RE 554: All the Damn Philosophies
Recovery Elevator
Paul
4.7 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 29 September 2025
⏱️ 42 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Today we have Mike. He is 50 years old and from Cleveland, OH and he took his last drink on August 9th, 2022.
This episode brought to you by:
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We offer a free month in Café RE once per year. Starting this Wednesday October 1st, and if you sign up for Café RE during the month of October, you get a free month.
[02:59] Thoughts from Paul:
Paul shares with us that he recently heard a song by Cameron Whitcomb called "Quitter", and it's about his journey into sobriety.
One line says - "The hardest part of getting clean are all the damn philosophies telling me how this is supposed to work."
We all want a manual and a clear pathway to healing. A set sequence of steps. And yes, there are The 12 Steps that have helped many. But not all.
Paul believes that there isn't a manual by design. Recovery is all about recovering you and figuring out what makes you function optimally. Discovering what makes you happy. Could there ever be a one-size-fits-all philosophy or manual for that?
You're supposed to explore different philosophies and go on a deep mission of exploration when recovering the self. We are tasked to heal and find out what philosophies work for us. We are on a mission to find what brings us joy. There isn't a manual for that.
Whatever philosophy you choose, make sure it involves other people. An addiction wants you alone with a bottle. The antidote is connection. With other human beings, animals, plants and flowers.
Good news, your listening represents you coming closer to the fire. We're putting aside our difference and coming together to heal. This is an incredible time to be alive.
[06:40] Paul introduces Mike:
Mike is 50 years old and lives in Cleveland, OH. He and his wife have been married almost twenty years and have two daughters, 16 and 18. For fun Mike enjoys a lot of outdoor activities with his family and enjoys reading.
Mike had plenty of exposure to alcohol while growing up but swore he was going to stay away from it. Sometime in his teens he got curious and decided to try it. He instantly had the "warm fuzzy" feeling but that didn't trigger any concern. Mike continued to drink through his teens into his twenties, accumulating three DUIs by the time he was 25.
Mike learned his lesson not to drink and drive and straightened his act out a little bit. He and his wife both drank so they didn't consider it problematic. Over time the nightly drinking increased and many times Mike would find himself drinking after getting home from events or get together.
Mike never tried to moderate his drinking, but he tried to keep it under control. Gradually he began losing interest in doing things that didn't involve alcohol. When COVID happened, the drinking time would get blurred and soon Mike was known to always have a beer in his hand.
Mike's wife didn't like how much his was drinking but seemed to accept it for a while. He began to try and hide it, but he knew that she knew he was drinking. Mike knew the only way he was going to quit drinking was if his wife gave him somewhat of an ultimatum.
There was no rock bottom, Mike says. Work was still going well, and his family was doing well, but he knew he needed to change. Mike knew he needed to prove to himself that he could beat this and decided to give it a try. So far he is three years into that first try.
Mike says the first few days were tough but was committed to giving it a try. Mike did a lot of reading and listening to podcasts, started learning more about addiction and taking courses online. He has enjoyed learning about it all and thinks that we are all capable of more than we think. Mike says he feels too good to ever want to go back.
Recovery Elevator
You took the elevator down, you gotta take the stairs back up.
We can do this.
I love you guys.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Recovery Elevator episode 554. |
| 0:04.2 | I've learned that I don't need alcohol. |
| 0:06.7 | It's really that simple in a way. |
| 0:08.5 | I don't need it. |
| 0:34.0 | I don't need it. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm excited to be here with you today. |
| 0:38.7 | Listeners on today's episode, we have Mike. He's 50 years old from Cleveland, Ohio, and he took his last drink of alcohol on August 9th, 2022. Great job, Mike. Listeners, we offer a |
| 0:48.2 | free month in Cafe Re one time per year. That's it. And this offer comes this Wednesday, October 1st. And if you sign up |
| 0:56.5 | for CAFE RE during the month of October, you get a free month. So let's get our sober October on. |
| 1:02.9 | There's a link in the show notes. I'll see you there. Place your bare feet on the planet and do it |
| 1:08.1 | often. This is called grounding, and it connects your body to a limitless |
| 1:12.2 | flow of electrons. The moment your skin touches the earth, electrons flow to the positive charges |
| 1:17.7 | in your body, neutralizing the acid and inflammation. Now inflammation and disease carries a positive |
| 1:23.5 | charge, while health and wholeness carries a negative charge. The rubber on our feet cut us off from this natural energy exchange that used to happen every day, which is forcing us to rely on our own limited electron generation instead of tapping into an energy source that spans 25,000 miles in circumference that's planet Earth. And never wonder why it feels so good |
| 1:46.1 | to walk barefooted on the beach. Well, this is why. And before we get any further, I want to mention |
| 1:51.4 | this is an ad from BetterHelp. Did you all know that this October 10th is World Mental Health Day? |
| 1:58.1 | And this year, BetterHelp is shining the spotlight on therapists, people who |
| 2:01.7 | truly make the world a better place. I have experienced major breakthroughs in therapy. I fully |
| 2:07.9 | believe in talk therapy, and this is why we have been partnering with BetterHelp for over four |
| 2:12.5 | years. You may have heard me say a couple times, you cannot do this alone. Well, BetterHelp is a great |
| 2:18.6 | place to start working with somebody else. With over 30,000 therapists, BetterHelp is the world's |
| 2:24.2 | largest online therapy platform, having served over 5 million people globally, and it works, |
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