‘There Is A Hell’: Matthew Perry Says He’s ‘Been There,’ Admits He Spent Nearly $10 Million To Get Sober

“Friends” actor Matthew Perry said he was certain that hell exists, claiming to have “been there” during his long struggle with substance abuse.

“There is a hell,” the actor said in his new book — “Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing: A Memoir” — which is due out on November 1. “Don’t let anyone tell you different. I’ve been there; it exists; end of discussion.”

Perry, 53, said that he got to the point where he was taking 55 Vicodin a day — in addition to drinking alcohol and taking Xanax — and explained that after certain point, being an addict became all about “math.”

He would get up in the morning, he said, and the only thing on his mind was how he might get those 55 pills. It was never about partying — the “Friends” star said he had never been one to go out and party. His goal, rather, was simply to take five Vicodin so that he could sit on the couch to watch a movie.

“When you’re a drug addict, it’s all math. I wasn’t doing it to feel high or to feel good. I certainly wasn’t a partyer; I just wanted to sit on my couch, take five Vicodin and watch a movie,” he said. “That was heaven for me. It no longer is.”

The “Fools Rush In” star admitted that over the years, he sunk millions into trying to overcome addiction. “I’ve probably spent $9 million or something trying to get sober,” he said — and while he made it clear that he understood the advantage and the resources that fame provided, he also noted that fame meant every failure made another headline.

Perry sat down for a full interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer ahead of his book release, and he told her that a near-death experience — brought on by over three decades of substance abuse — had turned him around.

After suffering a perforation in his colon, Perry was put on an ECMO machine that functioned for his heart and lungs — a move that he referred to as “a Hail Mary” — and he had to wear a colostomy bag for nearly a year after that. “The doctors told my family that I had a 2 percent chance to live,” he explained.

The thought of going back to the colostomy bag was what ultimately scared Perry into staying sober — he explained that his therapist had told him to picture the colostomy bag every time he wanted a pill. “A little window opened, and I crawled through it, and I no longer want OxyContin,” he said.

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DeSantis On Crist’s 2024 Comments: ‘Only Worn-Out Old Donkey I Want To Put Out To Pasture Is Crist’

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) ripped Rep. Charlie Crist (D-FL) during a gubernatorial debate Monday night after Crist repeatedly tried to make speculation that DeSantis would run for president in 2024 an issue during the debate.

The debate was originally scheduled for October 12th but was postponed in the wake of the devastation that was caused by Hurricane Ian.

DeSantis has far out-raised and outspent Crist in the election and is widely projected to win next month’s race.

DeSantis has dominated political fundraising in recent years, raising more money for his political operation than any other governor in U.S. history. He has raised so much money that he has out-raised all other potential 2024 presidential candidates in both the Democratic and Republican parties.

“Well listen I know that Charlie’s interested in talking about 2024 and Joe Biden but I just want to make things very, very clear the only worn out old donkey I’m looking to put out to pasture is Charlie Crist,” DeSantis fired back.

WATCH:

"I know Charlie wants to talk about 2024 and Joe Biden, but let me be clear: The only worn-out old donkey I want to put out to pasture is @CharlieCrist." – @RonDeSantisFL 🐐 pic.twitter.com/2LAqHqmxac

— DeSantis War Room 🐊 #FloridaStrong (@DeSantisWarRoom) October 24, 2022

Crist continued to bring up the issue later in the debate but it never gained traction or altered the course of the debate.

Earlier in the debate, Crist attacked DeSantis’ handling of the state’s responses to Hurricane Ian, which sparked a strong response from the governor.

“Look, I’m proud that we had 42,000 linemen staged, ready to go, an unprecedented array of first responders,” DeSantis said during the debate. “We were able to get in in a record time, effectuate thousands of rescues, get the power back on for millions of people in record time.”

“And when the bridges got wiped out in Pine Island and in Sanibel people thought those islands were going to be severed from the mainland for six months to a year, we did the Pine Island Restoration in three days and we did the Sanibel causeway restoration in two weeks,” DeSantis continued. “Now those islands have the ability to recover.”

DeSantis then turned his focus to Crist and what Crist was doing during and after the hurricane hit the state.

“You know what he was doing during this? He was hiding out in Puerto Rico,” DeSantis said. “He wasn’t helping his community here. And then when he got back, what did he do? His campaign was soliciting campaign contributions from storm victims. That is unacceptable and that’s not what a leader would do and a time of despair.”

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