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Recovery Elevator

RE 504: A Dopamine Feast

Recovery Elevator

Paul

Aa, Health & Fitness, Addictionpodcast, Education, Self-improvement, Mental Health, Onlinesupportcommnity, Alcoholicsanonymous, Selfhelp, Alcoholic, Addiction, Alcohol, Recoverypodcast, Sobriety, Recovery, Sobertravel, Quitdrinking

4.61.7K Ratings

🗓️ 14 October 2024

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Episode 504 – A Dopamine Feast

 

Today we have Don. He is 44 and lives in Clarkson, MI. He took his last drink on November 15th, 2021.

 

Sponsors mentioned in this episode:

 

Better Help  - code ELEVATOR

 

 

The theme for this podcast is I am Here, I am Whole. What does that mean? It means, that in this moment, the only moment that has ever mattered or ever existed, I choose to be here, and I will view myself as whole.

 

Please don’t kick the can of wholeness, authenticity and self-love down the road. It has to be now.

 

[04:22] Thoughts from Paul:

 

Paul shares that he really enjoyed the book Dopamine Nation by Dr. Anna Lembke, minus one part of it that talks about a dopamine fast as a way to beat an addiction.

 

A recent NYT article summarizes why Paul doesn’t like the dopamine fast idea. It has to do with the quote that “it’s less about quitting drinking, and more about creating a life that doesn’t require alcohol”. There are many healthier ways to release dopamine, such as hobbies you enjoy, that don’t involve your drug of choice. Trying new things helps us release dopamine as well.

 

The last paragraph of the article says “consequently, America’s problem isn’t that we’re a bunch of hedonists hooked on capitalism’s dopamine hits, it’s that so many of us aren’t able to get our social, physical and emotional needs met in healthy ways. Instead of a dopamine fast, we need a dopamine feast - one that makes us want experiences we actually like, rather than compulsively responding to craving”.

 

[08:36] Paul introduces Don:

 

Don is an anesthesiologist, and he lives in Clarkston, MI. He started enjoying traveling since his mid-30s and has been to 30 countries, five continents and heading to Antarctica at the end of the year. Don is a big fan of sports and roots for the teams out of Detroit.

 

Alcohol always seemed to have a positive light around it when Don was younger. Whether it was a gathering or party the adults seemed more relaxed, happy and silly. It always seemed like something to look forward to when he got older. Being more of a goody-two-shoes, Don says, he didn’t try alcohol until the summer after school ended. He recalls feeling like he was comfortable in his own skin and his racing thoughts relaxed. Don says he was immediately someone that couldn’t stop drinking once he started.

 

Don says his 20s were spent in school and would drink heavily maybe once a month. In his 30s after graduating and feeling he achieved all of his goals, he wondered “what’s next?” Don says that alcohol didn’t answer the question, but it prevented him from having to answer it. Don says that he realized he was gay as a young man and never wanted to deal with it. Drinking helped him push that away too.

 

COVID sped up the inevitable, Don says. Having more time off work due to less surgeries being performed; Don would start drinking more on his off days. Once work became busy again, he’s drinking continued where it was and started affecting his work.

When Don arrived at work still drunk after a Labor Day weekend binge, he says receiving a call from his boss was relief.

 

When Don started rehab, he knew he was going to need to address being gay in addition to having a drinking problem. After completing rehab, Don began attending a program for health professionals that gives him the accountability he needed.

 

Don says AA is a big part of his life now. He says he enjoys the community and accountability. He is testing out dating to see if it’s something that he wants to do. After falling in love with Costa Rica, he decided to build a house there. The greatest gift Don says he was given in sobriety is the ability to be present.

 

Don’s parting piece of guidance: Just start. You’ve got to start somewhere and if that’s rehab, than so be it. Take a break from your job, people will be much more supportive than you think they will.

 

Recovery Elevator

You took the elevator down, got to take the stairs back up.

I love you guys.

 

 

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Sobriety Tracker iTunes 

 

 

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Recovery Elevator episode 504.

0:03.0

No, I don't think I ever had that thought.

0:06.0

Because the more I got sober, the more I realized what I'd been missing out on. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm so excited to be here with you today.

0:36.0

On today's episode, we have Dawn. He's 44 years old from Clarkston, Michigan, and us last drink on November 15th, 2021.

0:46.0

Great job Dawn.

0:48.0

Again, I want to mention some of the changes taking place since episode 500. And my gosh, episode 500, I'm the Chris, the giant teddy bear from North Dakota, is no longer doing interviews or the occasional intro,

1:06.2

but he's still producing the podcast and he's still part of the Recovery Elevator team.

1:10.6

Now Chris says goodbye in episode 499 and it's a powerful episode. Thank you so much Chris.

1:17.0

In addition, since there are other projects that I'm currently working on, think second book and getting the nonprofit

1:24.1

cafe I rel launched, the intros are going to be a little shorter. Now I said this on

1:28.6

episode 500, but when I wrote the last three intros, they were almost just as long.

1:34.1

So who knows if that's even really going to pan out?

1:36.5

Because in reality, there's still so much I want to cover.

1:40.2

And I like writing, and these intros are also part of my own sobriety journey.

1:45.4

And of course I love hearing myself talk.

1:47.4

You may have noticed the new intro and outro music which by the way is on Spotify.

1:52.2

There's a link in the show notes. Thank you Robin. So it's an instrumental

1:56.2

version of a song I wrote when I was having a shit day. The lyrics to the song are, I am here, I am whole.

2:04.0

Now when writing this song on the ukulele,

2:06.0

I was trying to counter-strike the thinking mind or the ego

2:10.0

that was telling me that I'm a POS and that I had to do X, Y and Z before I could even be remotely

2:16.6

okay with myself.

...

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