4.6 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 12 August 2024
⏱️ 47 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Episode 495 – Stay the Course
Today we have Robbie. He is 28 years old from Palm Springs, CA and took his last drink on January 4th, 2024.
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[4:28] Thoughts from Paul:
You are listening to this podcast because you’ve correctly identified that alcohol is what is holding you back. You see that alcohol isn’t delivering what was promised.
Your inner guidance to quit drinking, to explore what that would look like is correct. Stay the course. You’re inner voice is spot on. You are on the right path.
Paul shares his struggles with finding homeostasis after welcoming his child into the world. He feels his nervous system is stuck in a level of fight or flight. While he is feeling a lot of emotions around this, he reminds himself to stay the course. So, for all of those parents who are seeking sobriety – we will stay the course with you.
What does staying the course look like when we depart from alcohol? Maybe it is tuning in to the podcast each week or logging just one more day alcohol-free. Maybe you are working through a quit lit book and the voice is saying it wasn’t that bad. Keep reading. Keep listening. Keep showing up. We are on the right path and it’s paramount that we stick together.
[10:18] Paul introduces Robbie:
Robbie lives in Palm Springs, CA. He enjoys tennis, pickleball, golf and interior design.
Robbie says he didn’t drink much growing up and only started to drink while studying abroad in Australia. He was able to drink socially with little issue. The drinking became more frequent after Robbie had graduated college and was living alone in Denver. He found himself at happy hours and then returning home to continue to drink. At the time, Robbie knew that his drinking wasn’t normal but chalked it up to being a phase.
During COVID lockdowns, Robbie ended up moving back to Montana to stay with his parents. Drinking was a great excuse since he didn’t have obligations. After moving back to his apartment, his drinking began earlier in the day over time. He was starting to have physical repercussions from drinking heavily and decided to try and moderate or cut back. One event found him going to the liquor store for “hair of the dog” and on the way back he ended up passing out. Robbie woke up in an ambulance on the way to the ER and had no idea who called them. This didn’t deter Robbie from drinking, he just knew that if he tried to quit again, he would need to have medical detox.
On a trip to Montana visiting family, Robbie ended up getting a DUI right down the street from his parents’ house. After his father picked him up from jail, he knew the cat was out of the bag.
At Christmas, Robbie decided to stay in Denver and told his mother that he was spending time with his girlfriend but ended up staying home. When his mother found out he wasn’t with her, see felt driven to send Robbie an email expressing concerns about his health. He felt a lot of relief when he read it and knew that he was going to be able to get help now since his family was aware of his problem.
Robbie went to Betty Ford and stayed there for 21 days. It was more social than Robbie was accustomed to, but he grew very close with the people he was there with. After a few step-down programs, Robbie still goes to Betty Ford frequently and while AA isn’t his favorite modality, he enjoys trying new meetings and keeps an open mind to all things recovery. He utilizes meetings, podcasts and gratitude lists in recovery and when he has a craving, he has found box-breathing helps him a lot.
What has sobriety made possible for Robbie: reconnecting with and loving himself.
Robbie’s parting piece of guidance: pick up the 100-pound phone, ask for help and you’ll be really surprised by people’s response to that.
Recovery Elevator
Go big, because eventually we all go home.
I love you guys.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Recovery Elevator episode 495 |
0:03.6 | I just couldn't stop I wanted to but I just couldn't |
0:08.7 | couldn't Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill and I'm so |
0:26.0 | excited to be here with you today. Listeners on today's episode we have Robbie. |
0:30.6 | He's 28 years old from Palm Springs, California and took his last |
0:34.6 | drink on January 5th, 2024, great job Robbie. I want to give a shout out to |
0:40.1 | our Cafe Ari chat hosts. You guys do an incredible job, thank you for your time. |
0:45.0 | Listeners, I'm 92% sure today is going to be a good day. I think it's going to hold. |
0:51.0 | In three days, we've got our annual alcohol-free retreat in |
0:55.1 | the beautiful Rocky Mountains just outside of Bozeman, Montana. And here's my |
0:59.3 | shout out to the 80-plus campers arriving this Wednesday. First off get on the plane, get in the car, hop on your bike. |
1:07.0 | Yes we have had campers arrive from far distances on a bicycle. So my advice is to embrace it all. I'm sure there will be some nerves, but I can tell you it's going to be a fun week, and I can't wait to meet everybody. |
1:20.0 | Let's talk N. A. Beer for a moment. |
1:23.0 | Athletic Brewing Company, America's biggest non-alcoholic beer brand, |
1:27.0 | just announced it secured an additional $50 million in funding, |
1:31.0 | pushing the company's valuation to 800 million. The company says it plans to use |
1:36.2 | this new cash to ramp up production and to get its beer into more stores worldwide in order to keep up |
1:41.8 | with the growing demand. Now since launching in |
1:44.8 | 2018 athletic brewing has outpaced competitors like Heineken and Budweiser |
1:49.9 | to claim the number one spot in non-alcoholic beer sales in U.S. grocery stores. |
1:55.0 | This is according to Nielsen-IQ data. |
1:58.0 | So things are changing in terms of alcohol consumption in America and across the globe. |
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