• Heidi's Recovery Blog
  • BOOKS
  • BUY BOOKS
  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR
  • CONTACT HEIDI
Menu

Square Books In The Light

  • Heidi's Recovery Blog
  • BOOKS
  • BUY BOOKS
  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR
  • CONTACT HEIDI

HISTORY

May 9, 2025

HISTORY.

His Story. The past.

The hearing of another person tell their history becomes part of my story when I listen to it today in the present. In hearing it, we can find the hope for the future—that there is a way out of it.

Out of addiction. Out of the patterns and behaviors that keep us stuck and without hope.

This is why I love meetings. Telling our story out loud in a meeting is the magic part. The details of our stories are vastly different. But, the general thoughts and behaviors are the same. I can find things to identify with that help me know that I am not alone in my struggle. 

I heard a woman say in a meeting, that she didn’t come here to find a “design for living” she started coming to meetings because: she could not stop drinking and maybe these people all knew something she didn’t. We don’t get to recovery meetings on a “winning streak.” We get here because our life is not working the way we are living it. We came to find a new solution other than alcohol or drugs for our lives.

The magic of what we find in recovery is each other—connection.

When you tell me you have experienced coming out to the other side of addiction without using alcohol or drugs—you help me. When you get your sobriety chip or a certain number of days, it is a celebration. For you. And for me.

It becomes my story. Your victory is mine too—together we celebrate that it can be done in community. We find that actually taking these 12-steps becomes a “design for living” and after going through them with our sponsor, we realize that we can also show others the way.

Your victory story, tells me I can do it, too. I also hear God’s voice speak to me through you in meetings. That is service on your part and you don’t even know it in that moment. That’s why I have to show up for others. For them to hear God’s voice through me. 

I want to celebrate our victory together, so we can live this life sober and free—Together.

Come and join us.

"And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another.” 

Hebrews 10:24-25

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

SELF CARE

May 2, 2025

When service becomes exhausting for me, it’s called codependency!

I realized after getting sober, I was also very codependent. I heard someone say the definition of codependency that resonated with me: “Helping another person at the expense of myself.” That is the exhausting part. Giving up something I need to do for myself and my own sobriety to help someone else. That is not helping either person.

I learned in early sobriety, that the quickest way out of my own spiraled thinking, was to help someone else—to be of service. This worked for me, and I also have to balance that with self-care. There is a middle ground where I can be in service and still stay healthy. Boundaries. To, not only, leave time for me, MAKE time for me.

How do I do this and reframe it?

Self-care.

Self-care is not Selfish.

What is Self-care?

Self-care is being intentional with your time and with boundaries for your own sobriety, meditating, praying, spending time with loved ones or outside with exercise, going to meetings to hear God speak.

We can’t give what we don’t have.

We need to fill our spiritual tank. 

Rest in this day.

“Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up.”

James 4:10

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
2 Comments

MORE

April 25, 2025

In a meeting, I heard a woman say in her story, “If I had I known that was my last drink, I would have had another” That is something only an alcoholic would say.

I can identify with that logic. Logic? That is not logic—that is insane thinking. I was not insane, but I was not of sound mind. I was in the logic of denial.

I thought that alcohol was my security blanket. I needed it. It was safety. What I thought I knew worked for me. Having another drink was my solution. It kept my mind flattened, dull, and not thinking. There couldn’t be another solution—Alcohol was what I knew worked for me.

Until it didn’t.

When the alcohol didn’t work for me anymore, in fact, it started working against me—I was at a turning point. Keep going and die, or try another way. 

Another way was surrender: Fear. Unknown. Scary. 

I had to start trusting in a power outside myself for help. “Myself” was not cutting it. It was self-centered fear. I needed more than me. "God help me. I can’t do this alone.” That was my prayer 7,591 days ago. That was the beginning of my sobriety. 

I had tried for 30 years to stop on my own. I could not. If I could have done it on my own power, I would have. I had to surrender my will and life over to God and trust that He could help me do this life without alcohol.

He did.

The funny thing about God is that you have to actually do this “trust” thing for it to work. Not just think about it, try harder, or say you will eventually trust God—You need to do it now for things to change.

Trust me. 

It works. 

You won’t regret it.

"He must become greater; I must become less.”

