Nikki Mammano arrived in Hawaii as a college student and, within months, was running crystal meth in Waikiki. She became known as the Crystal Meth Queen of Waikiki — until it all came crashing down. Today, she’s a PTA mom in New Jersey and the author of Breaking Good, a brutally honest memoir about addiction, trauma, and the long road to healing.
In this episode of The Hidden Third, we trace Nikki’s journey from an abused child and teenage addict to a meth dealer in Hawaii’s underworld, and eventually to a sober life built on therapy, accountability, and telling the truth about her past. She talks candidly about prison, homelessness, sex work, parenting with a criminal record, and what recovery really looks like years after the last high.
In this conversation, we cover:
Childhood abuse and the early wounds that shaped her
Her teenage struggle with addiction
How a college move to Hawaii spiraled into full‑time meth dealing
Life as the Crystal Meth Queen of Waikiki and the rules of that underworld
Violence, paranoia, and the moment everything collapsed
Prison, shame, and confronting buried trauma
Homelessness, sex work, and the cost of survival
Parenting, PTA meetings, and living honestly with your past
The role of therapy in long‑term recovery
Why she wrote Breaking Good and what she hopes readers take from it
If you or someone close to you is dealing with addiction, Nikki’s story is not a neat redemption arc — it’s a raw, hopeful map of relapse, repair, and the possibility of starting over.
Go to http://Quince.com/hiddenthird for free shipping on your order and 365-day returns.
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