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Loveline

Tuesday, November 10, 1998

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Guests: Dr. Drew

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0:00 Radio that keeps you up at night. It's Loveline only on W-E-B-N.
0:21 I love our intros.
0:22 Drew And what are these things called? Bumpers? And listen, are these things bumpers?
0:26 These things are great.
0:27 Voiceover Thank you, Mike. Loveline, 1-800-LOVE-191, I'm Dr. Drew Adam Corolla, is out fraternizing with the stars. He is a co-host, a special guest host, Two Guys a Girl and a Pizza Place, and the filming went on longer than they thought it would, and lo and behold, I'm here by myself, which is so far been rather nice. I hope you all are enjoying it. It's a nice break. I strangely kind of miss Adam, but generally I'm elated. So Sarah, you're 20.
0:55 Caller Yeah.
0:55 Drew Fiance, no physical elements, and you're in a psychology student, and you thought I better practice what I'm learning about.
1:04 Caller Yeah.
1:05 Drew Sociotherapist, and what happened?
1:06 Caller Well, I went to the MSTC, and I just told her that I'd just been petrified of doing it. I'm in a very supportive relationship.
1:14 Drew And have you ever had a physical intimacy before?
1:16 Caller Huh?
1:17 Drew Have you ever had sex before?
1:18 Caller No, no.
1:19 Drew Never? With anybody?
1:20 Caller Never, nobody.
1:21 Drew What's scaring you?
1:23 Caller I just get frightened of the whole thing. We even got really close a couple of times, and I just started crying.
1:28 Drew Okay, what happened?
1:30 Caller See, that's the thing. I have no memories of sexual abuse. I grew up in boarding schools my whole life.
1:38 Drew Oh, well, all right. So abandonment stuff.
1:41 Caller Maybe. I don't know.
1:43 Drew How old were you when you first sent away?
1:45 Caller About seven.
1:46 Drew What was that like?
1:48 Caller Um, it felt kind of like by yourself. It's kind of like dorm living at a younger age.
1:53 Drew Was it horrible?
1:55 Caller No, no, the people were very nice.
1:57 Drew But what was the feeling?
1:59 Caller Just kind of like.
2:00 Drew I mean, lying in bed at night alone away from home, God knows how far away you were. Was it horrible?
2:05 Caller Um, it didn't feel too good.
2:07 Drew All right. All right. That's what I mean. And you see, you're a psychology student, so I expect more of you. You're avoiding all this. You can't even answer those questions straight with me because that must have been very painful.
2:20 Caller Yeah, it was, but I never really tied that to my sexuality.
2:24 Drew Well, sexuality is just a primitive expression of all kinds of things, right? But understand, if your primary relationships were abandoning, why would you open up and be vulnerable in any other relationship?
2:37 Caller Well, see, he's been like the first person that I felt really, really close to, so that's kind of the confusing part as well. I don't know if I make any sense here.
2:44 Drew But I mean, but sex is going all the way in terms of being vulnerable and connecting with somebody and really having being out of control and powerless in a relationship with somebody. And if you're afraid that person is going to be abandoning, it's very hard to lose control. Am I not right?
3:01 Caller Yeah.
3:03 Drew Something like that. Something in there. And by the way, your parents are the kind of people that would send away a seven-year-old. So God knows what you're early.
3:11 Caller I think, well, they love me very much.
3:14 Drew Sarah, I could never ever send my kid at seven to anywhere. I can barely go to work in the morning. That's my pathology. To send them away for months at a time is unthinkable. Unthinkable.
3:26 Caller I went straight from boarding school to college.
3:28 Drew Unthinkable. Unfathomable. I can't imagine parents like that. And that's the people that brought you up in intimacy. I mean, excuse me, in infancy. And it may be that there is also some rather rapid abandonment at some point during your early development. In other words, maybe they were able to care for you as an infant, what not, but when you really started to...
3:51 Caller Well, I see I had a nanny too before I went to boarding school.
3:55 Drew Come on. Did you have brothers and sisters?
3:58 Caller No, none.
3:59 Drew Oh my God. Hey, listen. It's amazing you're as full and wonderful as you seem to be. Amazing.
4:10 Caller I try to be.
4:11 Drew You're a survivor. But the ultimate task lies ahead and that is the interpersonal experience. And that's where all our craziness always comes out and so it's time. You're 20. You're a psychologist too. There's no accident you're studying that stuff either. But don't be afraid of those painful feelings because getting into those in a safe environment with a good therapist is where the answers are right now.
4:32 Caller Well, see, that was one of my questions that I had for you is that my therapist actually, she, I don't know if she's saying the same thing here, but she said that I'm kind of creating fear that's not there and I should just go ahead and do...
4:47 Drew Well, if you can, that's great, that maybe you'll be able to grow through it in the expression in the relationship, but maybe not. And maybe you're forcing something that wouldn't feel so hot to you. I don't know.
4:59 Caller Are you concerned that I'm like neglecting his needs in this situation?
5:02 Drew Oh, forget it. For a minute, for a few more minutes. Anyway, look, he's hung up for two years. He obviously cares very much about you, right?
5:10 Caller Yeah.
5:10 Drew And stay with the therapy, do it for real. If you're gonna be a therapist, is that what you wanna be?
5:16 Caller I haven't figured it out yet.
5:17 Drew Well, you know, you're gonna have to go through this stuff. You gotta get your material out of the way if that's what you're gonna do. And you can look at it as a learning experience. And it's not gonna be very fun. A friend of mine, a psychiatrist said, I'm an internist, I work in psychiatric hospitals, so I'm familiar with all this stuff, but I don't do the work. And a friend of mine, a psychiatrist said, if you're enjoying therapy, something wrong with the therapy, it shouldn't feel good most of the time. It's painful, difficult for the real growth to go forward. Mike, 20.
5:47 Caller How you doing, Drew?
5:48 Drew I'm all right. I'm alone.
5:49 Caller Yeah, that's kind of sad. I really like Adam. He's a funny guy, but it's nice. You're actually getting all your calls today.
5:54 Drew You're depressing.
5:56 Caller Yeah. It's sad.
5:57 It's just you.
5:59 Caller What's up?
5:59 Drew It's really sad. It's just you.
6:01 Caller Yeah, really.
6:03 I can't say that I've ever had the pleasure of meeting a uterus with my penis.
6:09 Caller I mean, it's a chemical. And I was worrying about the consequences of it and the actuality of it harming you.
6:16 Drew Of what? Mushrooms?
6:17 Caller Of mushrooms.
6:18 Drew Well, I'm not familiar with any data that documents exactly what's going on with mushrooms. I can tell you from my clinical experience that essentially all drugs that cause hallucinations as a result of their primary effect on the brain. I want to make sure I'm being clear here. That is to say, if you have a hallucination from a side effect of a medication, I'm not talking about that. But a drug whose effect is only to cause a hallucination, and usually vivid hallucinations, seem to damage brain. All of them. Marijuana is a hallucinogenic in high doses, LSD, psilocybin, mushrooms, peyote, PCP even, ecstasy. These are all drugs that seem to cause brain damage. Now how much, and over what period of time, and is it reporable, and one drug relative to another, we don't have that kind of information. And as a matter of fact, I've never seen anything that I would call damage from mushrooms. Now I don't know if that's because people don't take big enough doses, or use enough of it, or frequently enough, or whatever, but I've not seen it. It concerns me. I believe I'm going to see it, but so far I haven't. Ronnie's 23. Ronnie, what's up?
7:33 Caller Yeah, I really want to stop cheating on my boyfriend. I haven't now for about six months, but I'm pregnant. That's probably why I haven't. He wants me to get a paternity test. The last time I...
