Natasha Lyonne has relapsed after almost a decade of sobriety.
“He went public with my relapse, more to come,” Lyonne, 46, wrote X on Friday, January 23, shortly before responding to a fan sending support for the actress in the comments section. “Thanks boss…for the grace etc. Sending love your way. May become a nun or a nun. TBD.”
Lyonne, than before stopped drinking alcohol in 2006offered more insight into his ongoing substance abuse and recovery journey.
“Recovery is a lifelong process. Anyone struggling, remember you are not alone,” he said. poker face actress he tweeted Saturday, January 24th. “Thanks for the love and smart feet. I’ll do it for baby Bambo. Be honest, people. Sick as our secrets.”
She continued, “If no one has told you today, I love you. No matter how far we’ve tipped the scales, we’ll see how our experience can help another. Keep it up, kids. Don’t quit before the miracle. Soak your mind in love. Rest is all noise and mockery.”
Lyonne received a series of messages of support in her responses, to which she responded with love and heart emojis.
“I love you,” she wrote to one fan, and told another: “We need better systems and to end the shaming – bill the Sacklers and the heels or something but don’t do me to be honest.” (The Sackler family, known for their ownership of Purdue Pharma, reached an $8 billion settlement in 2025 for their alleged role in overprescribing the incredibly addictive pain medication OxyContin, fueling the current opioid crisis.)
Lyonne has been honest before his addiction fightwhich began in the early 2000s.
“Going into addiction is very, very scary. Some things have a very A-to-B scientific effect,” the actress recalled. Weekly entertainment in 2012. “Like, alcohol is a depressant. Cocaine is a stimulant. And then, cocaine plus heroin is bad! That’s the point of my story, that’s the moral. Coke plus heroin equals speedball. And speedball equals bad, you know?”
He continued at the time: “It’s weird to talk about. I was definitely so dead, you know? A lot of people don’t come back. It makes me feel guarded and stretched. I wouldn’t want to be proud of it. People really rallied around me and took me by my fucking straps.”
Lyonne sought treatment at an inpatient rehab center in 2006 and, once sober, eventually he acted again in a 2008 Off-Broadway production of Two thousand years.
“(The play) got me back on my feet,” he said EW of his career. “Everything happened. I was on Pee-wee‘s, then I’m 16 and I’m in a Woody Allen movie. I never stopped to ask myself if I knew how to act. I had to relearn everything and do it in a much more honest way.”
When Lyonne restarted her career in Hollywood, she also remained open about her substance abuse problems.
“I’m such an open book that I have no problem talking about it and talking about it freely, but I’ve said my piece on the subject,” Lyonne said. the guardian in a 2017 interview. “The truth is that behind this addiction there are feelings that many of us have, which do not go away. Isn’t everyone entitled to a moment of existential rupture in life? Adulthood is about making peace with being kind to yourself when a response to a much more organic and immediate life would be self-destruction.”
If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, contact the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (4357).



