For Mia St. John, fighting is a way of life. She won the World Championship in boxing five times throughout her career. That said, nothing could have prepared her for the fight that resulted in the loss of her son – and later, her former husband.
St. John’s son, Julian, died by suicide in 2014 when he was just 24 years old following a battle with depression and schizophrenia that began when he was a teenager. Shortly after his death, Julian’s father and St. John’s ex-husband, Kristoff St. John, started drinking again after years of sobriety.
In February 2019, St. John received a call from Kristoff, an actor best known for playing Neil Winters on “The Young and the Restless.”
“I talked to him that morning and I knew what he was planning – he wanted to die … He just didn’t know any other way out,” St. John recounted to Know Your Value. “I tried to talk him out of it, and I was too far away from him. So, I had to call a friend to go and basically break down the door and get to him. But by then, it was too late.”
Kristoff was found dead at his Los Angeles-area home. An autopsy attributed his death to hypertrophic heart disease, and said alcohol may have been a factor.
It was after this second, devastating loss that St. John also turned back to alcohol after 30 years of sobriety. “Once I got the call that he was gone, I ended up … in a psychiatric ward twice,” recounted St. John. “I had lost my sobriety and tried to basically do what he [Kristoff] did, which was drink myself to death. And luckily my boyfriend and family put me in a hospital and saved my life.”
While St. John, now 54, says she was dragged into recovery “literally kicking and screaming,” she’s thankful for the help she received now. Eventually, she became determined to get sober so that she could act as a support system for her daughter.
To get her life together, St John realized she had to focus on her own mental health and use the same motivation and tenacity that helped her become a champion boxer.
“When I was fighting, I would say you needed a two-by-four to stop me, because I would keep coming and coming, and I would never go down,” said St. John. “And I had to keep that same mentality. I’m a fighter, I can’t let my son down, I can’t let Kristoff down, they wouldn’t want that for me. I couldn’t let my daughter down who is still with me. How could I do that to her – leave her without a brother, without a father and then without a mother? No way, I couldn’t do that.”
St. John decided to start Alcoholics Anonymous meetings once again. She credited the organization with her sobriety, and said regular meetings are still a cornerstone in her life today. In fact, she attends as many as five meetings a day starting with one on Zoom when she wakes up in the morning.









