Stephen Gibb Opens Up on Addiction, Survivor’s Guilt & Life After Loss”

Grow­ing up as Bar­ry Gibb’s son wasn’t always easy for Stephen Gibb. While his father achieved glob­al fame as a mem­ber of the Bee Gees, Stephen qui­et­ly wres­tled with per­son­al demons behind the scenes. His life, marked by highs and deep lows, even­tu­al­ly became a pow­er­ful sto­ry of recov­ery and for­give­ness.

Now in his 50s, Stephen is look­ing back with a renewed sense of hon­esty and per­spec­tive. For the first time, he’s open­ing up about the bat­tles that near­ly cost him every­thing and the jour­ney that brought him back to his family—and to him­self.

Stephen Gibb Reflects On His Battles With Addiction

Stephen Tha­dius Cromp­ton Gibb (born 1 Decem­ber 1973) is an Eng­lish musi­cian and the first-born son of Bar­ry Gibb and Lin­da Gibb./Wikimedia Com­mons

In a recent inter­view, Stephen shared inti­mate details about his past, includ­ing the dif­fi­cult peri­od when addic­tion over­took his life. Accord­ing to Mir­ror, he admit­ted, “There were times I was home­less. I had noth­ing.” The pres­sure of liv­ing in his father’s shad­ow and try­ing to carve out his own path in music only com­pound­ed the inter­nal strug­gles he faced.

Stephen even­tu­al­ly found solace through rehab, music, and fam­i­ly. He cred­its the sup­port of loved ones and the lessons he learned in recov­ery with help­ing him get his life back. Now clean for over a decade, he says one of the hardest—but most important—steps was learn­ing how to for­give him­self.

A Story Of Redemption And Family Strength

Though he came from one of music’s most famous fam­i­lies, Stephen nev­er want­ed to rely on the Gibb name. He forged his own career as a gui­tarist, work­ing with artists like Zakk Wylde and Black Label Soci­ety. Still, the most impor­tant role he’s embraced is as a son who found his way home.

His rela­tion­ship with Bar­ry Gibb has since grown stronger, built on under­stand­ing and respect. Stephen’s jour­ney reminds us that behind every pub­lic fig­ure, there are pri­vate battles—and often, redemp­tion sto­ries wait­ing to be told. For Bar­ry Gibb’s son, the sto­ry isn’t about per­fec­tion but resilience.