4.6 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 14 April 2025
⏱️ 42 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Today we have Kaylee. She’s 33 years old from Camp Hill, PA and took her last drink on December 24th, 2024.
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Registration for our annual alcohol-free retreat in Bozeman is now open. From August 6th through 10th, we will be spending lots of time in nature, doing breathwork, a lakeside hangout, laser tag and more.
[03:38] Thoughts from Paul:
Paul shares a comment that he heard recently in a Café RE chat.
Stephanie said she eventually called the fight with alcohol. It is another way to frame the moment where we surrender to what is when it comes to our drinking. We know moderation isn’t working, anxiety is getting worse and the shame and torture from alcohol is reaching unprecedented levels. It becomes time to throw in the towel.
He also shares a line from an upcoming interviewee who stated, “sobriety has given me the keys to the car of my dreams, I just hate the color”. So, the universe will always align with our hopes, our dreams, and desires, but we may want the package to look different.
It is all about accepting the journey that life places in front of you.
[07:08] Paul introduces Kaylee:
Kaylee is 33 and lives in Camp Hill, PA. She has two daughters aged 15 and six. She is still trying to figure out what she likes to do for fun, but enjoys movies, concerts and spending time with her daughters.
Kaylee says she was a sensitive kid. She struggled with depression and self-harm when she was very young and was always searching for a remedy her feelings. Kaylee drank experimentally by sporadically sneaking alcohol out of her mom’s cabinet.
When she was 15, she was assaulted and learned early on that using alcohol could help numb her pain. Kaylee says that any time her emotions were strong, she knew she could use alcohol to not think about the negative emotions and things that happened to her. Her usage became a regular thing on the weekends with friends while she was a teenager.
Kaylee had her first daughter when she was 17 and thought maybe she was done with the party life. She didn’t drink while pregnant but not long after her daughter was born, she was right back to drinking. Moving to her first apartment at age 21 also contributed to an increase in her drinking and now she felt free to drink however she wanted to, including by herself.
When Kaylee went right back to drinking after her second daughter, she knew she needed to try to cut back and moderate. She was taking online quizzes asking, “am I an alcoholic?” and considered AA meetings only to determine she was fine and could cut back on her own.
After a few years trying moderation, Kaylee found herself in a dark place with suicidal thoughts. She decided to seek therapy and was open with someone about her drinking for the first time. She was able to get sober for about six months.
In January 2024 after a breakup, Kaylee found herself drinking heavily again. After calling a suicide hotline looking for help, she ended up going to detox for a week. After detox she continued an outpatient program but again thought she could moderate. As Christmas approached, Kaylee was thinking that she could not continue drinking into another year. She began to talk to a good friend of hers who was extremely supportive.
The first few weeks were tough, but she started to get better physically. Within the first month she says her mind started coming back and she started feeling more like herself. Kaylee reconnected to her faith and became more open about her struggles which she says helps a lot.
Kaylee says the tools she uses the most in her recovery are journaling, talking to someone when she is having cravings or triggers, praying and meditation, and staying open with those close to her.
Recovery Elevator
Rule 22 – lighten up, let’s not take ourselves too seriously.
I love you guys.
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0:00.0 | Support for this episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Let's talk numbers. Traditional in-person |
0:05.4 | therapy can cost anywhere from $100 to $250 per session, which adds up fast. But with BetterHelp |
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0:22.9 | Now, your mental health is worth it, and now it's within reach. |
0:26.4 | Here at Recovery Elevator, we fully believe in BetterHelp's mission, which is why we have partnered |
0:30.6 | with them for over four years now. |
0:33.0 | If you're going to quit drinking or you're in the process of it, I highly recommend |
0:37.0 | you get a professional therapist on your recovery team. |
0:40.3 | With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world's largest online therapy platform, having served over 5 million people globally. |
0:48.3 | It's convenient too. You can join a session with a click of a button, helping you fit therapy into your busy life. |
1:00.3 | Plus, you can switch therapists at any time. Your well-being is worth it. Visit betterhelp.com slash elevator today to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp, h-elp.com slash elevator. |
1:09.3 | Recovery Elevator episode 530. once i tasted sobriety i just know it's the most |
1:15.6 | wonderful thing and i don't ever want to put that at risk again Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm excited to be here with you today. |
1:45.6 | Listeners on today's episode, we have Kylie. She's 33 years old from Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, |
1:50.9 | and she took her last drink on December 24th, 2004, great job, Kylie. I've got a great, you might need to ditch the boo's if line and this one is from |
2:03.2 | Art all the way back from the vault on episode 20 of this podcast. Art says you might need to |
2:10.0 | ditch the booze if your wife shows you a picture of you passed out in the middle of your living |
2:14.5 | room with your pants down that informs you her mother walked in |
2:18.4 | and saw the whole thing. So thank you, Art from episode 20, which was like 10 years ago. |
2:25.0 | It's great to hear from you and thank you for the submission. Listeners, I encourage you to |
2:30.1 | throw out all your willpower, throw out your brilliant ideas, all the information you've |
... |
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