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🗓️ 25 September 2023
⏱️ 56 minutes
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Episode 449 - How to Make it Through Your First Sober Concert?
Today we have Santino. He is 35 from Taunton, MA and took his last drink on May 24th, 2022.
Our latest Ditching the Booze course begins Monday October 2nd at 7:30pm EDT/4:30pm PDT and is free to Café RE members. The 5-week course is called Writing a New Narrative and is designed to help you explore your sobriety story through journaling and writing prompts.
Cafe RE - Use the promo code OPPORTUNITY to waive the set-up fee.
We have partnered with Sober Link. You can find some tips and can sign up for a $50 off promo code.
[03:05] Highlights from Paul:
Today’s question comes from Kelly in our Café RE Up Group. The question is “how do you make it through your first sober concert?”
The first of eight fantastic tips include giving yourself a little alcohol-free time before going to a concert. Once you’ve got some time under your belt, and the cravings are in check, then you can hit the green light on concerts. Regardless of how many days you have, if you are feeling squirrely the dray of the concert then sit it out. Sobriety is the priority.
Paul then shares several tips to include:
- Always have a non-alcoholic beverage in hand.
- Do not volunteer to be the DD.
- Make sure everyone you are attending with knows your intentions.
Some of the best parts about sober concerts? You will remember it. You will save money. You won’t get a DUI on the drive home.
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[10:14]: Paul introduces Santino:
Santino is a repeat guest and has maintained his sobriety since his last appearance on episode 397 where he was on day 43.
Santino is married and has one son. For fun, he loves going outside in nature to go hiking and go to the beach, but he also says that there is fun in everything since quitting drinking.
Santino had his first drink as a young teen. His mom was a single parent for a while, and he feels that he may have started drinking because the absence of his father bothered him. He learned that alcohol became a friend to him, and he feels like he used it for connection with his father and in contrast, to disconnect from her mother.
Santino joined the Air Force out of high school and found alcohol to be part of the culture. Between his early 20s and his early 30s he started deliberately planning his drinking to include before going out and drinking alone. Santino says he used a lot of rationalization that he wasn’t as bad as other people when it came to how he drank. He often pushed off having to think about it.
There wasn’t much hiding it from his spouse initially because they both drank. His hiding became more intentional as time went on, specifically after his son was born and during the pandemic. He found himself being sneakier about it. Santino started struggling with mood swings and being less communicative and didn’t want to address the fact that he needed help to quit drinking. He started to realize that this was going to destroy his family and he needed to rip the band aid off and address it. Once he addressed it with his wife, he felt freedom but was also worried about the process.
In the early days of his recovery, Santino and his wife began counseling to work on rebuilding their relationship. Santino also found that he started to feel healthier in general, was getting better sleep and did not miss the hangovers at all. Santino has been able to save money which assisted him with paying off some credit card debt he incurred while drinking. As a parent, he feels more centered and present with his son.
He attends AA frequently, listens to podcasts, and surrounds himself with others in recovery.
Santino’s parting piece of guidance: give yourself grace in all the moments that you feel that you don’t even deserve it.
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Recovery Elevator
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0:00.0 | Recovery Elvator episode 449. |
0:03.6 | Feeling more centered, feeling more present in my time with my son especially. |
0:23.8 | Welcome to the Recovery Elvator podcast. My name is Paul Churchill and I'm so excited to be here |
0:29.0 | with you today. On today's episode we have Santino. He's 35 years old from |
0:34.0 | Totten, Massachusetts and took his last drink on May 4th, 2022. Great job, Santino. |
0:40.9 | I want to say thank you to all of our Café Ari chat hosts. You guys do such an incredible job. |
0:45.9 | Listeners, today is going to be a good day. In fact, today has already been a good day. |
0:52.7 | Here's a fun alcohol fact for you. Did you know that Ganges Kong died in August 1277 |
0:59.0 | when he fell off a horse while riding drunk? Alcohol is shit, unless it prevents a bellicose |
1:05.4 | war tyrant from killing another couple million people. Interesting. We have got a new course coming |
1:11.5 | up called Ditching the Boos, Writing a New Narrative. This five-week course helps to explore |
1:16.9 | your sobriety story through journaling and writing prompts. When we drink, it's so easy to get |
1:22.6 | caught up in the roller coaster of thoughts, feelings and emotions running through our minds. |
1:27.4 | Writing helps us to get out of our head, unpack those old narratives, leave them on the page, |
1:32.4 | and begin a new story. Whether you're on day 1 or 1000, this course will help you explore the |
1:37.9 | creative process of writing, reflect on, and unpack your sobriety story in a safe place, |
1:43.3 | and establish a journaling practice to carry you forward with you on this journey. |
1:47.9 | Course starts Monday, October 2nd, at 7.30 PM Eastern, and runs for five weeks. This course |
1:54.2 | is for Café Ari Members Only, and there's a link in the show notes to join Thank You Robin. |
2:00.2 | All right, before we get any further in today's episode, let's hear from a fantastic sponsor, |
2:04.6 | Soberlink. Did you know there are 15 million people in the United States with an alcohol |
2:10.7 | use disorder? And yet, there's still a stigma that surrounds addiction and recovery. |
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