“They might as well call her Matty,” said the beloved “Chandler” from “Friends”.
A year after his gruesome death in his swimming pool and while five people close to him are accused of him, Matthew Perry’s words about ketamine are coming to the fore again.
“Like being hit over the head with a giant shovel of happiness”… that’s how “Chandler” described his feeling after injecting ketamine. “It was like a giant exhalation. They would bring me into a room, put me down, put headphones on me to listen to music, close my eyes and put a serum on me.”
“It’s got my name written all over it – they might as well call it ‘Matty’,” he said in the confessional he made in his book, adding that he was often “out of tune” and “seeing things”.
“I was in therapy for so long that I wasn’t even freaked out by it. Oh, is there a horse over there? Fine – it might as well be. As the music played and K ran through me, it all became about the ego and the death of the ego” are some of his words.
Perry had also talked about how he felt when he was given a combination of anti-anxiety medication and ketamine during his hour-long therapy sessions. “I often thought I was dying during this hour. “Ah,” I thought, “that’s what happens when you die,” he wrote.
Matthew Perry described ketamine as ‘being hit in the head with a giant happy shovel’ before his death from the drug pic.twitter.com/CfRyJ0ZeUO
— Page Six (@PageSix) August 23, 2024
Matthew Perry: The demand from his personal assistant
On the day Matthew Perry died, his personal assistant, who lived with him, gave him his first injection of ketamine in the morning around 8:30 am.
About four hours later, while “Friends” actor Matthew Perry was watching a movie at his home in Los Angeles, his assistant administered another injection.
Just 40 minutes later Perry wanted another injection, the assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, said in a plea agreement he signed.
“Give me a big injection,” Perry told Iwamasa, according to the deal, and asked him to get his hot tub ready.
So Iwamasa filled a syringe with ketamine, gave the 54-year-old actor a third injection and left the house to run some errands, according to court documents, as reported by the New York Times.
When he returned, he found Perry face down in the water, dead.
Iwamasa was one of five people that authorities in California said yesterday (15.08.2024) are being prosecuted in connection with the death of Perry, who died in 2023 after taking ketamine.
His personal assistant, two doctors, a drug dealer known as the “Queen of Ketamine” are among the defendants who took advantage of the actor’s weaknesses, as federal prosecutor Martin Estrada explained. They illegally gave Matthew Perry about 20 vials of ketamine for $55,000 in cash in just two months.
Perry, a beloved figure who rose to fame playing Chandler Bing on the sitcom Friends, has long struggled with addiction.
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