7:50 Drew So he knows you've been cheating.
7:53 Caller I haven't admitted it, but yeah, I'm sure he knows.
7:56 Drew Well, if he wants a paternity test, Ronnie, because we had an argument and I went out one night.
8:01 Caller That was the last time that I cheated on him. I went out and I stayed out all night.
8:06 Drew And why in God's name are you doing this?
8:10 Caller I don't know. I really, I don't want to at all. I love him very much.
8:17 Drew What's up with him?
8:20 Caller We've been best friends for like nine years. We've been together about 14 years.
8:24 Drew You can drop for me all the pleasantries about the relationship. Tell me what's wrong with it.
8:30 Caller Um, other than the fact that he's gone, he's in Texas. I had to come out here.
8:36 Drew Why is he gone?
8:37 Caller He's in the Army.
8:39 Drew So he has to be gone.
8:40 Caller Yeah. I was living out there with him and I had to go.
8:42 Drew Were things going okay before he left?
8:47 Caller He didn't leave. I left. I was in, I was...
8:50 Drew Ronna, you just said he left and went to Texas because he's in the Army.
8:53 Caller No, he's in the Army. I was in Texas. Because I left back to California.
8:57 Drew Why?
8:58 Caller Because to take care of a divorce and custody with my kids.
9:03 Drew And what was the divorce all about?
9:06 Caller My husband had, I don't know, we've been separated for like two years.
9:10 Drew Did he hit you?
9:11 Caller Oh, yeah.
9:12 Drew Okay, so you go for abusive guys.
9:14 Caller My boyfriend's not like that, though. I mean...
9:17 Drew Well, that may be the problem.
9:18 Caller He's a great guy.
9:20 Drew That's the problem.
9:21 Caller Yeah, and I don't...
9:22 Drew You can't tolerate that.
9:24 Caller Yeah, I don't want... Oh, God, it's terrible. I don't want to... I want to stop. He told me, you know...
9:29 Drew Your dad abused you? Physically?
9:34 Caller No, not physically.
9:35 Drew Sexually?
9:36 Caller I think so. I get these flashes. Like, when I sleep with these people, when I cheat on my boyfriend, it's like I feel like I'm a little kid, you know, in my bed, and I can't say no, you know what I mean?
9:49 Drew Yeah, you're trying to make it get... happen right, finally. Somebody let me empower myself in one of these horrible situations. I've got to do it again until I get it right. Until they love me. Until I have them powerful. And guess what? What? It doesn't work like that. I don't know what... Nobody's ever been able to satisfactorily explain why humans do that. But they do it. I don't know. I can't... I try to think of it from two perspectives.
10:18 That's just why.
10:19 Drew And secondly, what the hell could the evolutionary advantage of the human species be to be put together like that? And I can't come up with an answer for either. But they do it. And it usually doesn't get better without treatment, Ronnie.
10:31 Caller I want to... I've been trying so hard. I mean...
10:34 Drew We'll get some treatment.
10:36 Caller What? Just like go to a therapist or something?
10:38 Drew Yeah.
10:39 Caller Is there some place you could recommend? Because I don't... It's not like I have money or anything.
10:43 Drew Where are you?
10:44 Caller Canova Park.
10:46 Drew Ah, shoot. I would maybe start at UCLA or Northridge. Oh, UCLA. Start at UCLA. NeuroPsych Institute, and see if they have any pro bono services or know of any community-based services in that area. In Pasadena, there's Foothill Family Services. Okay? That's an excellent organization. Check that out. Maybe you ought to call there first. Foothill Family Services in Pasadena, they, if they can't help it, they can probably refer to somebody who can. And maybe try some support groups, some survivors groups. Do you have any addiction in your family of origin?
11:24 Caller No.
11:25 Drew No.
11:25 Caller No.
11:25 Drew Okay. Start with the Foothill Family Services. Hopefully, that will be something. If you really want to stop, which most people, when they really want to stop, stop. All right, Joe, 18.
11:39 Caller My question was basically, it's about unfaithfulness. And basically, I've been looking for a reason, an answer to my own unfaithfulness with my girlfriend. We've been going out for three years, three years. And everyone wants this great relationship that we have. And I'm basically looking for answers. I've been looking for a reason for this. And I was wondering if it could have anything to do with adoption, because you mentioned that earlier.
12:12 Drew I don't want to casually toss off problems as necessarily related to adoption. I mean, that creates some stuff, but it doesn't have to mean you're going to have trouble in relationships. How many times have you been unfaithful?
12:26 Caller It's not like a physical unfaithfulness. It's more of an emotional unfaithfulness.
12:30 Drew Explain.
12:31 Caller Basically, I think I'm into this whole saving thing, you know, how you talk about it. And I think I get into that. And basically, I just find a, you know, I look for a bond with a girl that it's something I would be jealous of if she did it. But it's, you know, I don't get very physical with it.
12:47 Drew Well, Joe, here's my just briefest of interpretations. You're clinging to this relationship. You've been in for three years. You're afraid to leave that. God knows people that do a lot of saving also do a lot of clinging and it may be time to wrap this thing up. It's normal for a relationship that begins at 15 to kind of wrap up and end and go on. So you can really establish yourself as a peer as you become an adult and figure out who you are and what you want in relationships and explore some of these relationships that you want to have. But don't get stuck in these enmeshed relationships where you're clinging and being the nice guy and doing what's perfect and right for the relationship. Get on become an adult figure out what you want. And we will be back. This is Dr. Drew Loveline 1-800-LOVE-E-191. I'm by myself tonight. Adam is out being a star.
13:31 Caller Just let me enjoy my weenie, please.
13:33 Drew I'm sure that's what he's doing right now. He is a co-star in Two Guys a Girl and a Pizza Place. I don't know when they're going to air that, but he will be back tomorrow night. He may even be in here tonight. He was going to try to get, you know, when the shooting is coming over here, but I won't hold my breath. In fact, don't wait. If he buzzes to come in, just lock him out. Forget it. We'll be back in a second.
13:50 Caller Loveline, Adam Corolla, Dr. Drew. The phone number is 1-800-LOVE-191.
13:55 We'll be right back.
13:58 Caller W-E-B-N.
14:03 Caller We're the G-spot on your radio dial.
14:06 Caller Oh, yeah, right there.
14:08 Caller Loveline, on 1027.
14:11 Caller W-E-B-N, Cincinnati.
14:17 Caller Oh, God.
14:22 Drew Sue, 28.
14:24 Caller Yeah, hi. I'll try to relate it a little bit to your topic.
14:27 Drew No, don't worry about it. Let's stay away from the topic.
14:29 Caller Well, first of all, I'm a lesbian. I've been in three relationships. The first two ended with my partner cheating on me, both of them. This last one was, I felt like the best relationship. Person treated me really well. It was a solid, honest, good relationship.
14:47 Drew But what happened?
14:48 Caller I still got dumped.
14:49 Drew She dumped you or what?
14:51 Caller Yeah, every relationship, I've been dumped.
14:55 Drew Tell me exactly what happened in this relationship. Let's just look at this one.
14:57 Caller This last one? Yeah. I felt like it was a good relationship. We were close.
15:04 Drew And then what happened?
15:06 Caller And I was kind of wanting to make some changes in terms of growing, moving forward. I think a little bit more commitment in the relationship. And I think she maybe wasn't.
15:18 Drew What does that mean? You asked her to marry you?
15:19 Caller No, no, no, no. No, just, just.
15:22 Drew Are you in a state where you can do that kind of thing?
