3am: Bad trip down memory lane; DRUGS DIDN'T WORK FOR ACID GOBBLER ROBBIE.Byline: Clemmie Moodie & Danielle Lawler HE'S been in rehab twice but Robbie Williams' paranoid struggles with drugs started way before he joined Take That. The semi-retired popster has been reminiscing about the good old days before he was famous. Well, we say good - but thinking about stabbing yourself during a debut acid trip doesn't sound like the biggest barrel of laughs. In a rambling rambling Neurology Fragmented non-goal directed speech most often caused by acute organic brain disease. See Organic brain disease, Word salad. blog on his website, Rob admits he was such a paranoid teenager he wouldn't dare pick the music on the pub jukebox A storage device for multiple sets of CD-ROMs, DVDs, tape cartridges or disk modules. Using carousels, robot arms and other methods, a jukebox physically moves the storage medium from its assigned location to an optical or magnetic station for reading and writing. in case someone didn't like it. So it's hardly surprising that doing drugs with his mates caused him untold mental anguish When connected with a physical injury, includes both the resultant mental sensation of pain and also the accompanying feelings of distress, fright, and anxiety. As an element of damages implies a relatively high degree of mental pain and distress; it is more than mere disappointment, . Thinking back to when he was 16, Robbie says: "It was at Shelleys (nightclub) where I had my first acid experience. We were in Golden Hill, in someone's kitchen probably. I was given a tiny piece of paper to ingest. E's were too expensive for the Potteries. pounds 15 - who could afford that? There was a band called the Prodigy performing that night and I thought they were really good. "Afterwards we drove up to the garage and the police were on the forecourt. S**t, I thought. I want to go home, I'm scared. There is only one place I want to be - at home with my mum." But even the safety of home proved little comfort for the hallucinating hal·lu·ci·nate v. hal·lu·ci·nat·ed, hal·lu·ci·nat·ing, hal·lu·ci·nates v.intr. To undergo hallucination. v.tr. To cause to have hallucinations. teenager. "American footballs were coming out of the TV," he recalls. "So I decided to go downstairs and stab myself. Mum came out of her room and said, 'What are you doing?' "'I'm just going downstairs to stab myself - do you want a cup of tea?' I said." Er, no thanks Rob. In fact, we'd best be off. |
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