4.6 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 29 April 2024
⏱️ 60 minutes
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Episode 480 – AF Legends
Today we have Emily. She is 31 and lives in Raleigh, NC. She has been sober since March 17th, 2019.
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[02:26] Thoughts from Paul:
Paul shares with us a list of his favorite AF (Alcohol Free) legends.
Included in the list is a man named Barry he met on the Gold Coast of Australia who taught him it’s the little things in life that create the most beautiful textures in life.
Another AF legend is Bill Wilson who together with Dr. Bob would become founders of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Paul also includes the 480 rock stars wo have shared their story on this podcast. Our interviewees have realized that for them to be successful, they have to help others. Thank you to all of the interviewees on the podcast.
Included in the list is Paul’s dog Ben. He taught him unconditional love.
And above all else, Paul feels the number one AF legend is the universe. It has provided everything he has needed for wholeness, happiness, and wellbeing. Even when being handed a roundhouse kick to the kidney, the universe only does so with the goal of promoting growth or to illuminate a better path.
Exact Nature: https://exactnature.com/RE20
[10:46] Kris introduces Emily:
Emily is 31 years old, and lives in Raleigh, NC. She has a Husky named Yogi and she works in water treatment. For fun she enjoys attending music festivals and concerts.
Emily says she is an adopted only child and grew up with wonderful parents that were always supportive. It was a religious household and while Emily feels she learned some great values through that, as she got older, she wanted to rebel a bit. Drinking with the older crowd was how she chose to do that and feels that she always drank to get drunk and didn’t see the point of drinking otherwise.
After high school Emily would have rather gone to the military instead of going to college, which was what was expected of her. She decided to go to school and join the reserves instead. Shortly after turning 18, she got a DUI which ruined the military path for her. School became a big party for Emily, and she ended up failing out of school. Emily was watching her peers graduate, start families and begin careers and she wasn’t sure what she was doing. She feels that this led to her drinking more to cope with the lost feelings she had. She would end up having two more DUI’s before she was 23.
While dealing with the consequences of these DUI’s, Emily went to rehab in Texas for 30 days. It was the first time she realized that she might have a problem but still wasn’t certain. After leaving inpatient treatment she started an outpatient program and was living in a sober house. She ended up transitioning to California and was excited to have a new start. Gradually drinking started back up for Emily and she ended up moving back to North Carolina because of how expensive it was where she was living.
After serving her probation from the DUIs, Emily found herself drinking again, but says it wasn’t as much as before. She was beginning to start working on her health with nutrition and exercise. Emily says that alcohol wasn’t fitting into her goals, so it slowly tapered off. She had one last hangover after St Patrick’s Day and decided she no longer wanted to feel that way anymore.
While working on sobriety, Emily learned that a friend from rehab had passed, and she used it as fuel to keep going. She was looking for podcasts and found Recovery Elevator. Listening to people’s stories really helped her and she started participating in communities learning that she was not alone.
Emily’s favorite resource in recovery: people
Emily’s parting piece of guidance: Be proud of the days that you don’t give up and celebrate even the small wins.
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0:00.0 | Recovery Elle later episode 480. |
0:04.0 | Starting to learn that there was a community of people out here who didn't have to drink. |
0:09.0 | And knowing that I wasn't alone was such a big part of that. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill and I'm so |
0:29.7 | excited to be here with you. On today's episode we have Emily. She's 31 years old from |
0:35.1 | Raleigh, North Carolina and took her last drink on March 17th, 2019. Great job |
0:41.4 | Emily. |
0:45.0 | Listeners, today is going to be a good day. Today has already been a good day. |
0:47.0 | But caveat with that previous line that can easily be considered a healthy dose of toxic positivity. |
0:53.4 | I've written and recorded episodes on shit days, but as long as I stay away from a drink, any day |
0:58.9 | has the potential to be a full send day, as the kids would say. And one motto I have is to keep showing up to this |
1:05.4 | microphone even on the shit days, on the good days, on the rainy days and the sunny days. |
1:10.6 | But I do want to mention this, listeners, don't fight the suck. |
1:14.8 | Embrace it, embrace it all because it's all part of this human life. |
1:19.1 | And now a word from our sponsor, better help. |
1:21.9 | We all carry around different stressors big and small. |
1:24.8 | When we keep them bottled up it can start to affect us negatively. Therapy is a safe |
1:29.6 | place to get things off your chest and figure out how to work through whatever's weighing you down. |
1:35.0 | Listeners, there's a reason why we've been working with better help for over four years now. |
1:39.3 | I believe in the product, I believe in the platform, I believe in therapy. I have personally |
1:44.1 | used better help and I have found their services valuable. If you're struggling with |
1:48.0 | quitting drinking, I know they can help. I personally found traction in my |
1:51.6 | sobriety journey when I started talking to other human beings about my desire to be alcohol-free. |
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