How does a girl go from being a shy, awkward bookworm to the biggest porn star in the world? In Sinner Takes All, Tera Patrick reveals all, including: her career as an international model; losing her virginity at fourteen to a thirtysomething photographer; learning oral sex techniques backstage at a Guns N' Roses concert; having an orgy with a team of firefighters; her unglamorous job in a nursing home; her first forays into the adult movie business; and how, with her husband's help, she launched her own multimillion-dollar empire.
Along the way, she dishes on the emotional side of being Tera Patrick, writing candidly about her battles with depression and anxiety. She also discusses finding true love and building a healthy marriage, achievements that many consider to be impossible in the world of porn. Featuring hundreds of photos, plus diary pages and scintillating sidebars, Sinner Takes All takes the tell-all to raunchy new heights.
Prologue
I woke up in the psych ward at St. Vincent’s Hospital in Manhattan
strapped to my bed, confused, disoriented, scared, and
thinking, “How did I get here? What have I done?” What went
down in the previous hours started coming back to me piecemeal,
but to this day the night remains one big, blurred, fucked-up
nightmare. My brain filled in the missing parts of the night with
hallucinations; I have visions of being bundled into a straightjacket
and taken away in an ambulance. But according to people who
were there, it didn’t happen that way. That was all in my warped
mind. What actually happened might be even worse. The man who
loved me and who I loved the most had to duct tape my hands
behind my back to stop me from further hurting myself and him.
He had to have me committed to a mental ward of a hospital to
save my life.
As I scratched and clawed my way through Evan’s Brooklyn loft
just hours earlier, the only thought in my mind was to end this. I
wanted to end my misery and I wanted to end my life. I couldn’t
handle any of it anymore. But Evan stayed strong because he knew
I was worth saving. Evan took my punches, dodged the heavy objects
I hurled at him, suffered through my relentless scratching, and
he did the one thing he knew to do: stop the madness and get me
help.
I don’t remember the ride in his Suburban over to the hospital. I don’t remember Dr. Lugo talking Evan through what to do. I don’t
remember entering the hospital or being checked into the psychiatric
ward. I don’t remember being strapped to a gurney and the cops
questioning Evan about the night’s events. I just remember waking
up the next morning in lockdown in the place where they keep the
most dangerous mental patients. Was I mental? I didn’t believe it.
My emotions had taken over my thought process, and I was reduced
to questioning everything around me and not being able to
make sense of any of it.
The psych ward frightened me. I was just a porn chick going
through a rough time trying to get out of my contract. Why was I
in a room behind locked doors that doctors had to be buzzed in and
out of? Why was I in a room with four beds with a variety of
women whom I did not relate to, who were not like me? The girl in
the bed next to me was a black girl younger than me who had tried
to kill herself. She was obsessed with shrimp parmesan and her
sister would bring it to her daily, and every day she’d offer me some
and each time I’d say no. To this day, the sight of shrimp parmesan
sends chills up my spine. I wasn’t there to make friends. At first, I
wanted nothing to do with the place or anyone in it.
In the bed next to her was a Middle Eastern girl with black curly
hair and a flashlight she’d shine around the room after the lights
went out. She didn’t talk much, but she did mumble her prayers a
lot. I would pretend not to hear her. She scared me. I overheard the
nurses say that she had delusions about becoming a suicide bomber
and that’s why she was in the ward. The bed at the end was host to
a revolving array of patients whom I don’t really remember.
The reality of the night before started coming back to me, and
bits and pieces were told to me. I realized that I’d had a major
meltdown. A psychotic break. A suicide attempt. I was inconsolable.
I was out of my mind. There was no talking me off the ledge
this time, as Evan had done before.
I was in St. Vincent’s psych ward for fourteen long days, and it was
not what you could call time well spent. I just lay there in my hospital
bed like a statue. I wanted nothing but out. But I did everything you
shouldn’t do if you want to be released from the psych ward. In full
denial for the first few days, I acted out in every way imaginable. I
figured if they think I’m crazy, I might as well play the part. I talked
to myself out loud. I refused medication. I wouldn’t eat anything. I
picked fights with other patients. I took it all out on Evan, calling him
daily and cursing him out for the entire ward to hear.
I pulled the diva act and tried to own that pay phone. My cell
phone had been confiscated, so the pay phone was my only connection
to the outside world. So, when anyone else tried to use the
phone, I unleashed a shit-storm of anger, screaming, “I’m on the
fucking phone! You wait your fucking turn! I’m on the phone! I’ll
be done when I’m done! I’ll fucking kill you!”
Making death threats in the psych ward is not exactly the way
to prove that you’re not crazy and get released. One day, I even
tried to escape. When those buzz-in, locked doors opened, I made
a run for it, forcing the orderly to wrestle me to the ground.
When I realized there was no way out unless I played by the
rules, I threw the rules in their face. They had been asking me to
shower for days and I refused. I was defiant and angry and anti-
authority. After days of nagging me to shower, I finally said, “Fuck
it. You want me to shower? OK, I’ll shower.” So I stripped off all of
my clothes, walked out of my room into the hallway completely
naked, and looked at the first nurse who came my way and said,
“OK. You want me to shower? Here I am. Where’s the fucking
shower?”
As much as this experience was the lowest point of my life, I’m
grateful for it. Sometimes you need to go off the rails of the crazy
train to get on the right track of your life. And that’s exactly what
I did.