Since his playing days ended back in 2008, there have been plenty of times Iโve worried about the health and wellbeing of former NBA star Steve Francis.
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In a past life, he was an explosive scorer who punished his opponents with his freak athleticism. But in the years since, heโs had multiple run-ins with the law and his battle with alcoholism is well-documented.
โWhat happened to Steve Francis? I was drinking heavily is what happened,โ he told the Playersโ Tribune in 2018. โIn the span of a few years I lost basketball, I lost my whole identity, and I lost my stepfather, who committed suicide.โ
Itโs safe to say that the former Houston Rockets star has been through his fair share of trials and tribulations. However, the 44-year-old wants others to learn from the mistakes he made along the way. And in his latest essay for the Playersโ Tribune, entitled A Letter to Young Black Men, he bares his soul and opens up about his mental health journey.
โAbout six years ago, I started struggling with my mental health,โ he writes. โAt the time, I was dealing with so much stress and anxiety that all I wanted to do was just drink to shut my brain off. I didnโt want to talk to anybody. I didnโt want to think. I just wanted to sit back with the Juice and Goose, in my own world.
โI just wanted to be numb. Thatโs the best way I can describe it. Pretty soon, I was drinking like every day. My career was over, and I didnโt know what was coming next, and I was just lost, man.โ
The Maryland product then goes on to reveal how basketball became his coping mechanism at an early age, as he did his best to survive in an environment brimming with violence and despair.
โBasketball was my escape,โ he writes. โAll around me, it could be chaos. But when I had the ball in my hands, I was in my own world. For 22 years, hooping was my self-medication. That was my ticket out of Maple Avenue. Out of poverty. Out of being in survival mode 24/7.โ
The NBA did provide him with the type of life most of us can only dream of, but Francis also admits that the trappings of fame made it much easier to simply mask his pain instead of addressing it head-on.
โLooking back on it, I was definitely ignoring a lot of pain,โ he writes. โOnce you get on the NBA roller coaster, thereโs no brakes. I never processed a lot of the trauma that Iโd experienced when I was growing up. The darkest day of my life was when I buried my mother at 18 years old, right before I went off to junior college. Cancer. She was my best friend in the whole world. When I say her name to this dayโI get a little bit emotional, because that scar is still so raw.โ
He then admits that he buried that pain of losing his mother so deep that it didnโt resurface until his NBA career was winding down a decade later. Thatโs when his drinking problem began.
โYou just want to numb the pain,โ he writes. โSo yeah, I was drinking heavy at that time, trying to erase all those memories. Youโve probably seen the pictures of me in the club. The Internet was on my ass, man. They were Photoshoppinโ your boy.โ
Thankfully, Franchise is in a much better place now, and it was former WNBA star Chamique Holdsclaw who helped him get on the right path.
โI was able to open up to her, because I knew sheโd understand me,โ he writes. โGetting help was really easy. Itโs not some big thing. I literally just looked up a number on Google, and I started talking to a counselor. It was that simple.โ
He continued, โIf you wouldโve told me at 17 years old when I was out on the corner that Iโd be talking about my mental health, I wouldโve laughed at you. But it was the best move Iโve ever made. Just being able to talk with someone about all the things Iโve been through instead of self-medicating and trying to bury everythingโฆit changed my life.โ
As a result, the 10-year NBA vet hasnโt had a drink in two years and encourages others, especially Black men, to prioritize their own mental health.
โIโve dealt with depression. Iโve dealt with anxiety. Iโve tried to solve my problems with the bottle. But thank God, I reached out and got some help. Thank God, Iโm straight,โ he writes. โIf I can do it, then you can, too.โ
I commend Francis for being so open about his mental health journey; he digs into those challenges even deeper in an accompanying interview with the Playersโ Tribune, which you can watch below.
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