Cameron Douglas explains in his new memoir, “Long Way Home,” about the ‘demented death wish’ that constrained him towards crime and drugs, shining a light on his well-known relations along the way.
In 2019, Michael Douglas’s eldest son was arrested at a New York hotel for carrying crystal meth, he was given a choice. He narrates in his new memoir, a Drug Enforcement Administration agent said him he can take benefit of his influential family to hit the front door, making noise he should be released for family’s sake.
Cameron attempted to unveil his struggles to back home as well as his life experience regarding his relationships. However, the book “Long Way Home,” was published on Tuesday that means a lot in his life.
He has been behind the bars for almost eight years for holding heroin and selling drugs. Cameron is the eldest son of the Academy Award-winning actor and producer, Michael Douglas, and a grandson of the venerated Spartacus star, Kirk Douglas.
Even though the notion of living up to either one of their reputations would seem to paralyze, Cameron Douglas has clarified that he does not thought anyone’s sympathy for throwing away his honored background.
The 40-year-old American actor he took everything negative those days removing eyes on his beloved relations dropping him into a mud of hard drugs, crime and punishment.
He told, “There was nothing anybody could do to get through to me at a certain point,” at the moment, Cameron believes his voice is uncertain, and while he has been away from all bad acts since 2016.
Nonetheless, the junior Douglas feels himself someone who can daily see daylight on a regular basis deeply.
After taking a breath, he started again, “All those years that the book is based on, all the pain and destruction that a lot of my behaviour caused, is done. I can’t go back and undo that.”
Cameron also considered him much better to others who don’t want to move back after sinking into dark world, added, “in the hopes that other people won’t have to make them”.
The “Long Way Home” is generous explanation of his efforts to rediscover himself as he decided to reach what he calls his “demented death wish”, turning to deadliest addictions to liquid cocaine and heroin.
He has been fighting for years to bad man in him who has been preventing his decisions to recovery and move back home. Part of this book includes his experiences of his arrest, indictment and incarceration, during which he was transported in the middle of a half-dozen federal penitentiaries and Cameron’s time (two years) in private imprisonment.