meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The Addicted Mind Podcast

94: Lost in Ghost Town with Carder Stout

The Addicted Mind Podcast

Duane Osterlind, LMFT

Medicine, Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.7655 Ratings

🗓️ 16 April 2020

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On today’s episode of The Addicted Mind Podcast, Duane speaks with author Carder Stout about his book, Lost in Ghost Town, the story of his addiction and recovery. Duane also addresses the difficulty of the ongoing COVID-19 situation by starting a campaign of stories trying to spread hope in a time of darkness.

Join The Addicted Mind Podcast Facebook Group>>>

Carder grew up in Georgetown, where his father constantly worked and his mother was an alcoholic. From an early age, he had feelings of disillusionment and worthlessness. By the time he was 11, his parents had divorced, securing the disarray in his home. By twenty, he’d already gone through eating disorders and was living on cocaine in New York. He thought that moving to Los Angeles would help him distance himself from the people he knew and his addiction, but in Venice, the epicenter of crack at the time, Carder’s addiction spiraled. Carder meets a drug dealer in Venice named Flynn, who, with his grandmother Beatrice, actually showed Carder the familial love that he never received from his actual family. 

Calming The Addicted Mind - 6 Day Mindfulness Email Series

theaddictedmind.com/mindfulness

As a child, Carder experimented with drugs and alcohol as early as age 7. By age ten, he was regularly smoking weed, bein altogether unsupervised. He talks about receiving visions, for lack of a better term, from his grandmother, as frightening as that is. His grandmother, who was a clairvoyant in her life, ultimately became something of a spirit guide for him while he was high. While in the midst of dealing drugs, Carder talks specifically about being surrounded by guns in the culture. In the middle of a lot of psychological pain, he says that he could not stop the “loop” of obsession and compulsion, the things that kept his addiction rolling. In a lot of ways, Flynn became the person that loved him through the cycle of addiction. 

In Santa Fe, Carder is accepted into a psychology school after getting out of in-patient care. He worked 2 or 3 jobs for almost ten years working on his degree. Now, he’s a practicing psychologist in Los Angeles. Part of his platform is pushing the idea that developing a sense of purpose is one of the first steps people can take toward a successful recovery program. Forgiveness also plays a vital role in recovery. Carder talks about forgiving his family and forgiving himself, and how that opens the door to freedom.

Episode Link

theaddictedmind.com/94

Carder carved out 4 hours a day, three days a week and set a goal to write. He found some hope in the writing process, which allowed him to tell his story and materialize healing. A publisher under Simon & Schuster picked up his book and he was able to do a reading before an audience before the COVID-19 outbreak. In his sobriety, he married and had two children, and he points to his life as living proof that addicts can recover. There is hope for those who actively seek support.



Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/the-addicted-mind-podcast/donations

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello everyone. Welcome to the Addicted Mind podcast. This is episode 94. My name is Dwayne Austerland and I'm your host.

0:16.1

And before we start this episode, I just want to talk a little bit about the situation that the world is in right now and the difficulty that everybody is going through.

0:32.0

And what I wanted to do to help and do my part is to create messages of hope for anyone out there who is having a

0:45.6

difficult time through this pandemic that we're all experiencing. So if you would like to share

0:53.0

your message of hope, you could be a poem, it could be

0:56.2

a quote from a book, it could be the story of witnessing a kind act. You can go to the addicted

1:04.4

mind.com forward slash hope and record a little bit of audio so that other people can hear that message of hope

1:16.7

during this difficult time, especially when people are struggling with addiction and getting help

1:26.0

and it's making it even harder to get that support.

1:30.0

And we all need it at this time. And we all need to stay connected.

1:34.4

So if you feel called to do that and would like to do that, please think about going to the

1:41.6

Addicted Mind podcast and sharing your message, I think people need to hear that

1:49.0

there is hope and that we will get through this together. All right. Thank you for listening to that.

1:55.0

So our guest today is Carter Stout and he is the author of a great book that I just finished before we did the

2:04.1

interview called Lost in Ghost Town, a memoir of addiction, redemption, and hope in unlikely places.

2:11.4

It's his personal story of his journey through addiction, starting from a family of privilege all the way to being

2:22.7

homeless in the streets of Venice. It is quite a harrowing story, but filled with a lot of hope.

2:31.5

And I was just really happy to be able to interview him on the podcast

2:36.9

and get a little bit of his personal take on writing the book and how he did it and what it

2:43.3

meant to him and how he thinks about addiction and recovery. So I definitely hope that you all enjoy it and get a lot out of this

2:53.8

episode. And don't forget, if you are enjoying the addicted mind podcast, please go to iTunes

3:01.6

and leave a five-star review that really does help us get a lot of exposure.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Duane Osterlind, LMFT, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Duane Osterlind, LMFT and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.