John 3:30

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

PAYING ATTENTION

April 17, 2025

This joke makes me laugh, mainly because it is so true. Maybe you have heard it.

*******************************************************************************

A storm descends on a small town, and the downpour soon turns into a flood. As the waters rise, the local preacher kneels in prayer on the church porch, surrounded by water. “Better get in, Preacher. The waters are rising fast.”

“No,” says the preacher. “I have faith in the Lord. He will save me.”

Waters rise and the preacher is up on the balcony, another person calls to him in a motorboat. “Come on, Preacher. We need to get you out of here. The levee is gonna break any minute.”

Once again, the preacher says, “I shall remain. The Lord will see me through.”

Flood waters rise over the church until only the steeple remains above water. Preacher standing on roof and a helicopter descends. A state trooper calls down to him through a megaphone.

“Grab the ladder, Preacher. This is your last chance.”

Once again, the preacher insists the Lord will deliver him.

And, predictably, he drowns.

Preacher goes to heaven and he asks the Almighty, “Lord, I had unwavering faith in you. Why didn’t you deliver me from that flood?”

God shakes his head. “What did you want from me? I sent you two boats and a helicopter.”

*******************************************************************************

I love this joke because it accentuates that the person has faith, but does not choose to take the action and partner with God to save himself. This is how it works with addiction at our bottoms.

We have to first admit we are powerless over alcohol and drugs and that our lives have become unmanageable. 

Then when help comes in the form of others who are there for us when we become ready for change— we then ask for help, and then to surrender to God for help. God can work through others in our lives, but only if we are ready to hear or see that help right in front of us.

When we take the action of admitting, then asking for help, then surrendering to the process—that is when the magic of recovery happens. 

Sometimes, as in the last part of this joke, even a megaphone does not work to get our attention. We have to choose to pay attention. Until we do, we continue in the chaos until our ultimate bottom.

If you think you are close, open your eyes and heart to what is actually true. Then reach out for help—first to God, then to others to guide you on this new path of recovery.

We are in the boat waiting for you to get in and join us.

You are not alone.

We will be with you along the way.

“For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind.”

2 Timothy 1:7

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

DRASTIC THOUGHT

April 11, 2025

When I was drinking, all was drama and chaos. I needed to make a drastic change to get out of that lifestyle and thinking. First, I needed to stop drinking. Period. 

Then begin to deal with my mental and spiritual mindset.

Sobriety is about doing everything the exact opposite of what I did before I got sober. Drastically-changed behaviors. I have learned that whatever my mind thinks first as a possible good idea needs to be challenged. I have to ask God to help me pause and review what I am thinking and direct me to the next right step or behavior. I never did that before. I just reacted. I just did things—without thinking.

It got me thinking about opposites.

I recently came across these paradoxes put forth by Alcoholics Anonymous:

• From weakness comes strength

• We suffer to get well

• We die to live

• We surrender to win

• From dependence we found independence 

• We forgive to be forgiven

• We give it away to keep it

• From darkness comes light

I think this 11th Step Prayer or the Prayer of St. Francis emphasizes the weaknesses to show the drastic nature of what the solution or hope will be. This prayer always lifts me and makes me know there is hope.

11th Step Prayer

“Lord, make me a channel of thy peace, that where there is hatred, I may bring love. That where there is wrong, I may bring the spirit of forgiveness. That where there is discord, I may bring harmony. That where there is error, I may bring truth. That where there is doubt, I may bring faith.That where there is despair, I may bring hope. That where there are shadows, I may bring light. That where there is sadness, I may bring joy. Lord, grant that I may seek rather to comfort than to be comforted to understand, than to be understood to love, than to be loved. For it is by self-forgetting that one finds. It is by forgiving that one is forgiven. It is by dying that one awakens to eternal life. Amen”

There is hope.

“Whoever walks in the dark does not know where they are going. Believe in the light while you have the light, so that you may become children of light.”

John 12:35-36

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
4 Comments

Mental push ups: Prayer and looking at God’s creation.

SPIRITUAL FITNESS

April 3, 2025

What is spiritual fitness?

It’s like physical fitness, which requires a work out, only with your mind!  

And, I’m not talking about “over-thinking” or “Thinking our way out of a situation”—neither of those, although it does require our minds to change our mindset and perspective.

