09/25/2025
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Eminem opens up in his new documentary STANS about one of the most life-changing and terrifying moments of his life — his near-fatal overdose in 2007. He describes how he had been trapped in a dangerous cycle of prescription pill abuse, relying on substances like Vicodin, Va**um, Ambien, and Xanax to cope with depression, anxiety, and the pressures of fame. What began as a way to escape pain slowly turned into a dependency that consumed every part of his life. He explains that when he felt low, he’d take more pills, and when the stress became too much, he’d take even more. That endless loop eventually pushed his body to the breaking point, leading to a night where he woke up in a hospital bed, surrounded by tubes and machines, unsure how he had even gotten there. It was a moment that made him realize just how close he had come to losing everything.
When Eminem returned home from the hospital, the full weight of the situation began to hit him. In the beginning, the withdrawal fog made it hard to focus on anything, but the real emotional blow came when he was shown a recording he had missed — his daughter Hailie’s first guitar recital. He recalls being overwhelmed with guilt, knowing he had been absent from a milestone moment in her life because of his addiction. That single moment became the turning point. He asked himself whether he wanted to keep missing these moments, whether he was willing to lose more time with the people who mattered most. That question, and the sight of Hailie performing without him there, lit the first spark in his decision to get sober.
Eminem has remained sober since April 2008 and says that the road back was anything but easy. In STANS, he reveals that early in recovery, he had to relearn how to function — not just physically, but creatively. He had to rebuild his ability to write, record, and perform, a process that felt almost like starting over from scratch. But as the fog cleared, so did his determination, and his passion for music became one of the driving forces in his recovery. His 2009 album Relapse captured those first raw steps toward sobriety, and although the reception was mixed, it marked a personal victory. Today, he sees his sobriety not just as survival, but as a source of strength — a reminder that even after hitting rock bottom, it’s possible to rebuild your life and stand taller than before. 💪🏻