15:24 Caller No, no, not like that, but just, we were already living together and just a little bit more solid in terms of the commitment and just wanting to do some growth with my work and that sort of stuff.
15:38 Drew Sue, you're being really vague. Give me two sentences on how this relationship ended and why.
15:43 Caller She just said she didn't want to be in it any more. She just didn't really give me a real specific reason.
15:48 Drew Were we living together at the time?
15:49 Caller Yeah, we were living together.
15:50 Drew And she moved out?
15:51 Caller Actually, I moved out.
15:52 Drew And that was that?
15:53 Caller Yeah. And I'm having a really hard time letting go of it.
15:57 Drew Yeah.
15:58 Caller And I'm not sure how to let go of it. That's the thing, I have such a hard time with these breakups.
16:03 Drew I bet in the past what you did was just got in another relationship. Am I right?
16:07 Caller Pretty much. I mean, this has been like over six months now, which has pretty much been the longest time I haven't been in a relationship. And I feel like I want to be, but I don't want to go through this again.
16:19 Drew What does being alone mean to you? And what is the problem with being alone? What is that experience unpleasant?
16:26 Caller Yeah, I don't like it at all.
16:27 Drew Why? I can tell why.
16:31 Caller Just that empty feeling.
16:33 Drew Right. What is that emptiness all about?
16:38 Caller I just don't want to be like alone the rest of my life.
16:41 Drew What makes you think you will be? I mean, it's not so it's, I think what I'm hearing you say is that the emptiness is intolerable and it feels like it's going to go on forever.
16:48 Caller Yeah.
16:48 Drew Which is different than I look at my situation, I'll never have a relationship. It's just this emptiness and is intolerable. Why? Why do you feel so empty? Why do you have to fill that hole with relationships that don't work?
17:02 Caller Because I feel like when I'm in a relationship while it's working, I feel the best I ever feel.
17:07 Drew Nope. I agree. But that's not what I'm asking.
17:10 Caller Okay.
17:11 Drew You have a big old cannonball in your stomach, right?
17:14 Caller Right.
17:15 Drew That's what you walk around with all the time.
17:16 Caller Right.
17:17 Drew Where'd that come from?
17:20 Caller When I'm not in a relationship, I have that.
17:22 Drew That's right. Where'd it come from originally?
17:25 Caller I guess my parents. I don't know.
17:26 Drew What'd they do to you?
17:30 Caller Not much. I mean, I think they just weren't there. I mean, I definitely was hit all the time.
17:35 Drew Okay. So you were physically abused. You were being an empathic failure. They couldn't see you as a separate person. They beat the crap out of you.
17:43 Caller Probably. I mean, I don't know if that was...
17:47 Drew I mean, how could you ever develop the resources or the sense of yourself to be separate and alone in those kinds of primary relationships? I mean, think about that. All you needed was your parents just to be present and supportive and allow you to grow up, but instead, what you got at people were intrusive and violent and annihilating. I mean, for God's sake.
18:13 Caller Yeah, or I think more they would just ignore me.
18:18 Drew I understand that, but when they came around, they came around with their hand or a belt or something else.
18:23 Caller Yeah, that's horrible. I mean, of course, I mean, who?
18:28 Drew I mean, at a time in your life, my God, when what you need is just a parent who's understand as you just want to grow up and be a person. And my God, what you get is just this horrible, painful affliction from the people that are supposed to help you grow. And you get stuck and you get a big hole inside you and you start finding ways to avoid that feeling. You had the biology of drug addiction. You'd be a drug addict.
18:53 Caller Yeah, no, I don't, I mean, I don't do any drugs.
18:55 Drew Yeah, I understand. You don't have that biology going. If you did, you'd be a drug addict. But instead, you found these lovely relationships that probably in some fashion reenact those early abuses and then reenact the abandonment. And then here you are.
19:10 Caller Well, yeah, and my parents, I mean, my dad left really early on.
19:12 Caller And just like that.
19:14 Caller So how do I not, like I feel like I don't know how I get dumped all the time and I don't know how to change that. I don't know.
19:20 Drew Well, it is the choices you make in your relationships that set you up at the beginning for the abandonment later on. I also, I think to get over that kind of abuse, if you're really you're interested in doing it, I mean, I would look into some, I mean, there are two ways, I think that people can grow through these sorts of things. One is some sort of 12 step model where people learn to develop intimate connections with their peers in the structure of a 12 step, which is basically just a formalized kind of a relationship. Or psychotherapy, which is another kind of controlled relationship, just so you get the connections you need to develop. Understand that human beings do not develop. You cannot grow really by reading a self-help group or just sitting back and thinking about your problems. Think about an infant. Infants left alone without an adult, wither and die. That's literally what happens. And in order for an infant or even a young child to grow normally emotionally, there has to be an empathic, and I mean an understanding by empathic, connection with another person, preferably an adult. And then the child just grows. Naturally, it just happens. And unfortunately, the way our world is today, the parents don't deliver on that. The kids get stuck and they grow up with big empty holes and distorted senses of themselves, and the worthless. And they get these relationships that confirm all that. And in order for that development to start up again, there has to be a controlled relationship that is empathic. And that's what therapy and 12 Steps are all about. So anyway, let's go on to Andrew. I think I'm boring everybody. He's 15. Andrew, what's going on there?
20:58 Hey, what's up, Dr. Drew?
20:59 Drew Not much. What's with you? I'm alone. Adam's out. 1-800-LOVE-191. I'm enjoying the hell of this. Now, I feel like somebody who's sort of been, like I'm like a skydiver that always had somebody strapped my back, pulling the cord for me, and I'm finally doing it on my own. Dr. Drew's right. Yeah.
21:16 Well, you're doing a good job, man.
21:17 Drew Well, thank you, Andrew.
21:18 Caller All right.
21:19 Well, I got a little problem where my hair seems to be falling out. And...
21:24 Drew In patches or diffusely throughout your scalp?
21:26 Caller It's just...
21:27 I mean, just everywhere. I'll run my fingers through my hair and, like, I'll usually get one or two, one or two hairs and then I'll comb my hair and then big clumps will come out.
21:36 Drew Are you on any medication?
21:37 No, no medication.
21:38 Drew Do you have any medical problems?
21:39 No, not that I know of.
21:40 Drew Were you on any medication within the last six months?
21:42 Nope.
21:43 Drew Any car accidents or major traumas or anything like that?
21:45 No.
21:46 Drew Nobody died or anything depressed or anything?
21:48 Not really, no.
21:49 Drew And you don't see any patches, you know, where there's like little bald spots?
21:53 No, it's getting a little thin in the back.
21:55 Drew It's thinning everywhere? Yeah. There's something called alopecia areata, which is these sort of these patches of hair falling out. And can be caused by medication, can be caused by stress, can be caused by traumatic experiences, can be caused by nothing specific. Alopecia totalis, which is where the whole, everything falls out of your scalp. Very rare, very unusual. But Andrew, if you're not telling me that you have any of the usual sorts of stress that caused this, I'd get a medical evaluation just to make sure it's not a thyroid problem.
22:26 Yeah, I was thinking it might be like a gland problem or something like that.
22:29 Drew Yeah, you have any other symptoms?
22:31 No, not really.
22:34 Drew Get it checked out, all right?
22:35 Okay, well thanks a lot.
22:36 Drew All right, Andrew, my pleasure.
22:37 Bye.
22:38 Drew Hey, Richard, 22, what's up there?
22:39 Caller Yes, I've been together with an individual for about four months now.
22:48 Drew Yes.
