Julie Chandler and Paul DiGiacomo had no idea where their daughter was, until one day they saw her on TV. She was being interviewed on the street in Boston about her life as a heroin addict.
Meghan DiGiacomo has been addicted to opioids for over a decade—since she was 19. She ended up on heroin, homeless, and living on the street.
In October, CNN’s Gary Tuchman interviewed Meghan DiGiacomo and another heroin addict, Billy Donovan, about their experiences in a notorious area south of downtown Boston. They both started with opioid pain pills and switched to heroin because it was cheaper.
DiGiacomo said she wanted to get sober and her dream was to have a family, but the love of her life was a heroin addict too. They both overdosed last year.
She woke up. He didn’t.
She tried addiction treatment many times, just as Donovan, but both of them have always failed.
Digiacomo said she wasn’t particularly afraid of death.
“Honestly, sometimes it just does seem easier,” she said.
But when her parents recognized her on TV, they resolutely decided not to let their daughter die.
“I’m never giving up on Meghan. She won’t die. She can’t,” Chandler, the mother, told Tuchman in November.
Paul DiGiacomo, the father, decided to live with his daughter on the street until she agrees to seek treatment again. He took her dog along too.
“I was like literally sleeping here,” Meghan DiGiacomo said. “And I woke up to my dog licking my face and my dad is like, ‘We all moved in.’ I’m like, ‘What are you doing here?’ He’s like, ‘I’m not leaving until you get help or go to the hospital.’”
“My kids are everything to me. They really are,” the father said.
It seems his approach has had some effect on his daughter. She cares about her father and doesn’t want him to worry.
“I feel all right with myself sleeping on the street. But I’m like, I check on him 100 times during the night,” she said.
“She wants to help others before she helps herself,” the father said.
But when it comes to treatment, Meghan still puts it off.
“I don’t know. One moment I really want to [seek treatment] and the next I’m like, ‘Ok, I’ll go later,’” she said. “I’m a procrastinator.”