The FMSA Foundation was not built in a boardroom. It was built in the aftermath — by the man who lost twenty years to gambling addiction, who hurt the people he loved most, and who finally walked out.
For twenty years, I was a man living in the centre of a meticulously engineered prison of my own making. To the outside world — to my colleagues, my neighbours, and the congregation at my church — I was a successful professional, a husband, and a father to four beautiful daughters. I looked like a man who had it all together.
But the truth was a slow, systematic decay.
I was caught in a cycle of self-centredness that I disguised as "providing." I wasn't just gambling — I was self-medicating a past I couldn't face and sins I couldn't erase. I thought I was the CEO of my life, but I was actually a slave to a thinking disorder that required an hourly feed.
It wasn't just the bets. It was the drinking. The smoking. The weekends away that were really just covers for the gambling in between. The systematic isolation was total.
I loved my wife and my girls with all my heart — deep down, they were the people I loved most — but I was sacrificing them daily on the altar of "one more." One more bet. One more loan. One more lie. I convinced myself that "today is the day I get it back." Every time I lost, it was replaced by a regret and a shame so heavy I cannot fully describe it. To escape that shame, I would go right back to the medication: one more bet.
I pushed the blame onto everyone else. I was too proud to admit that I was the disaster. I borrowed money I didn't pay back. I watched my salary vanish in hours. I sold things I shouldn't have. I deceived the people who were praying for me and helping me.
Then came the disaster. I reached a point where the lies were so deep and the debt so high that I had placed my family's lives at risk. I had placed my own life at risk. I was standing at the edge of life and death — alone in a crowd, a hollowed-out version of the man I was supposed to be.
That Sunday evening, I went to a church service. Not for a programme. Not for a self-help tip. I went because I was finished. For twenty years I hadn't listened. For twenty years I had run. That night, I finally allowed Him in.
In an instant, I had a collision with God. The freedom was immediate. The gambling craving didn't just fade — it was replaced by a new love and a new vision. I found forgiveness without judgement. For the first time in twenty years, I wasn't alone.
Today, I built Free Me South Africa with no prior experience — only what God put in me through the journey. My mess has become my message. My trials have become my testimony.
"Our lived experience is that no Dad — and no Mom — should ever have to walk this road alone."
— FMSA FoundationThat is why the Foundation exists. So that the next husband, the next father, the next mother, the next family in active addiction does not have to walk the road I walked — alone, in shame, with nowhere to turn. We are building the place that should have existed twenty years ago. We are walking with the families who are exactly where we once were.
Whether you have been through it, walked alongside someone who has, or simply believe families deserve a fighting chance — there is a place for you in this work.