The other day, I heard a friend talk about feeling “spiritually homeless”— I am sure we have all felt that way at some point. Alcohol only enhances this feeling, or state of being. We are born with that natural feeling of needing something outside of ourselves to complete ourselves, spiritually, mentally and physically. As if we are “missing something.” That is the feeling of spiritual homelessness. 

I searched for a spiritual home here in the physical world through alcohol. The world could not complete me or validate me. I held on for a while, but was still missing something. Eventually, it was not enough. I knew God before I got sober, but wasn’t talking to God and exercising that “relationship” muscle. I could not stop drinking and get sober on my own. Well, if I could have gotten sober on my own, I would have. But, I needed more. 

I was far from home. I needed a spiritual fitness. A friend the other day talked about learning of God growing up in church and then, falling away as a young adult. But there is a “homing instinct” aspect of spirituality, that once we get the addiction out of the way (the physical) we have access to our own spirituality once again and we instinctively know where to return for that feeling of HOME.

That home for me is God.

This is not a one-time deal. It takes active participation. Daily. Ongoing.

"What we really have is a daily reprieve contingent on the maintenance of our spiritual condition. Every day is a day when we must carry the vision of God's will into all of our activities.” Page 85 of The Big Book of AA

In the scripture at the bottom, it talks about being alert and of sober minded. The enemy (alcohol) is doing push ups behind the scenes ready to pounce in the form of relapse. What are you doing today for your spiritual fitness? Metaphorically speaking, what kind of mental push ups are you doing for your sober maintenance?

Daily Mental Push-ups:

Gratitude list—Keeps me in solution and not the problem

Prayers—Keeps me in the action step of surrendering to God.

Go to a meeting— keeps in active listening to others and out of my own head

Service— Helping somebody else, strengthens my “selflessness” muscle.

What are you doing today for your spiritual fitness?

"Be alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”

1 Peter 5:8

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

HEARD

March 28, 2025

Sometimes all it takes to know that you are not alone is to be “heard.”

I heard this in a meeting long ago—"If you want what we have (sobriety), do what we do—stay in the middle of the herd." When you to this, you will be protected and safe. Especially when you are new in sobriety and are feeling so vulnerable.

Think about nature, when the babies of the herd stay in the middle, they are protected and not “picked off” on the perimeter, by predators. Makes senses doesn’t it? Away from all the influence of what can distract us and can take us down that same path of chaos and destruction again. 

Here in recovery meetings with us, you will not only be “heard,” but you will hear others like yourself. You will be supported and guided back to healthy and sober living. You will heal here in meetings. Many of them in a row. You will become stronger and able to go out again into the world with more confidence. Community. Safety.

Come and sit and be heard.

Come and hear others.

Come and be healed.

"Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective."

James 5:16

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

STUDENT FOR LIFE

March 20, 2025

A while back, in my favorite women’s AA meeting, I heard a woman with many years of sobriety sharing how she got sober in the 80’s. She was sharing about a woman she was sponsoring coming up on a year of sobriety. While sharing, she accidentally said this, “She was getting many days lined up in a row and was coming up on her “A”—oh, I’m sorry, I meant coming up on her YEAR!”

This mistake really spoke to me, as I related to wanting to get the “A” in everything. Being performance-driven, I always had to get the “A” or push toward graduating. On the other hand, I LOVED school and being a student, so I didn’t want to graduate. If I could have been a professional student, I would have been.

When I was 50-years-old and ended up at the bottom of my drinking, I found recovery and started to go to AA meetings. A few months into the program, someone asked me if I had done “90 in 90” and asked what that was—It is 90 meetings in 90 days. 

Being the willing an “anxious-to-do-this-right” student of the program, I got out my calendar. I marked on my calendar all the meetings I would go to and started in. Well, I ended up doing MORE than 90 meetings in 90 days, being the over-achiever that I am.

At the end of this process, I said, “Now what?” I realized the answer to that was that this was the plan. This was my life now, with all of these meetings. My behaviors were set in a new pattern. A new habit and plan for living that didn’t involve alcohol. Such a great revelation for me.

In realizing that going to meetings was continuous and ongoing, I was happy to know that I would never graduate from this recovery program. I had achieved my “professional student” status and was pleased. Now, I attend 4 meetings a week. It is a part of my life of continuous learning, from others and from God, how to live my life without alcohol.

