DiscoverAddiction Medicine Made Easy | Fighting back against addictionWhat I Learned About Addiction from Matt Butler’s Prison Concerts
What I Learned About Addiction from Matt Butler’s Prison Concerts

What I Learned About Addiction from Matt Butler’s Prison Concerts

Update: 2025-06-02
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This episode is an interview with Matt Butler, a singer-songwriter who has performed in jails and prisons across America for a decade. He shares how music creates transformative spaces for healing in correctional environments.

• Matt's musical journey began after writing songs for a documentary about recovery high schools
• Music penetrates emotional defenses faster than conventional approaches, allowing inmates to be vulnerable
• Songs like "Good Friday" and "Time to Be a Man" directly speak to experiences of addiction and incarceration
• Hypervigilance in prison environments makes trauma processing nearly impossible
• Music temporarily changes the atmosphere, allowing emotional expression typically suppressed for survival
• Trauma and addiction form a vicious cycle that's particularly difficult to break while incarcerated
• Reentry challenges include practical barriers like employment, housing, and basic skills deficits
• Many successful recovery stories involve people transforming their past struggles into purpose by helping others
• Creating spaces where people feel safe and accepted is essential for healing from addiction and trauma

Please check out Matt's album Reckless Son, the one-man show he performs in correctional facilities across the country.

To contact Dr. Grover: ammadeeasy@fastmail.com

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What I Learned About Addiction from Matt Butler’s Prison Concerts

What I Learned About Addiction from Matt Butler’s Prison Concerts

Casey Grover, MD, FACEP, FASAM