22:50 Caller And, okay, both of us, we touch each other. We've been thinking about having sex and yes, okay. Okay, we're not at that point yet. Okay, and it turns us both on and she gets frustrated. Therefore, I do because I myself, I'm not coming and I just want to know is.
23:17 Drew Richard, state your question in one sentence.
23:21 Caller Okay. What would be the.
23:27 Drew Richard, ask your question, come on.
23:28 Caller Okay. What would be the problem if you know, she's obviously touching me and there's nothing happening.
23:42 Drew Anybody else understand that question?
23:44 Caller I, okay, that's about it.
23:46 Caller What exactly is she doing to you? Okay.
23:49 Caller What are you doing?
23:50 Caller Okay.
24:07 Caller I think he has a problem with intimacy. Maybe.
24:12 Drew Richard?
24:12 Caller Yes?
24:13 Drew I want you to formulate a sentence that helps me understand what your question is. I'm gonna go to somebody else in the meantime. Rachel, 15.
24:20 Adam Hello. What's up? Let me just say, okay, I love your show.
24:24 Drew Thank you. Even without Adam, are you even listening to it without Adam?
24:28 Adam Adam can go screw himself.
24:29 Caller Oh, Rachel.
24:30 Caller Yes.
24:31 Drew All right.
24:31 Adam What's going on? He's funny. My question for you has to do with, I consider myself depressed.
24:37 Caller Yeah.
24:37 Adam And I have for a long time, but I've had a lot of problems getting help. And I think a big part of it has to do with my parents.
24:48 Drew Well, at 15, you're sort of dependent on them to get help, aren't you?
24:50 Adam Yeah, I really have.
24:51 Drew Have you told them you want help?
24:53 Adam I begged them.
24:54 Drew Let me tell you something about being a parent.
24:56 Caller Oh, no.
24:58 Drew This is the one thing I can offer about that. You don't want all parents, healthy or otherwise, I think. I'm saying this because this is the way I am. You don't want to acknowledge that your kids have any problems.
25:10 Adam I know.
25:11 Drew It's very painful.
25:12 Adam I know.
25:12 Drew You don't want them to be sick. You don't want to be depressed. You don't want to be on drugs. And so the natural impulse is, you're okay.
25:19 Adam I know. But see, the thing is, I've had a lot of problems since I was really little. And the biggest one, I guess, is I've cut myself ever since I was eight. And I've tried to kill myself twice.
25:31 Drew And they will not take you to treatment?
25:33 Adam They don't know that I've been that suicidal.
25:36 Drew Have you been hospitalized for that?
25:38 Adam No. Actually...
25:41 Drew Oh, Rachel, please. This is serious.
25:43 Adam I know it's serious.
25:45 Drew Because this is the... Rachel, oh man, I'm getting a chill when I talk to you, because you are the person who does it.
25:51 Adam I know.
25:52 Drew Okay? Please, will you make a commitment to me?
25:56 Adam I've tried getting help.
25:57 Drew No, I know, Rachel, please make a commitment to me, right now.
26:01 Adam About what?
26:02 Drew About getting help. That you will not make an attempt, you will not cut, before you make some kind of contact with a professional. And I want this to be a commitment between us.
26:16 Adam I can't do that, though. The way that I deal with my emotions...
26:20 Drew By the way, God bless you for being honest. That is the one thing that might get you through this.
26:25 Adam Yeah, a lot of people have told me, you know, it's pretty amazing that...
26:30 Drew Dishonesty is the worst prognosis in a situation like this. But hang with your honesty and tell me why you can't commit yourself to this.
26:37 Adam It's the way that I've always learned to deal with my emotions. And I mean, it's like my dad's really emotional and my mom is emotional, but she suppresses it. So I do not...
26:48 Drew No, I understand that... See, you notice I'm not even getting into the reasons with you.
26:51 Adam Oh, I know.
26:52 Drew Okay, I know there are reasons, but I need to focus on keeping you safe.
26:59 Adam I just... I don't think I can do it.
27:01 Drew You can't get help?
27:04 Adam I'm kind of working on it. Some of my...
27:06 Drew I want you to... Now, you're a very smart girl, right? I know that. I can hear that. Here's what you came in and told me. I'm sick. I need help. My parents won't let me get help.
27:16 Adam Yeah.
27:17 Drew And I said, well, please commit to me that you're going to get help. And your answer is, I don't think I can do that.
27:22 Adam Well, let me explain. Some of my teachers were concerned about me. I've always been a good student and now I'm failing. And so they got me roped in with the counselor at school.
27:34 Drew So you have made some contact.
27:36 Adam Yeah. I've talked to a lot of school social workers and things like that. And our family just moved out to Washington in June from Minnesota, and I'd never moved before. And six weeks before that, I'd gotten myself into professional therapy. But I had a really hard time opening up and six weeks just wasn't a long enough amount of time.
27:58 So of course.
27:59 Adam And it's been really hard to adjust. And I finally found a friend that I can totally confide in. And it's helped a lot.
28:06 Good.
28:07 Adam But the school counselor, you know, she's there. She thinks that I really need to be in professional counseling. And there is actually, I think, a shrink in our school. And she's going to try and get me roped up with that. It's just that my parents don't think there's anything wrong with me.
28:23 Drew You know what? Screw your parents right now.
28:25 Adam Huh?
28:25 Drew Screw your parents for the time being, okay?
28:27 Just screw it.
28:28 Drew No, no, no. Just screw it. Screw the parents. Don't worry about them right now. The important here is your safety.
28:33 Adam Well, a lot of things need their signature and stuff. And they just don't approve, you know.
28:39 Drew You know what else? Here's the deal. You need some medication, too, for the time being. And I usually don't recommend that the 15-year-old is out, you know, overtly. But when your life is in danger, you got to do what you got to do. And until the therapy can get initiated, until you get the kinds of care you need. And God knows I wish you the best with this. And you have everything it takes. Just I can hear how your mind works. You have what it takes to get connected and do well. But you have to do it because you have to do it.
29:09 Adam I know. But it's just without their support and their help, it makes it so much harder.
29:15 Drew I know. Well, Rachel, I don't know if everybody who's listening can hear what I hear in you, but you sound like a wonderful person. You're just not worth sacrificing because your parents are ignorant. Will you please commit to me that you will get some treatment and follow through, please?
29:37 Adam Well, I know I will. I've been trying like crazy.
29:41 Drew But I want a commitment from you that you'll really see it through.
29:44 Adam I will. Because I'm sick of feeling this way.
29:47 Drew You don't have to feel this way.
29:48 Adam I feel like crap all the time.
29:51 Drew Life does not have to be like that, OK?
29:53 Adam I know it doesn't.
29:53 Drew I promise.
29:54 Adam It's the little things that keep me happy.
29:56 Drew Well, stay connected with that friend. Know that you need the full spectrum of professional care and that you can get better. I promise.
30:04 Adam OK? I don't know how to get that help.
30:06 Drew But you're with the counselor at school. They're recommending you to a therapist there. I'm telling you, you need medication as well. And I'm going to need some medication in a minute, Adam.
30:16 Caller Oh, Drew, you're driving the show into the ground, buddy.
30:19 Drew Buddy? You sound kind of desperate there, calling me buddy. You've been drinking or something?
30:24 Caller Hey, dude, I'm at the park.
30:27 I need you to pick me up.
30:29 Drew So you're on the set of Two Guys a Girl and a Pizza Place.
30:31 Caller Yes, I am.
30:32 Caller Yeah. Yeah.
30:33 Caller And I was on hold for the last five minutes and this close to killing myself.
30:37 Drew Spell me then.
30:38 Caller Drew, you have to weave some into the show.
