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Can't be stopped

Can't be stopped

Student finds a purpose despite her troubled past

Lior Haykeen / Roundup

Randi Katz remembers the day her father, a heavy drug addict, came home from work and asked, “How long has it been since I spanked you?”

She and her siblings said they did not remember, and he sent them to their rooms while he went to get the belt.

Living in an affluent area in Studio City, Katz, 46, always felt like an outsider in elementary school.

The kids used to tease her for being a tomboy. Her self-esteem slowly lessened until she felt inferior to everyone around her.

Katz’s inner child never healed.

“Be careful, kids,” she said. “It all starts with how you treat each other in elementary school.”

Katz came from an abusive home in the Valley, was diagnosed with a bipolar disorder at 15, suffered from an abusive relationship, and lived a life of drug use and drug dealing.

One day, she decided to repair her life by starting to attend college and taking meaningful action.

Now, she is sober and is a full-time student at Pierce College.

“This woman has overcome obstacles that would’ve crushed most of us, yet she soldiers on, motivated by the appeal of her life goal,” said Sheldon Roth, Katz’s Pierce College counselor.

Instructor of English Craig Kramer, who has taught Katz in three English classes, also has nothing but praise for his student.

“She’s really serious about her studies,” he said. “I was really impressed by her as a student.”

Revving away: Randi Katz poses with her Harley by the red barn. Katz is excelling academically in spite of unfavorable circumstances.
Jose Romero / Roundup

Katz’s family seemed to be a typical Jewish middleclass family with two working parents. Yet, on the inside, her family lacked love and support.

She started smoking cigarettes and pot at the age of 10. Yet, although black beauties and speed were running prevalent in her life, she was unwilling to use heavy drugs.

When she met her ex-fiancé, he introduced her to cocaine.

“I was responsible for my family from a very young age,” she said. “When I took the first hit from the pipe, and all of that disappeared, I felt like I was never going to have to feel all that bad stuff anymore.”

Once they were evicted from her house, they lived in every dive hotel from Santa Monica to West Hollywood.

“One thing led to another and I just checked out of life at 26,” she said.

When she was lonely, she bought a dog, and fell in love with him. She has tattooed the names of her 6 dogs on her body.

“The only anecdote I have that keeps me from committing suicide is my animals,” she said. “If I take myself out of the picture, they will lose the only foundation that makes them feel safe.”

She had gone in and out of rehab several times until she met Tony, a married man who was also a father to one child, yet stayed in her life for the next 13 years.

“I just ended that relationship because he wanted to keep me around even though he was living the life I wanted that he said he never did,” she said. “It took me eight years and four suicide attempts to get over him.”

Today, after having discovered her love for animals, Katz works for a dog rescue center, while preparing to transfer from Pierce to a four-year university.

Now that her life is back on track, she is also able to pursue her love of motorcycle riding. For the past three years, she’s been the proud owner of a Harley.

Katz dreams to be a motivational speaker for children, and ensure that no other child lets abuse by a parent or other children’s teasing lead to their downfall.

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