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The Addicted Mind Podcast

139: Stepping Into the Recovery Elevator with Paul Churchill

The Addicted Mind Podcast

Duane Osterlind, LMFT

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Mental Health

4.8621 Ratings

🗓️ 28 July 2021

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Addictions are many things. But to simplify, they represent parts of our personalities that are out of balance. They represent a part of our body, mind, soul, or spirit that needs a lot of attention and that perhaps was neglected in childhood. As we continue using external substances, these imbalances get louder and louder until they have to be dealt with. Eventually, we get stuck in a cycle of shame and guilt that leads to hopelessness.

On this episode, Duane speaks with Paul Churchill, the host and founder of Recovery Elevator. In 2015, Paul launched the podcast, which he thought was a risky move having only been six months sober from alcohol. It was a calculated gamble that actually saved his life. Now, it has opened a lot of doors for him to meet great people and impact other people’s lives.

Paul was a normal drinker for about seven years since he was 15 years old. Soon, he found how the drug alcohol let him overcome his insecurities and fears in early childhood. At 22, after he graduated college, he moved to Granada, Spain and bought a bar. Moving to a foreign country with a drinking problem to buy a bar in Spain at a young age was a total dumpster fire. It was both the best time and the worst time of his life.

The tipping point came at the very end when he blacked out for three straight days and realized he was tiptoeing around life and death. In 2010, he decided to go a month without alcohol and ended up going two and a half years without it. He was going forward on willpower. When you’re viewing life without alcohol as a sacrifice, your time is limited. So he went back to drinking, stopped again, and then went back to alcohol again. It was a cycle that gave him a sense of hopelessness to the point of him attempting suicide. In 2014, he finally surrendered and stopped fighting.

Now, here he is – seven years later. He believes his addiction served a purpose that directed him to move forward in life without alcohol and to go internal instead of external for happiness and support.

In this episode, you will hear:

  • Paul’s addiction and recovery journey
  • Being stuck in a cycle of shame and hopelessness
  • How Paul was finding habits or distractions as part of his recovery
  • Addiction as an adaptive behavior
  • The endowment theory that forces us to connect 
  • Ending the stigma of addiction itself and getting help for it
  • Overcoming addiction through community and accountability

Key Quotes:

[03:13] - “Addictions are many things. But to simplify them, they represent parts of our personalities that are out of balance.”

[04:16] - “Alcohol was a self medicating elixir in it. It worked wonders. The problem was it wasn't sustainable.”

[07:11] - “It's a real dangerous cycle that we can get on where we have intense anxiety, alcohol relieves it. And then when alcohol goes away, there's more anxiety.”

[10:18] - “Hope is constantly looking into the future for a better world, and that's a trap in itself.”

[10:23] - “When you have lost all hope, and you really come crashing down into the present moment, that's where the bulk of the recovery work happens in this present moment.”

[14:50] - “A lot of these addictions, especially in modern society, they're adaptive behaviors.”

[19:40] - “Overall human beings, they're wired to help. And most human beings are really good people.”

[23:08] - “It is a societal issue. And it's not the issue for just the addict or the alcoholic. And it's not even really their fault. A lot of this is generational and passed down.”

[24:06] - “How to depart from addiction is complicated... but it can also be as simple as community and accountability.”

Supporting Resources:

https://www.recoveryelevator.com/ 

In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts by Dr. Gabor Maté 

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, everyone. Welcome to the Addicted Mind podcast. My name is Dwayne Austerland, and I'm your host, and we are on to another episode. Today, our guest is Paul Churchill. He is the host of the Recovery Elevator Podcast. He is going to share his

0:26.0

story of recovery from alcohol and anxiety. Paul shares a little bit of his story of how he had to

0:36.8

switch his thinking in order to really build a life,

0:43.0

consciously build a life that he enjoyed, wanted, and thrived in. I really enjoyed talking with

0:51.8

Paul, and I hope you enjoyed this episode as well.

0:56.0

So let's start it.

1:01.0

Hello, everyone.

1:02.0

Welcome to the Addictive Mind podcast.

1:05.0

My guest today is Paul Churchill, and he is the host of Recovery Elevator. And Paul, introduce yourself.

1:14.1

Hey, Dwayne. What's up, my man? How are you doing? Good, good. Yeah, good. It's great to be here with you.

1:19.6

So my name is Paul Churchill. And like you said, I am the host and founder of Recovery Elevator.

1:24.9

This is a platform that I think saved my life in 2014.

1:29.0

It's an idea I had when I was about two months away from alcohol.

1:32.7

I was going to a meeting and I said the three most dangerous words that I think someone

1:36.3

with a drinking problem can say and that's, I got this.

1:39.7

I don't need to go to this meeting and I remember the shame and the stigma I was hiding

1:43.4

behind a tree and I was about to go back in my car because I had it all figured out, Dwayne. I was two

1:47.8

months away from alcohol. And I just stopped in my tracks. There was like this moment where I knew

1:52.6

if I didn't do something different, radically different than I was going to be toast because the

1:57.5

summer of 2014 got pretty grim and we'll cover that later.

2:06.0

But in short, I went into that meeting and then the following three months after that, I mapped out recovery elevator in my mind.

2:08.3

I did a 5,000 mile road trip just to think it through.

...

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