30:43 Drew You know what's nice? You know what's really nice about sitting here and you being there? What? I can hang up on you if I want to. Oh, this is awesome. No, he's back.
30:55 Caller We're pals.
30:55 Caller Yeah.
30:57 Drew For the first time.
30:58 Caller All right. So you're floundering and miserable without.
31:00 Drew Now I'm having a blast, actually. But I will admit you're missed.
31:04 Caller Thank God. Well, I'm over here at the Fox Studio. And all right. All right.
31:09 Drew You're the big star.
31:10 Caller I'm a big star. I'm wearing a tuxedo right now.
31:13 Drew Oh, the way you usually go around in your living room. You're seen in public. You've never had a tuxedo on your whole GD life.
31:20 Caller I just got chewed out by the security guard. For what? Well, I opened the stage door while the red light was on. And because I had to take a leak. And he said to me when I came back from the bathroom, he looked me right in the eye and he goes, when you open that door with the red light on, you do two things. One thing you do is you say to everyone in the audience, it's okay to do the same thing. The next thing you do is, would you like it if someone did that during your scene? Do I need that kind of abuse? I'm a big star. Anyway, Drew?
31:57 Drew Yeah, I just want you to know.
31:59 Caller Everything's going good here, but we're about four hours behind schedule.
32:03 Drew That's nice. Let me be very clear. I have never seen you in a tuxedo.
32:07 Caller Oh man, do I look good. I not only have the tuxedo on, but I have the makeup on and the woman chasing after me, making sure everything's in place.
32:17 Drew And if, oh yeah, and if in this segment, where allegedly are you coming from in a tuxedo in a limousine?
32:25 Caller I'm carrying notes and obviously I'm about to address a large audience somewhere.
32:31 Drew Oh, okay.
32:32 Caller Probably like the Shine Awards.
32:34 Drew Yeah, okay. Now describe for our audience what it's actually like when you and I are carted around in front of a large audience.
32:41 Caller I am wearing a hefty trash bag and a rope for a belt.
32:45 Drew And what kind of car are we in?
32:47 Caller We are in a 73 Nova.
32:50 Drew Or Vega.
32:51 Caller That's right.
32:51 Drew Yes, okay. That's our life in reality.
32:54 Caller You're my stern but groovy master, Adam.
32:57 Caller All right, so it doesn't look like I'm going to be in tonight. All right. I'll try, but I...
33:00 Drew No, don't bother. We're fine.
33:03 Caller All right.
33:04 Drew Enjoy yourself. We're having fun.
33:05 Caller All right. Don't have too much fun. We are.
33:08 Drew It's you and I and Jerry Springer tomorrow night.
33:10 Caller All right.
33:11 Drew We should be primed. We better make it.
33:12 Caller We'll make up for it.
33:13 Drew You're not filming anymore tomorrow night, are you?
33:15 Caller Nope.
33:15 This is it.
33:16 Drew All right.
33:17 All right.
33:17 Drew Enjoy.
33:18 Caller Carry on.
33:19 Drew Yes. Don't worry. I will. Godspeed. All right. That was Adam. You heard where he was. The number is still 1-800-L-O-V-E-1-9-1. It's still just me and enjoying myself like crazy. We will go to break at this point and I will be back with more calls. I feel so liquidy.
33:38 Caller Really? You're listening to Loveline with Adam Corolla and Dr. Drew. Loveline will be right back.
33:46 Caller Man turns animal for the erotic pleasures of women.
33:50 Caller It's Loveline.
33:52 Caller All right.
33:52 W-E-B-N.
33:55 Caller Suck on this.
33:56 Caller Loveline.
33:57 Caller All of my most sensitive areas were inflamed.
33:59 Caller Oh yeah. It's a good one.
34:11 Drew Welcome back to Loveline. I'm Dr. Drew. Adam Corolla is away being a star. The number is 1-800-LLV-E-191. And how come you don't give me any celebrity drops when I come into my segments? He's lazy. All right. Thank you for that honest answer. Yes, we're getting honest and real here tonight without Mr. Corolla, and it's quite pleasurable, I guess. I want to give Richard another chance to express himself. Richard was the Gentleman 22 having difficulty telling me what actually his question was. What's going on, Richard?
34:40 Caller Okay, I'm about to start it over. Yes? Look at my girlfriend. She does touch me with her, with my penises, and I do get an erection, but I do not come.
34:53 Drew Are you on any medication?
34:54 Caller No medication.
34:55 Drew Have you ever had an orgasm?
34:58 Caller Yes, I have.
34:58 Drew By yourself? Yes. How about with a woman? No. Are you anxious when you're with her?
35:06 Caller Sometimes. Sometimes I am.
35:08 Drew Do you have intercourse?
35:10 Caller No. No. We are thinking about that. We're leading up to it.
35:14 Drew All right. Just relax, Richard. Have you ever been with a woman before? This is first experience?
35:21 Caller She's done it. Okay. Yeah. It's the first time.
35:25 Drew The first woman. Yeah. Are you always this anxious or it's just because you're on the radio?
35:31 Caller Sometimes I sometimes I'm anxious.
35:35 Drew But this anxious?
35:38 Caller Well, I think.
35:40 Drew I'm afraid your head's going to explode in a second, Richard. Are you this anxious normally?
35:45 Caller No. No, not normally.
35:46 Drew Okay. Are you this anxious when you're with her?
35:49 Caller No. No. I'm very relaxed.
35:51 Drew With her?
35:52 Caller Yes.
35:52 Drew All right. Relax. This will take care of itself. I mean, I don't know if it's just that some preference you have that whatever she's doing isn't working for you, but as this relationship evolve and you begin to get more intimate and a greater range of physical intimacies, if you can relax and if everything is otherwise okay medically in your life and you're not on medication, you know, the vast majority of 22-year-old males will function. Lee?
36:19 Yes, sir.
36:19 Drew You're 27.
36:20 Caller Yes, I am.
36:21 Drew What's the question?
36:22 Caller I got two questions. The first question is, about two years ago I quit drinking because I got in some trouble, I went through therapy, been going to AA classes and all that other stuff. Now the problem is, I'm having trouble meeting women. I don't like to date anybody from work because that can bring problems to the workplace.
36:42 Drew What do you do for a living?
36:44 Caller I work in a warehouse at night, 90% of guys, but we do have women that are there.
36:50 Drew You sound like a handful of me.
36:53 Caller I sound like a what?
36:53 Drew A handful.
36:55 Caller What's that supposed to mean?
36:58 Drew I don't buy that you're involved in recovery. Nobody in recovery calls AA classes.
37:05 Caller No, AA meetings. I didn't say classes. I've been through substance abuse classes and AA meetings.
37:11 Drew I'll make a prediction. You don't have a sponsor.
37:14 Caller I do have a sponsor, but it's only temporary.
37:17 Drew All right.
37:17 Caller I've only been with AA for about, I don't know, about a year. And I've been getting temporary sponsors here and there.
37:26 Drew Yeah, this is what I'm talking about. I mean, you're not with the program. I mean, you've been not drinking for two years. You still smoke pot?
37:34 Caller I don't smoke pot. I have never done drugs. Alcohol was my drug of choice.
37:40 Drew Why aren't you hanging out in the program? Why don't you get with the program?
37:43 Caller The program is good. I like it. But I don't know. People at the AA meetings that I attend, I guess I haven't found the right one. That's why I haven't really got a permanent sponsor. It's because I quit. Keep going from meeting to meeting, not have like a home group or whatever. And it's, I don't know, they're like addicted to AA.
