RE 365: So Who Do I Connect With?
Recovery Elevator
Paul
4.7 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 14 February 2022
⏱️ 67 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Episode 365 – So Who Do I Connect With?
Today we have Joshua. He is 36 years old and from North Carolina. His last drink was on October 31, 2020.
https://kalabrand.com/
Highlights from Paul:
Happy Valentine's Day! The opposite of addiction is connection. Paul shares that reality is a mirror reflecting your inner world. The most important connection we have is the connection we have with ourselves. If we don't love, treat ourselves with respect or stand up for ourselves, that will appear in our outer world. Connecting with yourself allows you to become your own healer. Once your inner connection/relationship is healthy, that will be reflected in your external connections.
Paul recommends splitting your internal and external actions 50/50. Connect with yourself first (via meditation, journaling, yoga, etc.), then connect externally (Café RE chat, Marco Polo chat, a family member).
Johan Hari's Ted Talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PY9DcIMGxMs
BetterHelp: www.betterhelp.com/elevator
[10:45] Odette introduces Joshua
Joshua is from North Carolina, loves music, and works as an optician.
"Should" never helped Joshua quit drinking. Focusing on what he wanted from his life helped him shift his thinking and made an alcohol-free life possible.
Joshua's first drink was a Zima at a party in high school. He was generally a good kid and had a strong desire to belong. He recognized that alcohol did something for him early on before it did something to him. The first time he recalls getting drunk, he felt a euphoric escape. Alcohol was liberating and medicating. In college, a sneakiness appeared in his drinking. He wasn't aware of alcohol being problematic until 2014.
After divorcing, pent-up resentments led to accelerated drinking for Joshua. His drinking progressed. He attended his first AA meeting in 2017. After several false starts, AA helped him get 18 months of continuous sobriety. He stopped working his program and returned to drinking. He began to observe his drinking, and by Halloween, a dream helped him realize he wanted to be his best, and alcohol wasn't part of that vision.
Joshua credits AA for helping him and describes AA as binary; he has a realistic view of their history and acknowledges that many options are available for recovery today. Therapy helped him with harm reduction and to be less black and white.
Josh says quitting alcohol is hard, but the complications of drinking make your life exponentially harder. He is happier, more grateful, and knows the perceived benefits of alcohol were a lie. Life still has its ups and downs, which are easier to manage.
Odette's final thoughts:
You are enough. You are everything you need. You are loved. You are worthy. You are whole and complete, and you deserve a peaceful life.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Recover Yelvator episode three hundred and sixty-five. I also had this this bind of this forbidden fruit thing of like I like doing this and I feel bad about it and I feel shameful about it. |
| 0:14.0 | Life is always working in your favor. You can't heal the same environment you can sick. |
| 0:21.0 | Welcome to the Recover Yelvator podcast. My name is Paul Churchill. Thank you so much for joining us today. |
| 0:32.0 | On today's podcast we have Joshua. He's from North Carolina and took his last drink on November 1st, 2020. |
| 0:40.0 | Episode three sixty-five. If this podcast was released daily, that'd be a full year of podcasting. |
| 0:46.0 | But since it's only one time per week, that's seven years of podcasting. My goodness. |
| 0:52.0 | I want to say a huge thank you to you. Thank you so much to all of our listeners. We've almost had ten million of them. |
| 0:59.0 | Thank you for giving us your time. Thank you for listening and I'd personally like to say thank you for helping me quit drinking and remaining sober. |
| 1:09.0 | You can't see this but there are ten heart emojis on my screen right now. Thank you for all your support over the years. |
| 1:16.0 | You guys are a huge part of this project called Recovery Yelvator. We are building this project together as in me and you. |
| 1:24.0 | There's an Eastern teaching that says it's the teacher and the student that make the teaching that both are needed and both are equally important. |
| 1:33.0 | So again, thank you so much for listening. I love you guys. |
| 1:37.0 | Yo, how cool is this? Recovery Yelvator has partnered with Collabrand Eucalyles. As some of you guys might know, I teach sober Eucalyly courses. |
| 1:46.0 | This past Saturday was our second session and we are having a blast. |
| 1:50.0 | I'm currently playing a Collabrand Eucalyly and it sounds great. |
| 1:54.0 | Thank you so much Joe at Collabrand for getting me set up with this amazing sobriety tool called the Eucalyly. |
| 2:01.0 | I highly recommend Collabrand Eucalyles and you can pick one up at www.collabrand.com. Link is in the show notes. Thank you Liz. |
| 2:11.0 | Okay, let's get started. Happy Valentine's Day listeners. You can't see this but there's a heart emoji on my screen right now. |
| 2:19.0 | So this episode coincidentally falls on the date. I wanted to cover this topic, which in short is love. |
| 2:25.0 | Another word for that is connection and the infinite levels we can experience it. |
| 2:30.0 | If you've been listening to this podcast or been in the sobriety world for a minute, you've most likely heard the quote. |
| 2:36.0 | The opposite of addiction is connection. Now I want to give credit where credit is due. This is not my quote. |
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