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Recovery Elevator

RE 564: Hot and Cold

Recovery Elevator

Paul

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

4.71.8K Ratings

🗓️ 8 December 2025

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today we have Yeimy. She's 30 years old, from Rhode Island and took her last drink of alcohol on January 19th, 2025.

 

This episode is brought to you by:

 

Café RE – the social app for sober people

Better Help 10% off of your first month #sponsored

 

January 1st, 2026 is the official release date for Paul's new book Dolce Vita

and he'd love to have you on the launch team. Email info@recoveryelevator.com to join.

 

Registration for Recovery Elevator's Dry January course Restore is open. We are meeting 13 times live in the month of January to give you the best chance of ditching the booze.

 

[03:30] Thoughts from Paul:

 

Paul shares with us a concept that he still struggles with but has made progress. It is embracing the world of duality that we live in. Of course, we would all want to be happy all of the time, but living in the world of dualities, we have to have opposites for defining purposes.  

 

Do your best to embrace it all. Square your shoulders to this thing called life and don't get attached to any of it.  When you have a good day, be grateful. When you have a shit day, be grateful, knowing that you need them both equally.

 

[06:33] Paul introduces Yeimy:

 

Yeimy is 30 years old and works as a phlebotomist. Yeimy says she is still figuring out what she likes to do for fun but says she enjoys spending time with family and trying new things as in food or places. 

 

Yeimy says she was born into alcoholism as both of her parents were heavy drinkers. She doesn't specifically remember her first drink but was allowed to drink as a teenager when on vacation in the Dominican Republic.

 

In her early 20s, Yeimy worked in a bar and was able to drink on the job. Paired with other substances, Yeimy says her drinking became limitless.  After COVID happened, she started drinking alone at home. Occasionally Yeimy would question how much she was drinking, but when she mentioned it to friends, they would reassure her that it was fine, and she was just having fun.

 

Over this time, Yeimy said she had a few small rock bottoms including a two-week hospitalization, crashing her car and waking up in strange places from time to time. She didn't take the hint that she should stop the drinking and substance abuse and was determined to continue until something worse forced her to stop.

 

In 2022, Yeimy went to rehab. She says she wasn't ready but due to the concern of a friend, she went for 30 days and was able to stay sober for another 30 days but became overwhelmed when she went right back into her life with the same people and places.

 

Yeimy attempted to moderate from time to time to try and avoid losing jobs and relationships like she had in the past. In 2024 while in the early days of her relationship with a non-drinker, Yeimy says she felt like her drinking was under a microscope. She would try to hide her drinking but that became exhausting. December 2024 found Yeimy having a lot of moments and mishaps that led her to realize she couldn't do this anymore.

 

Yeimy began to go to AA meetings again but was still drinking. Her last rock bottom was when she fell asleep on the job the day after a blackout at a party. She was embarrassed and finally admitted to her boyfriend that she had a problem, and he said he would support her and she was relieved to have finally told him.

 

Whenever Yeimy felt the urge to drink, she attended meetings or listened to podcasts, staying focused on recovery for her first two months. With family support, she grew confident in her progress; she now works through AA steps with a sponsor.

Physically, Yeimy feels strong, and mentally she is more focused and decisive. Journaling, meetings, and connecting with sober people help her stay on track. She can now spend time around her drinking family, though she limits those interactions.

 

Yeimy's parting piece of guidance: if you think you have a problem, you most likely do.

 

Recovery Elevator

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

We can do this.

 

RE on Instagram

Sobriety Tracker iTunes 

RE YouTube

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Recovery Elevator Episode 564.

0:04.4

I rode to the, till the bitter edge, so I could not anymore.

0:10.6

And then I was like, all right, this is just too much baggage on me, too much emotional baggage that I cannot carry anymore.

0:44.9

Music that I cannot carry anymore. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator podcast. My name is Paul Churchill, and I'm excited to be here with you today.

0:54.9

Listeners on today's episode, we have Yami. She's 30 years old from Rhode Island, and she took her last drink of alcohol on January 19th, 2025.

0:56.4

Great job, Yami.

0:59.3

I am so pumped to announce this.

1:06.3

My new book, Dolce Vida, comes out January 1st, 2026, and I'd love to have you on the launch team.

1:08.0

And here's what I'm hoping for.

1:12.0

I send you a free copy of the book, a PDF, on December 20th, and you have 11 days to read it before the launch day. And then on January 1st or shortly after,

1:18.5

you purchase the book on Amazon and then leave a five-star review, but only if you feel it's a five-star

1:23.7

book. And look, we are more than happy to reimburse you for the purchase of the book

1:27.6

since you're helping us get the book out there. If you want to be on the launch team,

1:31.5

email info at recoveryelevator.com. And dry January registration is now open. We meet 13 times

1:40.1

live in January. And this isn't a course workbook you complete alone or modules on a course

1:45.7

website. We're going to meet live together as in a cohort of badasses who all want to ditch the

1:51.9

booze or deepen on the journey. I've got an all-star lineup of teachers and this is going to be

1:57.3

the best course yet. There's a link in the show notes if you want to register for more information. Thank you, Robin. Okay, let's get started. Starting in January, this show

2:08.1

format will change slightly. Instead of starting with my intro, we're going to get right into

2:13.6

the interviewee. Well, actually, first, I'm going to let you know the happenings with Recovery Elevator and Cafe Ari, because I think we have some pretty cool stuff going on. And then we're going to get right into the best part of this podcast, which are the stories of how people quit drinking. I know for myself, it was the stories that gave me the strength to quit drinking. And as for the intro, if there is something I want to cover,

2:34.8

I'm going to do it after the interview, so be sure to stick around. And let's talk sponsorship ads.

2:41.1

Industry standard for a podcast episode around 55 minutes should be about four to six,

...

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