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Wales Online
Wales Online
Amy Reast & Steven Smith

Mum was 'high 24/7' on meth and Xanax after her husband died

A mum "high 24/7" on meth and Xanax after her husband was killed has turned her life around. Natalee King, 33, suffered with depression after soldier husband John King died in a training accident in 2013 and she even spent time in prison for drug-driving.

The air force vehicle operator said meeting Justin White, 31, helped her onto the straight and narrow - and they now have a family.

Now five years sober, Natalee, said: "Not only did he help me get clean, but he allows me to grieve my late husband's death in any way I want. He lets me talk about him all the time. Now I spend my days raising my youngest son and I do a lot of meditating, breathing treatments and therapy."

The couple met on an airbase in Japan in 2011 and, later that year, Natalee became pregnant. John James King was then born in 2012, but just eight months later her husband was crushed by a truck.

She said: "I was told he was OK at first, but two hours went by and then they all showed up in blue uniform, and told me he was dead. It was gut-wrenching. I remember I was sitting on the couch and when I stood up, my knees gave out.

"I fell to the floor and started vomiting like I had the flu. I remember looking at my son and it was unbearable - I didn't know how I would be able to raise him alone."

John's death sent Natalee into a spiral and it was then that she became addicted to prescription medication Xanax, which is used to treat anxiety.

She said: "It made me forget what I was feeling. Every day was so painful - every morning I'd wake up and hate my life. I wished I wouldn't have to keep waking up."

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But, just months later, doctors took the drugs away - so Natalee turned to buying it from street dealers on street corners. It was then that she started taking crystal meth and she said she "high almost 24/7".

And after having her licence revoked for driving under the influence, she was jailed for getting behind the wheel illegally. Natalee said she was then in and out of prison and had to sign over custody of her young son to her mum.

She said: "My mum talked me into handing over custody because she didn't think I would make it out alive. She'd already lost my sister to drugs and I believed I wouldn't make it out alive either."

Natalee King hit 'rock bottom' and became addicted to drugs after her husband was tragically killed (Natalee King/SWNS)

But then, in 2016, Natalee met Justin, who told her he wanted to help her get clean. The couple worked together and, as of February 2023, it is five years since she touched drugs, cigarettes or alcohol.

Natalee even managed to stay sober after her dad died in 2021, which she feared would send her back to a dark place. The mum-of-two also got custody of John back from her mum and she and Justin had a son of their own, Jensen Richard White, now four, in 2018.

Natalee King with Justin White and her sons John King and Jensen Richard White (SWNS)

She said: "When I hit rock bottom, I was taking methamphetamine in the day to wake me up and Xanax at night to help me sleep. I had no car, no job, and I was living at my parents' house.

"But a man came into my life, Justin, and helped me get sober. It took two years to taper myself off the Xanax because of how much I was taking.

"Justin stayed by my side until I was clean - even when my father died in 2021, which I had worried would send me spiralling back, I stayed sober. Now I'll celebrate five years clean and it feels amazing - I'm not on a constant rollercoaster any more.

"It feels so good to be clean. Drugs really tear your body apart, so badly. I felt - and still feel - temptations all the time. I even have dreams of using Xanax and crystal meth almost every night, even five years later. But I'm not around those people any more - I have my kids and I have Justin."

Natalee King today (SWNS)

After choosing to share her addiction and recovery journey online, she said she wants to "help and inspire others" struggling with addiction.

Natalee, from Florida, USA, said: "I feel shame towards certain parts, but as far as addiction goes, and what I did, I'm learning to forgive myself. Recovery is an every day work-in-progress, but I'm not on the rollercoaster any more, and my body isn't fighting for its life. I lost almost half my life to drugs but I will not go back - because it feels amazing to be here."

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