stole from them…all in all, he spent five years bouncing back and forth between rehab and relapse until 2005.

You wouldn’t think much good could come of an experience like that. Fortunately, though, Nic is a writer, and so is his dad, David Sheff. Together, they’re tackling the inner workings of addiction with their parallel memoirs, Tweak and Beautiful Boy. Which book you choose—and both are deftly written—depends on whether you prefer searing grief (David) or intense suffering (Nic). It’s like Woody Allen said: “Life is divided into the horrible and the miserable.”

The Sheffs have appeared on Oprah and NPR’s Fresh Air, and have been written up in The New York Times, but they might find their most receptive audience right here in Portland next Monday, March 31. According to Rob Bovett, Legal Counsel for the Oregon Narcotics Enforcement Association: “We’ve made some progress [in Oregon]. Meth purity is the lowest it’s been in a decade. We’ve virtually eliminated meth labs in Oregon, and meth-related arrests and property crimes have leveled off,” he says. “Now, we have a golden opportunity to save lives and families...to ramp up evidence-based prevention, enforcement and treatment. Raising awareness is the first step.”

That’s handy, ‘cause awareness is what the Sheffs are all about. WW caught up with the family on tour in Los Angeles via phone to talk about expensive rehabs, self-destruction and the possibility of atheistic prayer.

WW: To make this project work, you had to reveal excruciating personal details. What’s it like having your most heinous sins out there for everybody to see?

Nic Sheff: I think of John and Yoko on the cover of Two Virgins. It’s not like they’re airbrushed, or they were going to the gym. The whole world was criticizing them, tearing them apart, and they just said, “Look at us, this is who we are.” That’s something I aspire to, that kind of bravery.

Do you think it’s possible to use things like alcohol or marijuana responsibly?

David Sheff: This is what I know from being in about 800 rehabs with Nic—if any of those things gets in the way of your life, if it screws up your relationships, if you can’t do your schoolwork, then it’s dangerous. I know people who smoke pot and it doesn’t destroy their lives; I’ve met people in rehabs whose only drug is pot and it completely screwed up their lives.















icon Story continues below

advertisement
OMSI
advertisement

Nic, you say you were trying to self-medicate with meth. What about yourself were you trying to treat?

Nic: I don’t know, really. The most terrifying thing in the world for me was that someone would see who I really was inside, and think that person was this horrible, disgusting, gross thing that didn’t even deserve to live. I think I felt that if I ever really looked inside of me, that’s what I’d find, too. Now, through therapy, I’ve had a lot of opportunity to face that stuff. I mean, I had to figure out how to live with myself, or else I was gonna die. I guess I’ve learned that I’m not that disgusting, horrible person. [Laughs] I’m actually kind of, like, an OK person.

In your memoirs, both of you flirt with God’s role in recovery, but you’re both atheists. What’s the deal? Is God real? Is he a mind trick to help you get clean?

David: I was never on the fence about this. I was an atheist, and I am an atheist. But, I believe in things now that I never would have expected. I believe in prayer. I never sat down and planned to pray, but then all of a sudden, there I was, in the hospital, praying. Was I trying to hedge my bets? Maybe. But it was also more primal than that.

Nic: I can’t conceive of an entity, I don’t believe in that. But I was talking to my friend the other day, and he told me, “Being a good Christian means having a lot of faith.” If that’s true, then I guess I’m kind of a good Christian. I don’t know what I have faith in exactly, but I do have a lot of faith. I have faith that things are gonna be OK, that things are gonna work out, that I’m gonna be taken care of. And that’s something I’ve gained from this experience.

David, do you think it’s possible for a parent not to feel responsible for his child’s addiction?

David: Really, completely? No. I think parents are wired to worry about their kids, to feel responsible for their choices. The task for me was not to take it all on, because it was impeding Nic from taking responsibility for himself. I learned the hard way that I couldn’t do it for him—he had to do it himself. I guess what I have now is mainly what parents can hope for: perspective.

So, Nic, pretend you’re casting the movie version of Tweak. Who plays you? Who plays your dad?

Nic: [pause] For me, I’d go with Joseph Gordon-Levitt. And then, for Dad, I don’t know...Martin Sheen, maybe? Martin Sheen seems like a nice guy.

Rate This Story
4.3 average/20 votes

 
read all 7 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Nic and David Sheff”

4

I am grateful for their books. They are helping me navigate something I did not know I was signing up for as a parent. It is a nightmare. My "beautiful boy" is lost in a similar way and I do...

Patty, Jul 4th, 2008 9:12am
5

DAVID, JUST FINISHED BEAUTFUL BOY LAST NIGHT, I CRIED.. I HAVE TOLD MY SON, WHOS 13 THIS MONTH,HE HAS TO READ IT!

I OPENED THE MAIL YESTERDAY, & RECEIVED A FREE GIFT FROM A CHURCH, ...

LISA L, Jul 14th, 2008 11:11pm
6

Dear David, An aquaintance told me of you book. I felt as if I already knew you. I had been saying I had a story to tell but never have had the confidence in myself to put it in writing. My firstborn ...

bonita kelly, Jul 15th, 2008 10:02pm
7

Dear David, I have been reading your book and feel your pain as a parent. I am a single parent of three two teenage girls and an eleven year old boy with ADHD. I refuse to put my son on any medication...

Brenda P., Aug 16th, 2008 8:33am
 
 
 





Recently in Willamette Week
August 20th 2008Sliced Bread, Beware | A better fire hose, a poker aid & a foldable clipboard—meet six Portland inventors whose big ideas are the best thing since, well, you know.
August 20th 2008How to Live Cheap in Portland | Throwing too much money away on food and shelter? here’s WW’s Recession Survival Guide.
August 20th 2008The Queer and the Qur’an | Ali is gay. And Muslim. Can he be both?
August 20th 2008Good Cop, Mad Cop | Many of Navin Sharma’s colleagues in the Vancouver Police Department can’t believe he got fired. After reading this, neither will you.
August 20th 2008Lean, Mean Meat-Free Machine | Portlander Robert Cheeke is the face of vegan bodybuilding.
August 20th 2008The Sopranokovs | The Russian mob comes to town with a new scam—medical identity theft.
August 20th 2008Manhunter | Almost every state lets bounty hunters chase down its most wanted. Why doesn’t Oregon?
August 20th 2008Get Wet: WW’s Summer Guide 2008 | The rain is finally over. Now let’s get wet!
August 20th 2008New Kids In The Flock | Gresham’s twin teenage sensations go about their Father’s business. And it’s making them superstars.