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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Ultra Runner Says He Did Crystal Meth at Age 15 to Cope with Father's Terminal Cancer

Rich Roll Podcast · Smile, Or You're Doing It Wrong: Andy Glaze On Relentless Positivity, PTSD, & The Healing Power Of Movement · May 18, 2026
Ultra Runner Says He Did Crystal Meth at Age 15 to Cope with Father's Terminal Cancer
Rich Roll Podcast
Rich Roll Podcast
Smile, Or You're Doing It Wrong: Andy Glaze On Relentless Positivity, PTSD, & The Healing Power Of Movement
"Around 15, my dad was diagnosed with cancer. They gave him like 6 months to live. And so I didn't know how to process that as a 15-year-old. I just did more drugs. The crystal meth just made me feel so good. Being up for days and days with just endless energy and just, it made everything in life fun."
Andy Glaze described his descent into severe crystal meth addiction at age 15, attributing it to his inability to process his father's terminal cancer diagnosis. He had unlimited access to meth through a friend whose father sold to biker gangs in Southern California, leading to severe addiction including smoking meth out of light bulbs and doing a line as long as his arm for his 16th birthday. He eventually ran away from home and was found emaciated and strung out by off-duty cops his father hired.

About this episode

On this episode of the Rich Roll Podcast, host Rich Roll interviewed Andy Glaze, an ultra-endurance athlete, paramedic, and author known as the smiling ultra runner. The conversation centered on Glaze's harrowing journey from severe crystal meth addiction as a teenager to becoming one of the world's most inspiring endurance athletes, currently maintaining a 320-week streak of running 100 miles per week. Glaze revealed for the first time publicly that he was sexually abused by a teacher at age 16-17 while attending John Dewey Academy, a therapeutic boarding school in Massachusetts, and that the teacher continued the pattern with other students and eventually became pregnant by one of them. The episode explored Glaze's descent into addiction at age 15 following his father's terminal cancer diagnosis, his placement in abusive therapeutic programs including wilderness camps and a boarding school that practiced conversion therapy, and his multiple cycles of sobriety and relapse. Most significantly, Glaze disclosed that after using ultra running to manage severe PTSD from his work as a paramedic for five years, it has recently stopped working, forcing him to seek therapy including EMDR and CPT. The conversation examined the complex relationship between addiction and extreme endurance sports, with Glaze acknowledging he has an obsessive-compulsive relationship with running that may be masking rather than healing underlying trauma. Roll and Glaze discussed transformation as a decades-long process requiring patience, the importance of failing forward, and how personal growth serves others beyond oneself.

Key takeaways

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