Love my life as a sober, professional student.

I am grateful for continuous learning.


“Rooted and built up in him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with gratefulness.”

Colossians 2:7

Click on my books below to buy.


Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

SPIN CYCLE

March 13, 2025

This is such a great visual on what happens in my head—the spin cycle on the washing machine. Crazy thoughts continuously turning around in a circle coming back to the same place of aggravation. Adding more spin on the thoughts and letting it cycle around in my brain once more. Then again. churning, until the problem seems insurmountable.

What then?

Until I get it out of my head, I can’t look at it with any degree of clarity or truth. This is when my recovery meetings really help. Being with others to say out loud what is going on in my head. Once I put it out here in the world to others, either speaking it or in writing, I can get a different perspective on it. Doing this takes so much power out of the situation that was living in my head. All of the spin and judgement I was adding to it in my head falls away.

It never looks quite as ominous out here in the world outside my head. Speaking it out or writing it on paper, I can see how this may not be the truth. That in the spin cycle in my brain, as in the laundry cycle, I can add detergent to whitewash — or add more dirt and judgement to it and blow it out of proportion. Right?

Connecting with others and talking about what is troubling me, gets it out of the dangerous territory of my brain. Others can help me gain perspective. Then, I get to give the problem to God and let go of the outcome. That is the only way I can get peace on any given situation.

I can move toward acceptance, which is a word I have always struggled with. It implies for me to just take it and “live with it.” Even something I don’t even want. Things out of my control—there it is. I have learned to shift the word “acceptance” in my mind to this phrase in the long version of the Serenity Prayer, “…taking this sinful world as it is, not as I would have it. Trusting that God will make everything right, if I surrender to His Will.”

As it is, not as I would have it. This phrase affects me physically. It takes my control out of it. It allows me to calm down and have peace.

Try this:

• Tell somebody else—take the power out.

• Write it down in your journal.

• Give it to God and trust Him with the outcome.

“And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”

Hebrews 10:24-25

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

CHANGE FOR A DOLLAR

March 6, 2025

In our meetings, we pass around a basket for our 7th tradition of AA, which states, “We are self-supporting through our own contributions.” You are not required to give, just a dollar will suffice.

I have heard people say that sitting in an AA meeting is the only place I can go to get “change” for a dollar. 

Clever, and true. I am not sitting there waiting for change. I am changing as I am sitting there, listening to others’ stories. I am becoming willing and open to doing things differently.

I also heard there —Nothing changes if nothing changes.

Addiction (insanity) is doing the same thing over an over and expecting different results. I needed to try something new. I didn’t think that I could live my life without alcohol because I had not done it before. When I tried in the past, I found myself going right back to what I knew, even though it did not work. It was an external solution to an internal problem.

Patterns. I had to break the cycle and do something I had never done. 

"If you want something you’ve never had, you must be willing to do something you’ve never done.” Thomas Jefferson

Come to a meeting and see how others are staying sober with each other and in community. We are here to show you that it works. We don’t even need your dollar!

Just come and sit.

Listen to others share.

Change is possible.

Serenity Prayer: 

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference. Amen.

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
2 Comments

PAUSE. PRAY. PROCEED.

February 26, 2025

Overwhelm.

In my recovery, what do I do when I am in overwhelm?

I learned from my sponsor, that turning to alcohol to take me away or check out is not the solution for dealing with the stress of my life.

She told me to, “Pause. Take a deep breath. Pray. Ask for God’s guidance. Then wait. Then act and trust God for the outcome.”

Ok. Then what? Wait for what?

Wait for the peace and calm that comes from asking for God’s help and for guidance on next steps for a response.

Oh, ok. That sounds like a good approach!

I tried her approach and it helped me center me. It calmed my brain and made me able to respond in a kind, gentle and loving way. To not jump into the chaos with others by reacting. Overwhelm for me comes from taking on something that is not mine. As in, when others are in crisis and run to me, as another friend says, “Comin' in hot” with their issues, looking for answers that I do not have.

Or, committing to something I don’t want to do or I am not able to do right now. Committing immediately because I don’t want to disappoint the person who is asking.

I don’t have to carry the world. It is not my job. Here is what I am learning in the interaction with others in my life: Pause. Then, pray and ask God to guide and direct my thinking, then proceed to respond and trust God for the outcome.

