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Recovery Elevator

RE 559: Recovery Achieved

Recovery Elevator

Paul

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

4.71.8K Ratings

🗓️ 3 November 2025

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today we have Robyn. She is 49 years old from Columbia, SC and took her last drink on June 30th, 2020.

 

This episode brought to you by:

 

Better Help 10% off of your first month #sponsored

Soberlink sign up and claim your $100 enrollment bonus

 

We are planting the seed early and inviting you to join us for our 7th annual Restore course coming January 2026. Registration opens Monday, December 1st.

 

[02:39] Thoughts from Paul:

 

We have all heard the word recovery, but what does that mean? And does it ever end? Paul recently came across a line he likes that says, "If substance use or drinking no longer interferes with your ability to live a productive and loving life, then recovery has been achieved."

 

Using the logic of this line, Paul shares with us several ways that we can see if recovery has been achieved. Maybe you'll have to (or get to) attend meetings or chats for the rest of your life or maybe your recovery has already been achieved. So now what?

 

A simple answer is don't go back to drinking but in addition to that, sticking with the pack or community that helped you achieve recovery in the first place is a good start.

 

[07:54] Paul introduces Robyn:

 

Robyn is 49 and she lives in Columbia, SC with her husband, stepdaughter and two pit bulls. She is an office manager for a transportation company and enjoys reading, playing games and spending time with her family. Robyn was previously interviewed on episode 306.

 

Robyn grew up very shy and quiet and never really felt she fit in. The desire to rebel was building up and when she moved from Maine to South Carolina towards the end of high school, she viewed it as an opportunity to try new things including alcohol and other drugs.

 

After graduating high school, Robyn met someone and ended up getting married at the age of 18. She didn't realize the issues he had, and it was her first exposure to an abusive relationship with an addict.

 

Fortunately, she was able to escape that relationship but jumped right into another one that she considers her first real relationship. Their drinking looked normal for their age but over time, it started to create cracks in their relationship, and they split up soon after moving away from friends and family.

 

Feeling abandoned again and not knowing anyone, Robyn started going out and meeting people at bars alone after work. The relationships she had were with others who partied like she did, which helped her ignore the addictions that were creeping in. Her codependent nature found her feeling stuck in another abusive relationship, but over time she was able to start pulling away and made attempts to regulate her drinking.

 

After their break-up, Robyn began a close friendship with a friend from work. With his influence and help, she began to explore her traumas and started to organically cut back on her drinking as he rarely drank. They eventually began a relationship, and Robyn happily assumed the role of stepmother to his two children. She still drank, but it looked very different, and "mommy wine culture" made it seem ok.

 

After the sudden death of Robyn's mother, she took on the role of caretaker to her stepfather. This meant helping him with his grief and moving him closer to her. The drinking was beginning to become unmanageable. In September 2017, she discovered the upside of quitting drinking through a Google search that led her to Holly Whittaker and Annie Grace.

 

Upon discovering that going alcohol free could be a good thing, Robyn began to read a lot of quit lit and found podcasts. She told her husband about her struggles and felt a weight lift immediately. A few months later she joined Café RE and being part of a community was life changing. There were several stops and starts and she almost gave up quitting just before the announcement of the first Ditching the Booze course. That was the fuel Robyn needed to try again.

 

Recovery Elevator

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

We can do this.

 

Café RE

RE on Instagram

Sobriety Tracker iTunes 

 

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Recovery Elevator, episode 559.

0:03.7

But when I changed my thinking to not, I have to do this, I get to do this.

0:08.5

You know, every day, you know, enjoying the journey.

0:13.2

And I don't really know how it went from one to the other, but it went pretty quickly.

0:40.4

Thank you. it went pretty quickly. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast.

0:43.8

My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm excited to be here with you today.

0:46.3

On today's episode, we have Robin.

0:52.0

She's 49 years old from Columbia, South Carolina, and she took her last drink of alcohol on June 30th, 2020.

0:55.2

Great job, Robin.

0:58.1

Dry January, I'm planting the seed right now with you all.

1:02.2

Join us for our seventh installment of our Dry January course called Restore.

1:07.0

If you want to take a look at the format, dates, times, and all that information, there's a link in the show notes. Thank you, Robin. And speaking of Robin, so that's the gal who does the show notes for us. She's been volunteering for over three years. She's also the interviewee today. You guys are going to love the interview. And before we get any further, I want to mention this is an ad from BetterHelp.

1:28.9

Recovery Elevator and BetterHelp, we are all about connection. And as the seasons change and the

1:34.7

days grow darker sooner, this can be a tough time for many. So this November, BetterHelp is

1:40.6

encouraging you to reach out. Check in on your friends, reconnect with loved ones,

1:46.6

and remind the people in your life that you're there. This matches up well with recovery or

1:51.5

sobriety. It's all about reaching out to somebody else, checking in on how they're doing,

1:57.2

and also when we do reach out, our own problems become less intense and we can talk about

2:02.2

them with other people. And when I get on that phone and call somebody, afterward, I always say the

2:08.1

same thing, which is, why didn't I do this sooner? And you're going to say the same thing with therapy.

2:13.3

Why didn't I meet with a therapist sooner? BetterHelp does the initial matching work for you

2:17.7

so you can focus on your therapy goals.

...

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