38:04 Drew I know. I know. I know if it feels like that right at this point. But what you need, Lee, is a relationship with a sponsor and to honker down and work the steps. And don't worry quite so much about the meetings at this point. But do worry about your comfort and connection with the sponsor and decide who that person is and start working. And then, and I now feel guilty for calling you a handful. What I was getting from you was all the sort of bravado and stuff that I'm sure you're sort of used to putting out. And you've got something behind that. Okay? There's some substance here. And you've got the capacity to really grow. And I think if you start making connections with people, magically some women will come into your life.
38:51 Caller Yeah, because my first priority in life is making a commitment to myself to not drink.
38:55 Drew Well, but that you, unless you work a program, and this is a biological fact and people have real difficulty accepting this, you will drink again. And if you work a program, magically you won't drink. And magically some quality people will enter your life because you will suddenly become very attractive to all kinds of people.
39:12 Caller Okay.
39:13 Drew And you won't have to worry about meeting the people at the bars and struggling to find relationships. They will happen to you.
39:19 Caller I've already been told I'm a hell of a lot nicer guy without drinking.
39:22 Drew Well, but you're also even a nicer guy than you think you are, I think. Somewhere, you're a... My words are going to ring in your head someday. You are a nicer and more substantial person than you've ever known yourself to be.
39:37 Caller Yes, probably.
39:38 Drew But you've got to give yourself a chance, and this is so interesting to me that you've hung around the program and stayed clean but not really worked the program. Something there is scaring you, but if you get through that...
39:48 Caller That's probably commitment. I'm afraid of commitment.
39:50 Drew Yeah, you've got to commit yourself to the relationship with the sponsor and then work the steps and then just hang with it for a while.
39:56 Caller I've got a second question real quick. That drug and the testosterone that Mark McGuire was taking.
40:01 Drew Andrastine Dione.
40:03 Caller Yes, what are some of the effects of that? And is it addictive?
40:08 Drew Well, it's a complicated question. It's an androgenic hormone. It is a congenerative relative of testosterone. Think of all the things that testosterone does, hair growth, aggression, muscle growth, strength, and many, many other things. But those are the things that people sort of identify with testosterone. Anderstein dialyze does to some extent. Is it addictive? Not per se, but I'll tell you what, addicts tend to be the people that use anabolic steroids, particularly stimulant addicts.
40:38 Caller That's why I was wondering if it would be a good idea for me to start, because I'm kind of like a health nut too.
40:44 Drew Yeah, it would be the best thing for you in terms of your overall health is to look at balance as your goal, and not muscle growth and size and strength and all that stuff. It will all, all that is fine, and I have no real, you know, absolute recommendations against it, but it will kind of move you in the wrong direction. Balance will be a much better approach for you, I think. So let's go to Tim, who's 15. Tim, what's going on there? Hey, what's up, Drew? Not much. I'm alone. It's 1-800-LLVE-191. This is still Loveline. I hope it still sounds like Loveline, but I'm having a great time, and Adam is on the set of Two Guys a Girl and a Pizza Place. He's being a guest, special guest star. And did you hear him when he called in a few minutes ago? Yeah. Yeah. He's having a great time. It sounded loaded to me. No, he did. Oh, Adam.
41:32 Caller Yeah. That guy was weird.
41:33 Drew What's going on, Tim?
41:34 Caller Well, I'd just like to say that you guys are awesome. You guys are a cool team, and you guys are just like, I listen to you every night before I go to bed.
41:43 Drew Well, thanks.
41:43 Caller And you guys are cool.
41:46 Drew And you had a question.
41:47 Caller Yeah. Well, I was just like wondering. I go to like a lot of raves and stuff.
41:51 Caller At 15?
41:53 Drew At 15?
41:54 Caller Yeah.
41:55 Drew Is it, are you getting to raves at 15?
41:57 Caller Yeah. They let you in.
41:59 Caller Wow.
42:00 Caller All right.
42:01 Drew Do your parents know you go to raves?
42:03 Caller My dad, he's like really, he looks really young for like, he let me go. I mean.
42:08 Drew Oh boy. All right.
42:09 Caller I mean, there's nothing wrong with it. He's cool.
42:12 Drew By the way, the job of the parent to be not cool. I'm sorry, but that's the parent's job. That's the way it goes. Hey, go ahead. What's the question?
42:21 Caller Well, I see like a lot of people like with ecstasy and stuff. I just want to know like what's up with that. I mean, what?
42:27 Drew It's a stimulant. It's an amphetamine. It's an operative that's been altered in such a way as to make it hallucinogenic. It is one of the more dangerous drugs out there. We're learning all the time, the potential adverse effects of this drug. I have seen all sorts of things happen, all sorts of acute toxic reactions where people black out and go nuts and rip their clothes off and jump off buildings. I've seen people get locked in where they can't move. They can just like move their eyes and nothing else for several days. I've seen people get severely paranoid and stay that way for a while. I've seen various reactions, all of which seem to go away, frankly. I don't know of them any persisting. I have only seen two cases of ecstasy addiction, and those people were severely impaired. They couldn't think, they couldn't reason, they're paranoid. It was a mess. They couldn't be treated because of that either. But it seems to be a rare addiction.
43:19 Caller So that's like in the more advanced, like, cases?
43:22 Drew Yeah. But as I told you, in just even a single exposure, I've seen people have some very unpleasant reactions.
43:30 Caller Well, I mean, I don't do like any other drugs.
43:31 Caller I hate, like, what?
43:34 Drew I've seen people locked in, can't move a muscle except their eyes for days. One dose of ecstasy, okay? Don't know why that happens. Well, there's something that is bad. But they don't know why it happens after a single dose. Or, you know, we just don't know what rhyme or reason to why it happens when it does. I've seen people, again, black out and do very dangerous things impulsively because they don't know what the hell they're doing.
43:58 Caller Should I, should I?
43:59 Drew And at 15, your brain is still developing and there's an overwhelming amount of information now that the brain at that age is extremely sensitive to these drugs and that you can actually shrink it or at least prevent it from developing further or maybe miss some development that you would have otherwise gotten by exposing it to things. I just read some stuff the other day about alcohol and memory function. After relatively low levels of exposure to alcohol, there were sort of college-age students, they were between 20 and 29, rather substantial impairment of memory and new learning. It was amazing to me how much, how much impairment there was. So, all right, I don't want to bust your high, what do we call it? Ruin your high? Man, am I pathetic. Let's go to David. He's 30. Dave, what's going on?
44:48 Caller Hello, Dr. Drew.
44:48 Drew Hey there.
44:50 Caller Love your show. God bless you. You do an awesome job. Thank you. I was wondering if I could maybe get a little bit of advice from you.
44:56 Caller Maybe.
44:58 Caller I was married quite young, about 21. I got married, met this gal when I was 20. She had a two-year-old daughter and 21 we married and eight months later we divorced and she left state rather abruptly.
45:16 Drew Why the divorce?
45:18 Caller A couple of reasons. My parents didn't like her. I was, you have to excuse me, I'm really nervous. My parents didn't like her and there was a lot of drinking on my part and she didn't want to work and we just were poor all the time and basically I listened to my parents too much.
45:44 Drew You left her or she left you?
45:47 Caller I asked her to leave and she left state.
45:51 Drew Where did the two-year-old come from? What was that all about?
45:55 Caller She was involved with a guy before I ever met her and he was ever around. He was a severe alcoholic.
46:06 Drew Okay, so she tends to get involved with alcoholics.
46:08 Caller Yeah. Alright, what's the question? I have been in treatment. I've been in AA for, I'll be well, I'll have five days, I'll have 11 months.