It sounds simple, but in my head and in my own pride and arrogance, I think that I can “fix” this or change it on my own power. Help this person. Solve that problem. Commit to that person just to please them. When, in reality, I am not that powerful. Ha ha.

God is.

If I turn to God humbly and ask. This has worked for me for many days in a row—in fact, 7,536 days of sobriety. Try it a few times and see. Just a suggestion.

Pause.

Pray.

Proceed.

“Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.”

Matthew 7:7

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
2 Comments

GROWTH AND CHANGE

February 22, 2025

I always want to improve and grow. 

Staying stuck is easy. It’s what I know. Moving forward into new ways of thinking that lead to growth is hard. That requires change. I can say what I want to change, but living it is the hard part.

I need help.

That is where prayer comes in for me. Asking for help is everything. Thankfully, God does for me what I cannot do for myself. This partnership is essential for me in my recovery journey.

In my drinking days, it was all about what I thought I could do and had every intention of doing it. Unfortunately, that thinking was very self-centered and self-powered. Don’t drink for a while and everything will go better…I couldn’t go one day on my own power. The next day I was drinking again.

I had to change my thinking to change my behaviors. Stop old behaviors and begin new behaviors. And, getting help outside of myself and old thinking. Starting with prayer, “God, I need help. Show me new ways of thinking rather than reaching for that one thing that will help me change the way I feel. Help me to practice focusing on you and what you bring to mind for focus today.”

Then wait. Look around to see the evidence that is presented. The prayer that I start every day with now, is the “Third Step Prayer.”

“God, I offer myself to Thee —to build with me and to do with me as Thou wilt. Relieve me of the bondage of self, that I may better do Thy will. Take away my difficulties, that victory over them may bear witness to those I would help of Thy Power, Thy Love, and Thy Way of life. May I do Thy will always! Amen.”

It allows me to get out of my own way (and God’s way) and focus on aligning with His will for me instead of my own. And, get out of my old ways of thinking and muscling my way through situations on my own, without God’s help. When I do this,  God’s will becomes my will. I am not just saying how I want to change, I begin living it rather effortlessly…

With Gods help. The partnership begins. The relationship becomes one that I can rely on when my thinking goes awry again—and it will. I get to surrender my will and restart— engage again with God’s help. 

Open your mind to prayer.

Try it. 

It works.

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

Volunteer

WHAT WE RESIST, PERSISTS.

February 13, 2025

This photo is so sweet and reminds me of how my recovery works.

I’ll tell you why.

This beautiful flower coming up between the bricks of our patio is called a “volunteer.” There is a pot with luscious soil not a foot away with that same plant flourishing in it. This little volunteer, pushed up through the bricks with minimal soil and little chance of it growing there. It was determined, despite the odds—accepting it’s conditions, admitting it was powerless over where the seed landed—sprouting in what seemed like unmanageable circumstances.

Wow.

This is Step One: “Admitted we were powerless over alcohol and our lives had become unmanageable.”

I learned that what I resist, persists. Think about it. If I resist something, I have an adverse reaction—resistance. It causes me to think about it and mull it over and over in my head. I don’t get resolution about it, causing it to persist, until I accept the situation is not working and resolve it—

This is how it was with my drinking for years. I resisted loved ones’ concerns for my excessive drinking and pushed back, “I don’t have a problem. It’s under control.” So, my condition persisted.

Definition of resist: to exert force in opposition

Definition of persist: to continue to do something or to try to do something even though it is difficult or other people want you to stop

Now—I am like the flower in the hardscape. I volunteer to show up for my recovery, despite the hard conditions or circumstances that come up in my life. I am not resisting anymore or finding reasons or excuses to hide and escape from things that are hard. Or, people who are difficult. I am not resisting others’ concerns or for help they may want to give me. I have a chance of resolving it and responding in a healthy way and flourishing in my life—but, I can’t do it alone.

If I can do this life sober, so can you.

I am not saying it’s easy but it is simple. Like the flower metaphor, there are people, close by beckoning us to plant into the rich soil of a sober life, to live and to flourish among others like ourselves.

Ask for help—from others and from God.

It starts with you.

Then, volunteer to show up and help somebody else.

“Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.”

Matthew 7:7

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

Context for routine. Quiet.

