Intervention: Lauren Doesn’t Want to Leave Without Chad (Season 14, Episode 2) | A&E

Lauren listens to her family’s letters but ojects to the idea of leaving for rehab without Chad in this scene from “Mike/Lauren.”

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Intervention
Season 14
Episode 2
Mike/Lauren

“Intervention” profiles people whose addictions or other compulsive behaviors have brought them to a point of personal crisis, and the friends and family members who come together to help them.

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14 thoughts on “Intervention: Lauren Doesn’t Want to Leave Without Chad (Season 14, Episode 2) | A&E

  1. You could move Lauren to Chad. But I don’t think a white girl would last a day there. If the Sahara doesn’t get you, the warlords will.

  2. I feel so sorry for her children and it breaks my heart.
    My mother was a functional addict for over 5 years with prescription drugs and opiates, after she started methadone we thought that was the end of it but we thought wrong, she became addicted to crack cocaine, she smoked it everyday and sometimes all day.

    My mother owned and managed a rental car and truck company, it amazes me that she still has this business today.

    Growing up with her wasn't so bad as other children who had to suffer, although she was a addict my mother still managed to always have a roof and food on our tables, we had Christmas and birthday parties, she spoiled us with whatever money she had left, and I feel so heart broken for people who never got that.

    Either way, me and my siblings were still affected by her addiction.

    She managed to get clean after we went away for college and got jobs, and she's an amazing grandmother today.

    It must've been because of the stress of being a single mom, a broken heart after my dad was murdered when she was still pregnant with my sister, and who knows what.

    I'm happy her grandchildren will never see that side of her like me and my siblings did.

  3. Any addict it's a disease!! Every family has at least one addict family member! I never turn my back I would try to get them treatment that's family love!!!!!!

  4. I will never feel sympathetic towards a drug addict. Disease or not, it’s disgusting and selfish.

  5. It infuriates me seeing her get emotional knowing that she doesn't get to say goodbye to her boyfriend. Her kids feel this way EVERY TIME she leaves them. My mother was an addict from when I was 9 till I was 21. My siblings and I suffered so much and all she could think about was herself.

    Thankfully, my mom got sober in 2006. We have built a relationship and she's an amazing Grandmother to my sister's and my kids.

    I wish every addict a second chance.

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