Pubdate: Fri, 16 Apr 2004 Source: Emory Wheel, The (Emory U, GA Edu) Copyright: 2004 The Emory Wheel Contact: http://www.emorywheel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2781 Author: Mara Prager CNN JOURNALIST TELLS PERSONAL TALE OF ADDICTION IN ATLANTA'S DRUG SCENE CNN reporter William Moyers Jr., the son of prominent journalist William Moyers, spoke Thursday about his secret decade-long decline into the underworld of Atlanta's drug culture. "Addiction is an equal-opportunity problem," Moyers said. "I am an alcoholic and I am a drug addict. This is what one looks like." His autobiographical lecture, titled "Fame and Fantasy: From the Crack House on Ponce to Recovery," was attended by about 50 people in the Woodruff Health Sciences Center Administration Building. Moyers said his life was a testament to the fact that drug and alcohol abuse are not just problems of poor people of color in the inner city. He described himself as having a solid upbringing in a family that was privileged financially, mentally, emotionally and spiritually. Moyers first got involved with alcohol and drugs during his freshman year at Washington and Lee University (Va.). He equated college to a "fantasy world," where drinking became a necessary part of personal enjoyment. "I learned to have fun, to drink, and to have fun drinking," he said. "Parental supervision was replaced by the camaraderie of new friends." By his junior year of college, Moyers said he began to lose interest in his studies, his fraternity and relationships. "My casual drinking was replaced by full-blown alcoholism," he said. But Moyers managed to graduate with honors in journalism. Following in the steps of his father, he began working for CNN in Atlanta. But Moyers had a secret life apart from CNN. He began buying and using crack at a house near the intersection of Ponce de Leon Avenue and Boulevard Street. With his coworkers unaware of his addiction, Moyers could turn to no one for help. "No one knew that I was an addict because I never fit the image of a typical user," Moyers said. Ten years have passed since Moyers shed his addictions to alcohol and crack. As part of his recovery program, Moyers works at a treatment center and travels around the nation promoting drug awareness. "I don't regret being an alcoholic, because that was fun," Moyers said. "But I do regret all the time I lost to alcoholism. I lost a lot of precious time during the 10 years that I was addicted to drugs and alcohol." Moyers said his tours allow him to embrace his past problems and work to prevent others from making his mistakes. "I don't do what I do for the money or accolades," he said. "I do it in hopes to provide a spark for change, to become a beacon of hope for families without hope." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin