![]() Sarah stumbled across ASMR videos while looking up a man who made videos of himself massaging doll heads. In layman's terms, that means a tingling sensation on the skin that typically begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine. This field of YouTube therapy is known as autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR). But she got herself stable and now earns enough money from her YouTube channel to support her whole family The children were taken away from her by Pennsylvania child protective services for two years in June 2015 after her father died and she plummeted into a low point. In fact, she now has her own whispering therapy YouTube channel, earning enough in advertising to support her husband and two children.Ĭlean: Sarah had her son Odin, four, when she 21. Now 26 and clean, Sarah says those videos saved her life. The videos typically involve a softly spoken woman stroking hair, or flipping the pages of a book, to stimulate the viewer and trigger a tingly sensation. She's taken methadone every single day for the past seven years.īut in 2012, at the age of 20, her life changed: she discovered ‘whispering therapy’ on YouTube. She started taking methadone, the government’s recommended replacement therapy for recovering addicts, but Sarah described it as ‘liquid handcuffs’, keeping her craving. By 19 she was desperate to get clean, but she was hooked she couldn’t sleep if she didn’t take a hit. On her 17th birthday she tried snorting a now-banned form of Ox圜ontin, one of the strongest opioids on the market, made of pure oxycodone. She liked the numb high and kept doing it, also dabbling with LSD, shrooms, ecstasy and heroin. ![]() ![]() Sarah Toth was just 15 when she tried Percocet, a powerful painkiller which includes oxycodone.
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