RE 574: Your Sobriety Team
Recovery Elevator
Paul
4.7 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 16 February 2026
⏱️ 42 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Today we have Kerri. She is 51 years old from Maine and took her last drink on June 7th, 2025.
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[04:09] Thoughts from Paul:
Last week we talked about patience and how preparation is sacred work. This week, we are talking about building your expedition team a.k.a., your sobriety team.
First, there is this podcast. Paul and the RE production team are part of your team. All interviewees are part of your team.
Then you need community. This can be in-person or online with other sober people. You need people who get it, who've been where you are, and who can remind you why you are doing this. There is also no shame in seeking professional help or a therapist.
And don't forget God, or a higher power, or the universe, or whatever you want to call that thing bigger than yourself. Because when you're in the wilderness and the map runs out.
This week, ask yourself: who's on my team? And if the answer is "nobody yet" then your mission is to find at least one person. Because you can't do this alone. You weren't meant to do this alone. Lean in.
[08:14] Paul introduces Kerri:
Kerri is 51 and lives in Maine. She is a registered nurse, divorced and has two older teenagers. For fun she loves live music, yoga, sauna, kayak, writing and spending time with her kids.
Kerri first tried alcohol when she was 12. She grew up in a townhouse community with lots of other kids and limited supervision. Kerri went to college in Boston where she says she partied like the guys did and was the girl that was let in. Her 20's were pretty healthy and she doesn't feel her drinking was a problem at that point.
Kerri has a sister in recovery. She says their alcoholism was more overt and people would comment on it, but Kerri kept drinking privately and faked control over it. When she got married, she and her husband were drinking partners and would drink daily. Over time she says she felt a switch flip and began to try and control her drinking with little luck.
When she got divorced, Kerri says she was undone. Alcohol became her coping mechanism, but she kept it concealed and remained functional. She tried to quit after her first DUI, but it lasted nine months and then she began to test the water again every few months afterwards. Kerri feels that moderation is a lie, from her experience.
Last June, Kerri lost her job as a school nurse and says she hit an emotional rock bottom. She no longer cared about herself, drank a box of wine and then drove leading to another DUI. Prior to this event, her drinking had been ramping up to the point her kids were noticing it. Her kids reaction to her DUI led Kerri to decide she needed to quit.
Utilizing her sister as a resource and attending AA, Kerri was determined to work on her recovery. Her life was crashing down around her, and her sister asked her what she was going to do differently. Kerri found herself on her knees surrendering and asking for help, which is something that has never been easy for her.
Podcasts have been a great tool for Kerri because she lives in a rural area and it's hard to get to meetings. Other tools she uses are journaling, sauna, yoga and she is committed to attending AA once a week.
Kerri's message to those that are still struggling: "your life will get better. It is so incredibly worth it. It could be the most challenging thing you're ever going to go through but imagine being clear and present for your own life".
Recovery Elevator
You took the elevator down
You've got to take the stairs back up
We can do this
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Recovery Elevator Episode 5774. Paul Churchill, and this is how we quit. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator podcast. |
| 0:38.9 | My name is Paul Churchill, and this is how we quit. |
| 0:41.8 | On today's episode, we have Carrie. |
| 0:43.9 | She's 51 years old from Maine, and she took her last drink of alcohol on June 7, 2025. |
| 0:51.6 | Great Job, Carrie. |
| 0:53.5 | In our Alcohol-Free Community Cafe Re, we have monthly themes and February's theme is self-love and acceptance. |
| 1:03.0 | So every person I've met and chatted with who has been successful in sobriety has done major work in this area. |
| 1:10.0 | Now the issue that trips people up with this |
| 1:12.8 | core concept is when. When will we show ourselves love and acceptance? When I first began |
| 1:20.1 | sobriety, I attached my self-love and acceptance to a clock, or how many days I had away from |
| 1:26.5 | alcohol. For example, I'd love myself, but only when I hit |
| 1:31.1 | 30 days of sobriety, or 60 days, or 90 days or a year, you get the point. I didn't realize this at the |
| 1:38.3 | time, but this was always a trap. The only time we can practice self-love and acceptance is now, the only time we're in. |
| 1:46.7 | This is also why this concept can be mastered in a matter of seconds or even less, because again, |
| 1:52.5 | it has to happen now in this moment. It's the only time it can ever happen. It also helps to know |
| 1:59.0 | some basic mechanics of the thinking mind, and the big |
| 2:02.1 | one here is that it will always push happiness or salvation or self-love or acceptance into the |
| 2:08.4 | future. So next time you hear the mind say that once we do X, Y, or Z, then we can love |
| 2:14.8 | ourselves, and gently, then forcefully push back on that voice. |
| 2:20.3 | See, these are the trenches of recovery, and you don't have to be in the trenches alone. |
| 2:24.9 | And what's up, all my Cafe Ari peeps. |
| 2:27.7 | I'm seeing so much self-love and acceptance in the community. |
... |
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