CHAOS OR ROUTINE

February 7, 2025

Working with a newcomer to this recovery program keeps me humble. Not necessarily sponsoring, but just reaching out and coming alongside the one who is newly sober. It reminds me of my early days and trying to figure out new ways of thinking and of doing things—the old ways were not working. I had no context.

I heard this recently:

Addiction is Chaos—Recovery is Routine

Opposites.

My context for addiction was chaos. I had no idea what routine looked like. I had not been thriving there. Neither had I been thriving in chaos—hence my dilemma. I had a decision to make. I was at the end of myself. I love that turning point in every alcoholic/addict’s story—When we realize we need help outside of ourselves.

The word “repent” means to “turn around” and go the other way.

What is the true meaning of repent?

True repentance is not only sorrow for sins and humble penitence and contrition before God, but it involves the necessity of turning away from them, a discontinuance of all evil practices and deeds, a thorough reformation of life, a vital change from evil to good, from vice to virtue, from darkness to light.

This is my favorite part in the Big Book of Alcoholics Anonymous, in the chapter to the agnostics on Page 53: “When we became alcoholics, crushed by a self-imposed crisis we could not postpone or evade, we had to fearlessly face the proposition that either God is everything or else He is nothing. God either is, or He isn’t. What was our choice to be?”

Choose God. I did and do not regret it.

Turn around and go a new way.

Simple program, but not easy.




“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.”

Micah 6:8

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

SLIP

January 30, 2025

I have heard so many times in meetings that people say they “slip” over circumstances happening in their lives and relapse—whether it be a death, or a broken shoelace.

A slip is something that you do on a banana peel, like in the cartoons. An accident. A mistake.

I believe that a S.L.I.P. is and acronym for:

Sobriety Losing Its Priority.

Relapse is a choice because drinking was STILL an option that was on the table. We may not believe it at the time, but, so many things lead up to that decision. We have stopped taking all of the precautions that keep us from finally making that decision to drink. When drinking or using is an option, it will always become a real choice at some point. We will use that excuse, whatever it is, to drink or use.

When I got sober, I realized that I had to take drinking off the table as a solution. It was not an option for me anymore. Some people call that a “reservation.”— “I don’t know what I will do if THIS particular thing happens.”

Just saying that leaves the door open.

My sponsor sat me down in early sobriety and said, “I want to talk to you about relapse.” I was confident at that point that I was finished drinking—we all are confident at that point, right? She told me that relapse wasn’t just about the moment we take that drink—it is about all of the thinking and choices we make leading up to that moment. That is what she wanted to teach me. How to protect myself. How to put the processes in place to protect against that final decision.

Circumstances happen. Good or bad. They will always happen, whether we are sober or not. It is how we respond to the circumstances that affect our sobriety. Learning those tools were so important for me.

Sobriety is a process and program of action. My tools are: Meetings, fellowship with others like me, working my steps with my sponsor, serving others, and lots of prayer.

I don’t want to relapse, so that is my plan.

What’s yours?

“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”

John 16:33

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
3 Comments

7500 days in a row of sobriety.

COOL CLUB

January 24, 2025

Everybody wants to be in the cool club, right? 

I was recently reading an article about the actor, Rob Lowe (34 years sober) and his 10 Transformative moments in his life. Getting Sober was up toward the top of that list. He talked about sobriety being the “cool club.”

Rob says in the People article:

*******************************************************

"Getting sober was an incremental decision," he tells PEOPLE in this week's cover story that celebrates 10 transformative moments in the Hollywood icon's life. "It's baby steps until you're ready. You can't do it until you’re really ready.”  

"I always tell people: you can't get sober... I don't care if it's fentanyl, booze, drugs, coke, pot, gambling, overeating, sex addiction, whatever, you cannot stop…for your job, your wife, your family, your parole officer, because you screwed something up.” 

At the end of the day, Lowe says, "You only are going to stop when you're ready, period." (Rob Lowe, People Magazine)

*******************************************************

Later in the article, he talks about his son joining him in sobriety, who now has 6 years sober. What a gift it is to share that with another family member. It IS possible to turn this ship around. Many of us are on that same ship and others in the family may not be aware they are on it. When we turn the ship of destruction and shame around and head back into the light, we are paving the way for others in the family to follow us into the light and on that road to sobriety. 

