😱 What REALLY Happened To R&B Singer Houston Is TRULY TRAGIC – Fame, Demons & The Eye-Gouging Breakdown 👁️

What REALLY Happened to R&B Singer Houston?

In 2004, Houston Summers was living the dream.

A gifted vocalist from Los Angeles with gospel roots and West Coast swagger, he broke into the scene with the smash hit “I Like That” featuring Chingy, Nate Dogg, and I-20.

The track exploded on radio, dominated the Billboard charts, got licensed for a McDonald’s commercial, and positioned Houston as R&B’s next big star.

His debut album “It’s Already Written” went Gold, and his future looked blindingly bright.

But within a year, it all came crashing down in the most disturbing way possible.

Behind the scenes, Houston was already crumbling.

He was battling schizophrenia, drug abuse, and spiritual paranoia—but no one around him seemed to notice.

Or care.

His family allegedly controlled his business decisions, even turning down lucrative publishing deals on his behalf.

He lived in a cramped two-bedroom apartment with four people, despite having a Gold record.

People were siphoning off his money, and Houston himself said he felt like he was being used like a puppet.

“I had to get out that industry, man,” he later said.

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“Everything was clobbering down on me.”

Then came London.

In January 2005, Houston traveled to the UK to perform.

But instead of headlining concerts, he ended up in a hotel room, spiraling into what can only be described as a full-on psychotic break.

Under the influence of angel dust (PCP)—a hallucinogen known for inducing extreme paranoia and violent behavior—Houston tried to jump out of a window.

Hotel staff stopped him.

So instead, he locked himself in his room, took a plastic fork, and ripped out his own eye.

When his bodyguard found him, bloodied and broken, Houston muttered a haunting explanation: “I had to get the devil off my back.”

The press went into overdrive.

Some blamed drugs.

Others whispered about demons—real ones.

Houston himself said it was deeper than mental illness.

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“I was dealing with gangsters, thugs, mafia…

there’s too many Froot Loops in Hollywood,” he said in a later interview, suggesting he had witnessed or been pulled into things far darker than the public ever knew.

And that’s where Diddy’s name starts to appear—again.

Though never directly linked to Houston’s breakdown in legal documents, many fans and former industry insiders have pointed fingers at Diddy, suggesting his influence over young artists—and his alleged

involvement in darker industry practices—might have played a role in Houston’s collapse.

In recent years, Diddy has been accused of assault, coercion, and covering up abuse, and his connections to artists who suffered sudden mental, physical, or even fatal breakdowns continue to raise eyebrows.

In Houston’s case, it’s not just about a drug-induced psychosis.

It’s about a pattern—young, vulnerable artists from marginalized backgrounds given a taste of stardom, then left to rot the moment they start questioning the system.

Houston’s record label, Capitol, tried to spin the incident as “an accident” and downplayed any long-term consequences.

His reps claimed he wasn’t on medication, wasn’t mentally ill, and just needed a break.

But the truth was far grimmer.

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After the eye-gouging incident, Houston was diagnosed with schizophrenia and spent over a year in a psychiatric facility.

By the time he was discharged, his career was over.

He gave a few interviews afterward—one with Hood News in 2008 where he removed his sunglasses to show the world his missing eye.

Fans were shocked, and yet, touched by his vulnerability.

“I left the industry because it wasn’t me,” he said.

“They told me how to dress, what to sing, how to act.

I couldn’t breathe.

” Houston made it clear he felt manipulated and spiritually violated by the very machine that had once celebrated him.

And then… he vanished.

Over the years, rumors swirled.

Fans claimed they spotted him homeless on the streets of Los Angeles, panhandling and singing for spare change.

Others said he had joined a spiritual group to escape the demons that had followed him from the industry.

 

A 2019 interview added even more confusion, with Houston speaking cryptically about fighting inner darkness and hinting at more than one suicide attempt.

TikTok videos even alleged he underwent a spiritual exorcism to rid himself of evil energies absorbed during his short-lived music career.

There were fake death hoaxes.

Fans spread obituaries on forums.

Some believed he had already passed.

Others hoped he was alive and healing.

But no one knew for sure—because Houston had been silenced.

What makes his story especially haunting is how it mirrors others.

Bushwick Bill from the Geto Boys lost an eye in a similar traumatic event.

Whitney Houston, another artist surrounded by industry handlers, spiraled into addiction and died under suspicious circumstances.

Even Kim Porter, Diddy’s ex and mother of three of his kids, died suddenly at 47 from what was ruled pneumonia—but not everyone believed the official story.

Houston’s name belongs in these conversations—not just because of his music, but because of what he survived.

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He didn’t die, but he disappeared.

He didn’t overdose, but he was spiritually dismantled.

And in 2025, as more and more truths about the music industry emerge, his story is finally getting the attention it deserves.

He was a young Black man with talent, dreams, and a voice that could have shaken the world.

But instead, he became a living warning sign—a red flag waving in a storm of fame, drugs, manipulation, and dark power plays.

He said it best himself: “I had to get the devil off my back.”

Whether you believe Houston’s story was the result of drugs, mental illness, or something even more sinister, one thing is clear—he was failed by the very system that promised to protect him.

And that failure should haunt the industry until it finally learns how to stop breaking its brightest stars.

He may never return to the stage.

He may never release another hit.

But his voice—his pain—his eye—are more unforgettable than any chart-topper ever could be.