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Recovery Elevator

RE 557: Why the Drinking?

Recovery Elevator

Paul

Self-improvement, Education, Mental Health, Health & Fitness

4.71.8K Ratings

🗓️ 20 October 2025

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today we have Lauren. She is 44 years old from Arroyo Grande, CA and took her last drink on April 26th, 2021.

 

This episode brought to you by Better Help 10% off of your first month #sponsored

 

Tonight, our four-week mindfulness course starts in Café RE at 7:30 EST. This is our fourth year doing the course and you're going to learn a lot about how to sit with those thoughts in the head. Specifically, the ones that tell you it's a good idea to drink and how to let them pass.

 

Paul's next book Dolce Vita will be coming out soon. Once we have a launch date, you all will be the first to know.

 

[03:22] Thoughts from Paul:

 

Why the drinking? Well, the better question is why the excess drinking? Why do you drink before you meet up with friends and continue drinking afterwards? Why do you drink after you tell yourself you're not drinking today? We may never 100% know why, but it's a good idea to have a simplified mission statement that you tell yourself when you feel the urge to drink.

 

A key to recovery is discovering the purpose that excessive drinking serves, the why. And then another important key is finding healthier ways to fill the role alcohol was playing. Paul shares that the fourth step of AA played a very helpful role in him learning his "whys".

 

Paul encourages listeners to explore within them what it is driving the drinking and then explore what makes them smile without the alcohol and do more of that.

 

[7:33] Paul introduces Lauren:

 

Lauren is 44 and lives in Arroyo Grande, CA. She is married and they have a 17-year-old son, a dog and a cat. Lauren works in public affairs and communications for a local college and for fun, they enjoy spending time on their boat at lakes.

 

Lauren had her first drink at a party when she was 16. She says she didn't go to a lot of parties so was excited when she was invited. Lauren was upset about something before going and had already made the plan to get drunk in order to change the way she was feeling. In college is where Lauren says her drinking really ramped up. The parties were fun, and Lauren would binge drink on weekends but did not drink during the week.

 

After graduation, Lauren began working as a TV news producer where drinking during the week became normal. It was around this time that Lauren met her husband. When he got a job out of town, Lauren chose to go with him and soon after became pregnant.

 

Lauren didn't drink while she was pregnant but definitely missed it. They had no support since they moved to a new place. After the baby came, Lauren started drinking again and this time it wasn't for fun, it was to cope. She made attempts to moderate, but the goalposts kept moving. When her husband confronted her about her drinking, she defensively began to hide it.

 

COVID came and Lauren says she lost accountability by not being able to go to work. Her first drinks would come earlier in the day and before long she was starting her mornings with a shot of vodka.

 

She kept her concerns about her drinking to herself, but it was starting to show enough for her husband to stage an intervention with her family. Lauren agreed to go to treatment and stayed for 40 days with an outpatient program afterward. For the first time, Lauren didn't feel alone and was determined to make sobriety work.

 

The first year of recovery, Lauren avoided anything that would jeopardize her sobriety and began acquiring tools to keep her sober. She read books, listened to podcasts, began exercising and found a therapist. By year three she had more confidence: went back to school and took on more responsibilities at work.

 

Since quitting drinking Lauren says that her family is closer than ever. Presence, patience and gratitude are huge things in Lauren's life now.

 

Lauren's parting piece of guidance: just try.

 

Recovery Elevator

You took the elevator down, you gotta take the stairs back up.

We can do this.

I love you guys.

 

RE on Instagram

Recovery Elevator YouTube

Sobriety Tracker iTunes 

 

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Recovery Elevator episode 557.

0:03.7

I just noticed that it was just like this sliding scale.

0:07.3

Like I just kept moving the goalposts, right?

0:10.3

And the off switch was just, it was definitely stuck in the on position.

0:14.6

It wasn't budging.

0:15.6

I was, it wasn't budging.

0:41.2

Thank you. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast. My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm excited to be here with you today.

0:48.2

Listeners on today's episode, we have Lauren. She's 44 years old from a Royal Grande, California, and she took her last drink of alcohol on April 26th, 2021. Great job, Lauren. Tonight, our four-week mindfulness course starts

0:59.5

in Cafaree at 7.30 p.m. Eastern. This is our fourth year doing this mindfulness course, and you're

1:06.3

going to learn a lot about how to sit with those thoughts in the head, especially how to sit with the thoughts that

1:12.3

tell you it's a good idea to drink and how to let them pass. I hope to see you guys there. There's a

1:18.0

link in the show notes. Thank you, Robin. It's time to get your alcohol-free travel on. Did someone

1:24.5

say Blue Zone? Join us in Costa Rica, February 21st to the 28th, 26. We've got four

1:31.4

spots left. Link is in the show notes. Dolce Vita. My next book is coming out soon. The cover

1:38.5

art is complete. The book has been edited and it's currently being formatted. I still have to record the audio version as it will be available on Audible, but once we

1:48.3

have a launch date, you guys will be the first to know.

1:51.6

And why the name Dolce Vita?

1:53.4

Well, that was the name of the bar I used to own in Spain.

1:57.1

And Dolce Vita is Italian for the Good Life.

2:00.3

I tried to find the good life in the bottom of a bottle for many years, but it never delivered.

2:05.9

This book is all about discovering the true good life once you put the bottle down.

2:11.2

And before we get any further, I want to mention this is an ad from BetterHelp.

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