The disease is often deep in the family—more than one of us is suffering. Just as that is true, more than one of us can end that cycle of shame and walk into the “cool club” of recovery. 

My brother, Roger, and I were in the cool club together. He passed this last year, but he died sober. I will continue to shine our legacy in the family to be in recovery and remain sober to shine the light for others to be attracted to join the cool club—inside and outside of our family.

My sponsor said to me early in sobriety, “Heidi, this is where the party is!”

Yesterday, I celebrated 7500 days of sobriety.

I am saving a seat for you in the cool club.

Come join me.

“To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven.”

Ecclesiasties 3:1

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

SIMPLIFY

January 17, 2025

Turn back to what I know—to simplify.

Return to routine.

These days, I can over-complicate my life and get into overwhelm quickly. I don’t have the bandwidth for chaos, which in my drinking days I seemed to thrive upon. Sometimes I have to just pull back and be quiet. Start with today. Return to the basics of my own routine of recovery. I need to do what works to keep me centered. 

When I first got sober, someone in an AA meeting came up to me and said, “have you done 90 in 90 yet?” Of course, I didn’t know what that was. They told me to do 90 meetings in 90 days. 

That gave me a focus. All I had to do was go to a meeting every day for 90 days? I can do that. In fact, being the obsessive person that I am, I got out my calendar and marked all the meetings I was going to attend. I began the process. I also attended more than one meeting in a day and ended up doing more than 90 meetings in 90 days! Little over-achiever that I am, ha ha. When I got to the end, I thought, “Now, what?”—It occured to me that it was now a part of my daily routine and my life. 

What a concept. 

Retraining my brain to incorporate those meetings into my daily life. Routine Maintenance. I used to despise the word routine, because it seemed so boring. But now I count on it for my stability. We can break the cycle of addiction, which is partly habit (routine.) The addiction cycle is what we think works for us, but in reality, is temporary and not helpful for a healthy lifestyle.

Now, I count on the basic routine every day: 

• Say the Third Step Prayer each morning 

• Pray for God’s Will for how to serve others.

• Go to meetings

The Third Step Prayer

"God, I offer myself to Thee—
To build with me and to do with me as Thou wilt.
 Relieve me of the bondage of self, that I may better do Thy will.
Take away my difficulties, that victory over them may bear witness
to those I would help of Thy Power, Thy Love, and Thy Way of life.
May I do Thy will always! Amen."

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

NEVER CURED.

January 10, 2025

We are never cured. But we are freed up.

We have to stay connected and stay in today.

I have had people ask me, “Heidi, why do you still call yourself an alcoholic after all these years, when you don’t drink anymore?” 

Because we are never cured of this disease—dis-EASE. Admitting to myself that drinking is not my solution anymore, keeps me in today. It is a process. I get to continue this path of sobriety and protect it like I would my physical condition with exercise. I need to do something every day to exercise and maintain my sobriety to keep it strong. 

Meeting and connecting with others is one of the best ways of doing that. I have never been comfortable calling alcoholism a disease. But I do know that when you have a disease, you have to actively treat it. Some diseases have a cure, but this disease does not. It is a lifelong effort of treatment for me. I have a dis-EASE with others and with life. My tendency is to check out or withdraw. That is not a treatment solution. My treatment involves reconnecting and engaging with life that helps me not withdraw and check out.

My saying that “I am an alcoholic in recovery,” says to others that I am like them and we are on this path of recovery together.

We can’t do it alone.

Come join us today.

Today is the day.

"This is the day the LORD has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it." 

Psalm 118:24

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
Comment

Sunrise. January 1, 2025

UNDER THE INFLUENCE

January 3, 2025

New Year—2025

Time to review. 

I never got a DUI when I was still drinking. I should have gotten one because I drove many times under the influence of alcohol. I just didn’t get caught. When I was drinking, I was only concerned with me and what I was doing. Under the influence of alcohol, I was more me. I was self-centered and totally under my own power and influence. I made many poor decisions out of that mindset. Nobody could tell me what to do. I knew everything. I was self-reliant. Yeah, I’m good. Don’t bother me. I don’t need help.

I tried to stop drinking for many years on my own power. When I finally admitted I could not stop on my own, I surrendered and asked God to help me. If I could have gotten sober on my own, I would have. Not until I admitted that I was powerless and surrendered to God, did I finally get sober. I was no longer under the influence of what was confusing me—alcohol. 

