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Tuesday October 15, 2024

Kelly Osbourne reveals Matthew Perry played crucial role in her healing process

Kelly Osbourne reflects on her journey to sobriety with the help of late Matthew Perry

By Web Desk
September 17, 2024
Kelly Osbourne can never forget Matthew Perrys kind gesture amid sobriety journey
Kelly Osbourne can never forget Matthew Perry's kind gesture amid sobriety journey

Kelly Osbourne has recently explained how Matthew Perry played a pivotal role in her recovery process and on her journey to sobriety.

Speaking on the latest episode of TMZ Investigates: Matthew Perry & The Secret Celebrity Drug Ring, Kelly recalled meeting with late Friends actor in a rehab.

“I cannot forget a kind gesture from Matthew while I had been struggling with my sobriety,” said the reality star.

Kelly stated, “Matthew helped so many people. He helped me one day.”

She mentioned, “I was 19 years old, and I was in rehab for the first time and I just wanted to run – it wasn't clicking. I didn't get it.”

“I’d never felt more insecure or hated myself more,” remarked the 39-year-old.

Reflecting on her sobriety journey, Kelly pointed out, “Matthew could see that I was struggling, and he walked up to me, and he gave me a chip, and it said ‘three minutes.’”

“He told me, ‘If you can get through three minutes, you can get through anything,’” noted the fashion designer.

Ozzy Osbourne’s daughter disclosed she had doctors she could call for certain kinds of drugs.

“If you want an Adderall doctor, then I knew who to talk to. If it was opiates, then I also knew which people in Hollywood,” admitted the TV personality.

Elsewhere in the interview, Kelly shared her thoughts on Matthew’s demise.

“I wish I could say that I was surprised by his death,” said the reality star.

Kelly added, “I was shocked because he’s like the last kind of person you'd ever want to have this kind of life.”

“When you think about how much pain he must have been in, it’s devastating. But at the same time, he was an addict, and you can't be shocked when an addict passes away, because it's par for the course. It ends in three places - jails, institutions or death,” she concluded.