46:20 Drew Alright, congratulations.
46:21 Caller Thank you. And in the process of making amends and stuff is quite coincidental. Oh, by the way, I should probably tell you that I did remarry after her, my second wife I was with for five years and then we got divorced. I currently have been separated for two and a half years and have not dated or seen anybody since then. And in the process of making amends kind of coincidentally, she, my first wife called me from the state she's currently living in. Evidently, she had never really gotten over me.
46:58 Drew All right, Dave, we got to go to break. State the question.
47:01 Caller I want to know what your opinion is or what your feelings are as far as me getting back together with her.
47:06 Drew All right. Hang on. We're going to go to break. It's still Loveline. I'm still Dr. Drew. It'll be right back.
47:19 Loveline will be right back.
47:22 Caller W-E-B-N.
47:23 Caller Hey, guys, are you tired of the same old thing night after night?
47:27 Caller Are you looking for a place where you can truly unwind?
47:29 Caller It's not hard to swallow. We've got a frog in our throat.
47:34 Caller Lick it up.
47:35 Caller It's Loveline.
47:36 Caller W-E-B-N. Hey, this is Paul.
47:44 Drew This is Kevin.
47:45 Caller And this is Steve, and we're Smash Mouth, and you're listening to Love Lines with Adam Corolla and Dr. Drew.
47:51 Drew Thank you for delivering that to me. Mike, I appreciate that. Especially Steve from Smash Mouth. Makes me feel like a little more of Adam is here. That's right, he's in our book. Adam and I wrote a book. I don't know if anybody's aware of that. And Smash Mouth, Steve particularly contributed to that. We had a lot of great celebrities. We called them up and asked them to give some information, to see what they thought about certain things. And they were wonderfully cooperative and wanted to participate. I think, although nobody's hearing about this book, there's something to be learned by reading it. So it's called The Adam and Drew Book, The Dr. Drew and Adam Book, Surviving Love and Life. And it's available on amazon.com and any of your local bookstores. And if you go to Barnes and Noble, please go up to the front desk and give them a ration of crap because they have buried the book and they're concerned about the content. Which believe me, the things we're trying to advocate are quite healthy and so be it. Got a fax, allegedly from Steve in San Diego, even though it's from a 626 fax machine and the name at the top of the page is quite different. You say no one faxes you, so I decided to. I'm a single male who a few months ago was at a bachelor party with a stripper during the course of the evening. I, along with others, engaged in oral sex with this woman on multiple occasions. I had no open cuts in my mouth of what would be the risk to me contracting an STD or other infection. Mike, do people really do that at bachelor parties? Did you hear what I just said? No. All right. Well, the oral contact is just as high a risk for transmission of sexually transmitted disease in either direction, oral genital or genital oral, as genital-genital contact. This is anytime you have a mucosal surface, like a lining of the body that's not your skin, or skin is a kind of mucosal surface, but your mouth, vagina, urethra, contacting with another person, you can transmit a sexually transmitted disease essentially any of them, essentially any of them.
49:43 Caller Yes, they do that at bachelor parties.
49:45 Drew They do that. They have oral sex with the strippers.
49:48 Caller There's lots of oral things that go on. I hear, I don't do bachelor parties myself.
49:52 Drew Forget the drop the I hear and tell me more about this bizarre.
49:55 Caller This is bizarre.
49:57 Drew Anna is losing it.
49:59 Caller Anna doesn't like to hear about the bachelor parties.
50:01 Drew Oh my God. Anna, can you imagine that?
50:04 Adam You've always said nothing goes on.
50:06 Drew Things go on. I've been to two bachelor parties and one of them was my own. And nothing went on. Nothing. I mean, you sit there, the groom gets, they pour alcohol down the groom and you sit there and with your eyes like propped open like clockwork orange or something. And that's it.
50:27 Caller Well, that's only, you've only been to two.
50:29 Caller That's the only two you've experienced.
50:30 Too small of a sample.
50:32 Drew Too small of a sample? All right. Thank you for the scientific impression, Sherry. All right, let's get back to the calls. I was talking to David. David is 11 months sober in the program, had a relationship with an ex-wife who had a two-year-old daughter. Clearly a very codependent relationship. David, yes?
50:47 Caller Yes.
50:48 Drew And then you left that when you asked her to leave, even though it sounds like she was ready to leave because you were loaded at the time and your parents were getting under case and you believed your parents who, dad was, or dad and mom, mom is an alcoholic, I'm going to guess.
51:01 Caller Dad.
51:01 Drew Dad's an alcoholic. And they in all their wisdom told you to leave her. You told her to get out. You married another woman, divorced her, got in the program, made contact by serendipity and you're wondering if your higher power is giving you a message here, I bet.
51:16 Caller Kind of, yeah. Well, in talking to her, I realized, well, when she had left state, my first wife, when she had left state, I didn't realize it and just found out two months ago that she was pregnant at the time.
51:29 Drew Well, with your child?
51:30 Caller With my child.
51:31 Drew And so you've got a child with her too?
51:33 Caller She lost it.
51:35 Caller She lost it in her, I think, eighth month. And she evidently had never been able to work through it because she never made contact with me.
51:44 Drew But here's my, all right, so now all that's coming up too, right?
51:47 Caller Right.
51:49 Drew Let me give you one caveat, one morning. The most common reason I see people with a solid program lose it is because of a relationship.
51:59 Caller Right. I've heard that and they've said not to get involved or make a relationship.
52:02 Drew For a year.
52:03 Caller For a year.
52:04 Drew Nowhere else do humans act out their craziness or get sucked into stuff more easily than in relationships. And we just, we find it like un, we can't, we're irresistible. We just have to go in and do our old stuff and act it out and try to fix those old problems. And until you've really healed and made some substantial internal changes in the program, it is risky territory for you. And given that your sobriety should be your priority, my recommendation would be to avoid this. Now, having said all that, if you were to get into this relationship, has she been in any kind of co-dependency recovery?
52:38 Caller Not that I'm aware of.
52:40 Drew Another strike against this. I mean, you've come, you've grown since this relationship. And if she doesn't grow with you or come along, she's going to pull you back where you were. Now, from the other hand, you said, you know, she's in Al and I go on everyday work in a program. I would be less concerned about you at least moving towards getting involved in this relationship. So if, let's say this, I'll put this one recommendation on the table that you absolutely don't do it unless she's involved in some sort of codependency recovery. Okay. All right. Beyond that, Dr. Sponsor, let your own conscience be your guide on this one. This is now Tim. He's 23. Tim, what's going on?
53:18 Caller Yeah. Hi, Dr. Drew.
53:19 Drew Hey.
53:20 Caller My question is pretty simple. Every time I have sex with my girlfriend, when I ejaculate after that happens, my tip of the head of the penis starts getting really tender.
53:31 Drew Tender or sort of like uncomfortable?
53:35 Caller Tender. It's like every time she goes to touch it, you get a sort of really high sensation.
53:41 Drew Right. That's not it. That's normal. All right.
53:43 Caller It's normal.
53:44 Drew Normal. She shouldn't touch it. Give it a little time. Women complain about the more than men, by the way. Andy's 28, 20, excuse me. Andy, what's going on?
53:52 Caller All right. To put the problem as quickly as I can.
53:56 Drew Thank you.
53:58 Caller I am back in a relationship with a girl I was with when I was 17 and tried to kill myself over.
54:06 Drew Nice.
54:08 Caller I have since found out that I am severely bipolar.
54:12 Drew Are you on meds?
54:13 Caller Oh, yeah. I'm on five different, well, four different medications.
54:17 Caller All right.