When alcohol was removed from the equation, I was no longer separated from access to God’s influence in my life. I turned my will over to God. My obsession to drink was removed. 

I started to watch others who were able to live this life so fully and without alcohol. How were they doing this? They had an influence on me too. I could see they were not doing it alone or on their own power. The way was shown to me. In meetings. Connection with God. Connection with others like myself. God magically began to put people in my life that would walk beside me, like my sponsor, that asked me challenging questions. “How’s that working for you?”  

I started working the 12 Steps with my sponsor. She pointed out things I could not see on my own. I looked inside and reviewed. I examined motives for my behaviors and became willing to change. I was astonished. My eyes were opened. I was influenced in a good way.

For me, it was not just stopping drinking, it became a new way of thinking. I was now consulting God first. Praying for His will, not my own. Then stepping outside myself and thinking of others. What positive influence can I have on others around me who still struggle?

In the 12th Step it says, “Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry the message to others, and practice these principles in all our affairs.” 

Just by living this program, we show the way. We may never get to know how we have made a difference for others, but we continue to show the way, like it was shown to us. What a miracle I have been given. Now, I am under the influence of the greatest power of all—God. He guides my every step.

If you are still suffering, reach out. Come and join us in a meeting. We will walk this recovery road with you.

You are not alone.

“So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”

Isaiah 41:10

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
1 Comment

LOSS

December 27, 2024

Death has been a big part of my recovery story. Maybe yours too. Death took me to my bottom and I have experienced many deaths in recovery—It is not an excuse to drink and check out anymore. This time of year is particularly hard for me and for many who have lost family. 

Grief overwhelmed me in a huge way yesterday morning. It has a way of sneaking up when you least expect it. I have been in denial about my sadness over the loss of my brother, Roger, since he died in late April—then losing my dog ten days later.

My grief this morning came in the form of a panic attack. I could not breathe. I could not be still. I could not move. Heart beating out of my chest. Nauseous. Body frozen.

I started to pray and could not even do that. Self-centered fear overwhelmed me. My husband came into my office and didn’t say a word. He just sat next to me calmly. My young, usually crazy dog, felt my emotional state and sat next to me on the other side calmly. And then the tears came.

Huge tears of sadness for my brother. I had not had that deep of a cry yet. It felt like the dam broke. Healing tears. Holy tears. Joy for him, sadness for me and my family not having him here for the first Christmas in over 70 years. Holding joy and sadness together in my heart. It is possible to hold those two emotions together.

I am writing about it to share with you what I learned to do in recovery instead of drink. I don’t have that option to drink over it anymore. For the first time, I wanted to drink to change the way I felt. I have not felt that urge for 7,473 days in a row (over 20 years) of being sober. My obsession to drink was lifted by God in early sobriety—I know I won’t drink.

You know why?

I know what to do now. 

I learned it in recovery meetings when I first got sober. It is still working for me today. I shared that I felt like drinking out loud to my husband. I called my nephew. He prayed a healing prayer over me. I let the tears flow and hung in the sadness for however long it took. The wave passed. I stayed by myself and protected my heart for the day. Not isolation, just self-care. I learned that’s ok to do. 

I was finally able to pray again. Connection with God and my world. Walk out the door and know I would be ok and stay sober in the process.

Today, I am praying for you this Holiday season. It brings up so many memories—good and bad—from the past for us all. Also, praying that my sharing this will help you know that you are not alone.

Christmas is the hope for all the world. Light has come. My focus is on the knowledge that my Savior has come to save us all. 

That is Hope.

For me. 

And, for you.

“In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God.” Romans 8:26-27

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.”    Matthew 5:4 

Click on my books below to buy.

Tags alcoholism, addiction, substance abuse, recovery, rehab, AA, alcoholics anonymous, God, higher power, surrender, self-discovery, NA, sobriety, soberlife, soberliving, wedorecover, recoveringaddict, sobersupport, welivesober, ACA, programs, justfortoday, today, self, addictionrecovery, roadrecovery, hope, sobertime, treatment, alcoholrecovery, god, sobermovement, iamnotashamed, sober, sober today
2 Comments
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Latest Posts

Me too!!!

Powered by Squarespace