Back in the city, it went on like thisâtiring, depressing, strange, numbâfor a few weeks. In February, I was arrested for drug possession in the Lower East Side after two undercover cops found me doing key-bumps outside a shitty club, and it was late March or early April when she overdosed. I was starting to see other people in the extended circle of druggies and theater kids and people I called âmy friendsâ disappear, drop out, dissolve intoâ¦something or nothing. Ashes to ashes. At my normal dive bar hauntsâthe type of places where promoters with names like âJaggerâ would practice dark arts on young, unsuspecting twinksâbodies were moving around like musical chairs.
It only took a few weeks before I was digging back into my old Rolodex of dealers and scoring my usual everything-but-the-kitchen-sink cocktail of pills and powders and flowers and mushrooms and vials and whatever else the vagrant in front of me was hawking. Some cocaine to bring me up, Xanax to help me sleep, Molly to sprinkle into beverages and blunts, and, of course, my newest addition (who was rapidly becoming a series regular): heroin. I would get it in white powder form to snort, because shooting up just wasnât for me. And so, to nobodyâs surprise, really, but my own, by the time my birthday came around, I had multiple eight balls at the ready and a night of mediocre Brooklyn debauchery planned. It was to include some dumpster fire gay bars (that definitely did not go on to survive the pandemic), and the wild mix of friends I somehow managed to hang on to during my rock-bottom moments.
Itâs justâIâd understand if you were enjoying yourself, but you seemâ¦
Weâre back to 2013. Peter again. I want him to stop talking, my ears are bleeding and my brain is struggling to keep up. Like, shut the fuck up.
I donât want to be presumptuous, itâs justâand Iâm not judging you, I promise. Iâm just curious, like, why do cocaine and whatever else if it makes you soâ¦
Miserable? I manage to croak out.
Yeah.
I donât know⦠I donât want to do it, but I canâtâ¦not.
I struggle to remember the end of this conversation, because really the only thing that matters now is that it happened at all. That for once in my fucking life I could honestly say to someone I didnât know why I couldnât stop doing drugs. That I could not sneak, lie, cheat my way out of confrontation, like I did when I said I was going to rehab a few summers prior to avoid getting expelled from Semester at Sea for sneaking drugs onto the boat. Peter opened a door for me to finally admit for once that I didnât want to do drugs anymore and that I didnât know how to stop. A seed planted, and the sunrise fertilizing it.
***
Weâre driving out to East Hampton. Being in a confined space with my father means endless tapping of my toes in anticipation of whatever serious-but-not-too-serious, slightly-misguided- imparting-of-wisdom-cum-jeremiad he has cooked up. Except it never comes. I look down at my hands, marveling at how their square shape mirrors his own, only a little smaller. Larry Ivan Dorfman, born in the mid-50s in Brooklyn, Jewish with a signature crew cut and an infectious smile. A teddy bear of a man. His hand is gripping the gear shift and Iâm thinking, Oh, shit. This time is different. This time heâs quiet and reserved. When Iâd called him and told him I wanted to try to get clean, heâd simply exhaled, and in the same breath, said, Finally. Thank you.
He assured me heâd be on the next flight out of Hartsfield- Jackson, but I asked him for one last night alone with Peter. He obliged.
Hereâs something dark: When searching for a rehab that night, I literally googled âcelebrity rehab fancy.â I wasnât famous, not even close; I was just delusional and unwilling to go somewhere that would ask me to mop floors or give me cafeteria duty. Because heaven forbid this shit actually be, you know, hard.
The closer we get to East Hampton, the more I regret my decision. A pit in my stomach starts growing, screaming at me to jump out of the car Lady Birdâstyle (even though Lady Bird was still a few years offâbless you, Greta).
I donât think I can do this, Dad.
You can.
I donât know. Maybe I jumped the gun.
You didnât. But if you did, youâll find out soon enough. Weâre here now anyway.
I press my forehead as hard as I can into the cold window of the carâexcept it feels more like a hearse.
Fuck.
Adapted from Maybe This Will Save Me: A Memoir of Art, Addiction and Transformation by Tommy Dorfman, to be published on May 27 by Hanover Square Press, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Copyright © 2025 by Tommy Dorfman