54:19 Caller But we don't have anything in common when it comes to interest. She's Mormon. I'm Nordic Wicken and she keeps pressing, reforming and converting and all that fun stuff.
54:32 Drew What's your question?
54:33 Caller My question. Should I give her the boot or keep her? Because I think I might love her. I don't know. I know it's a bad idea to get in a relationship so young and with what I got.
54:50 Drew It's a chaos. She was part of all that chaos and she really massaged that and gratified that and she's all part of that. You're getting better. You're getting treatment. She's still the same, right?
55:04 Caller She's changed a little. She's starting to question that which she was raised as, but when it comes down to it, she's the same. Yeah.
55:14 Drew You're getting better. She's the same. It's part of the wreckage of your past, not the addictive wreckage, but just part of the chaos that you were in at that time. And just to bring that relationship back into the present, will sort of pull you back into that state you were in before. I suspect. I don't know. I'm not going to tell you what to do, but it concerns me. Beth 30.
55:33 Caller Hi. Hey. I am having a problem with this guy at work who I think is rather disgusting. And for the past few months, I have been seeing him when I'm having sex with my boyfriend.
55:50 Caller Wait a minute, wait a minute, wait a minute.
55:52 Drew What?
55:52 Caller I mean, like I'll picture him. And it's like the most disgusting thing I can think of.
55:56 Drew Describe him to me.
55:57 Caller Okay. The guy is like 50 years old. He's married, has a new baby. He's kind of a touchy feely guy. And quite a while ago, he like touches you, you know, when he talks to you. Gross. Yeah. And at one point, he was telling me something and he brushed the back of his hand against my breast. And I kind of thought, okay, maybe that was a mistake. And then another time he'd gotten me a present and he was sitting down and I came to put my arm around to thank him. And he looked over at my breast and looked away. And then looked again and kissed it.
56:31 Drew And kissed what?
56:32 Caller My breast. Cause I was standing up and he was sitting down.
56:34 Drew Why didn't you smack him?
56:36 Caller Because I thought, I don't know what's going on. Okay, maybe it was a mistake too. You know, it's not a third.
56:42 Drew You kissed your breast. You take it and sock him.
56:45 Caller I know, I should have.
56:46 Drew And the next thing is, is he in a position of authority at work?
56:49 Caller He's in a position of authority.
56:51 Drew Does he own the business?
56:52 Caller No.
56:53 Drew Oh, too bad. You could have had that.
56:54 Caller I know, but see, no one was there. No one saw it. I feel like, this is a wild guess.
56:57 Drew Gives a rat's ass. You gotta report this guy. But that's a different subject.
57:01 Caller Yeah, but there's more. My brother's girlfriend also works there with me. And they had worked together close, this guy and her, for a while. And she told me that he said that he's in love with her. And they went away on a business trip. And he asked if he could sleep next to her and all of this stuff. And the guy's married and has a baby. And that just disgusts me.
57:22 Drew And why are you?
57:23 Caller Why is this coming into my thoughts?
57:25 Drew You're fascinated with this guy.
57:27 Caller No, I mean, I became obsessed with him. I had to share a room with him for five months. And besides that, he's totally pompous. He tells you what to, you know, how to do things that are completely.
57:36 Drew Who does he remind you of?
57:39 Caller I have no idea.
57:40 Drew Has there been no one in your life like him ever early?
57:44 Caller I don't think so. No, I don't think so.
57:47 Drew Just free associate with me.
57:48 Caller Anybody? The first person that came to my head was my dad. Because he's an older guy, but that's it.
57:56 Drew Dad ever mean appropriate with you?
57:58 Caller No, no, no, no, never.
58:00 Drew All right, so something about dad with this guy. I mean, that's the only thing. That's what I expected you to say because otherwise you would have reported this guy a long time ago.
58:07 Caller Yeah.
58:07 Drew You're protecting your dad. He's not your dad.
58:10 Caller No, no, no, no, no.
58:11 Drew He's an abusive, disgusting a-hole.
58:13 Caller But he's not. The thing is nobody was there. He was in a position of authority. He's been there years and years and years.
58:20 Drew You're defending him to me.
58:21 Caller I'm also protecting my friend. I think it's what it is. Oh, my brother's girlfriend. Because if I, he doesn't want me to say anything because she's protecting him, I think.
58:31 Drew Maybe, but that's her business.
58:32 Caller But then how do I prove anything?
58:36 Drew You're not obliged to prove anything. You just go make the report.
58:40 Caller And do you think that will help me in what's going on? I mean, I've been there a year. He's been there, you know, ten years.
58:49 Drew Tell me more about this obsession you have with him. Where else is it cropping up?
58:52 Caller I used to think about him just all the time, all the time, all the time when I was in the same room with him because I just couldn't stand being there with him. I finally got out of the room after about five months and it's gotten a lot better, but now it still creeps up when I'm having sex. I'll just get the thought of him and I'll try and associate it with something else and like get past it, but it still keeps creeping in and I'll just start crying or something.
59:12 Drew It's a pretty strong thing going on here and the whole dad deal and him and ooh.
59:16 Caller I know, I can't make sense out of it.
59:19 Drew It's something, it's not happening for no reason, I'll tell you that, but if it is some residual sort of abuse issue, certainly standing up and asserting yourself would be a healthier direction to move things in and may cause some of these symptoms to settle down. Unfortunately, I think there's a higher priority here, and that is the sort of legal safety issues that you're in, and those need to be dealt with immediately.
59:48 Caller You mean talking to the Superfan?
59:50 Drew Yeah, because it's not just about you, it's about everybody else he interacts with. God knows he's already sucked this other woman into this, but who knows who else, and his wife, and this guy, it's just a mess.
59:58 Caller Oh yeah.
59:59 Drew And these people need to be taken to task, I'm sorry.
1:00:01 Caller Okay.
1:00:02 Drew And for you, you need to assert, you need to learn to assert yourself, so the next time somebody kisses your breast, you pull out a...
1:00:11 Caller It was just on accident, because that was just the closest thing there, and... Oh Beth. I know. And then I...
1:00:17 Drew Beth, you're worth more than this.
1:00:20 Caller Thank you.
1:00:21 Drew Good luck.
1:00:22 Caller Thank you. Bye.
1:00:24 Drew Amazingly, this experience has come to a close. It's Loveline with Just Dr. Drew, two hours flew by for me. Everybody else has turned the radio off and got to sleep, which is nice. I appreciate those of you who have hung in. Adam has been with the shooting of Two Guys a Girl and a Pizza Place, which hopefully you'll be able to see in a couple of weeks, but we'll go to a break for right now. And this is Love Line. I'm Dr. Drew. And to quote my sidekick, mercifully, the show has come to a close. Mike, how did it feel to actually hit the breaks on time and close the show on time? It was quite bizarre. It's never happened before, has it? So I'm going to let it drag out a few, just a little bit late, just as an homage to Adam here. Thank you very much for those of you who have listened. I really, very want to send my most sincere appreciation to the staff tonight. Mike for enjoying the show and for producing at Sherry for screening some great calls and for all of you for staying with me and participating. I hope we'll have a chance to do it again alone sometime in the not too distant future. Otherwise Adam will be back tomorrow night. We'll have Jerry Springer in here and Loveline will go on. This is Dr. Drew for the absent Adam, Adam Corolla saying mahalo.
1:02:10 Caller This is Ben Loveline. The views expressed on Loveline are not necessarily those of the staff, the management or the sponsors of this radio station.
1:02:21 Caller Loveline is produced by Ann Wilkins Engel.
1:02:23 Caller Now, please listen to this station longer.