RE 576: The Cost of Your New Life
Recovery Elevator
Paul
4.7 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 2 March 2026
⏱️ 41 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Today we have Tom. He is 40 years old from New Canaan, CT and took his last drink on July 12th, 2024.
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Happy March! The Café RE theme this month is Mindfulness and Awareness. This key topic helps us build awareness and space, which ultimately gives us the freedom to make different choices beyond drinking. Café RE will feature chats focused on mindfulness. It has been said that the most powerful medicine can't match the power of awareness.
Recovery Elevator is compiling a list of recovery stories and we're going to put them in a book called This is How We Quit. If you want to be part of this book, and submit your story, we'd love to have you. There is no sobriety time requirement so if your saying to yourself, well, I've only been sober 30 days, I can't submit my story, then nonsense. Send an email to info@recoveryelevator.com and you'll get a google form to fill out and submit your story.
[03:56] Thoughts from Paul:
Paul shares with us a quote from author Brianna Wiest.
"Your new life is going to cost you your old one.
It's going to cost you your comfort zone and your sense
of direction.
It's going to cost you relationships and friends.
It's going to cost you being liked and understood.
It doesn't matter.
The people who are meant for you are going to meet you
on the other side. You're going to build a new comfort
zone around the things that actually move you forward.
Instead of being liked, you're going to be loved. Instead of
being understood, you're going to be seen.
All you're going to lose is what was built for a person you
no longer are."
[06:25] Paul introduces Tom:
Tom is 40 years old and lives in New Canaan, CT. He is a construction superintendent, is married and they have 5-year-old twins. For fun, Tom enjoys gold, skiing and spending time with his kids.
Tom first drank at age 14 and says he frequently blacked out when he drank going forward. There were multiple legal consequences throughout his late teens and early twenties as his binge drinking continued through college. Around age 21, Tom began using cocaine which enabled him to drink more with less blackouts.
After college, Tom and his friends mainly drank on the weekend. Fast forward a few years and he found himself drinking alone during the week while his friends did not. As time progressed, he would wake up daily and trash talk himself for not being able to stop at just one or two. He felt like Jekyll and Hyde and struggled with that throughout his 30's.
In 2020, Tom's twins were born. He struggled to juggle his drinking life and his family life. His wife was growing frustrated, and Tom wasn't the parent that he had hoped he would be. In spite of this, he never really thought about quitting drinking, but quickly realized moderation didn't work. He knew he would need to quit drinking for himself and not just for his family. His wife was growing frustrated, and Tom knew he would lose everything if he didn't quit.
On June 12th, 2024, Tom was going to start a new job and looked at it as a clean slate. He says quitting was awkward and he began to talk to an alcohol counselor that helped him a lot. Within the first few months Tom felt better physically and able to establish a workout routine which helped him start the day in a better headspace. He started listening to the RE podcast and relating to others' stories. Exercise has become a hobby for Tom. Woodworking is a hobby that has come back for Tom as well, he takes pride in the projects he completes now.
Tom's parting piece of guidance: If you can make it through the first couple of days, and start to see the benefit, it'll get better every day. There'll be bad moments and challenging moments, but don't give up.
Recovery Elevator
Remember this is an inside job. It all starts from the inside out.
I love you guys.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Recovery Elevator episode 5776. |
| 0:03.0 | I felt like there was two people. |
| 0:06.0 | There was me when I was sober. |
| 0:08.0 | And then as soon as I had one drink, it was like somebody else was taken over. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator podcast. My name is Paul Churchill. This is how we quit. On today's |
| 0:41.5 | episode, we have Tom. He's 40 years old from New Canaan, Connecticut, and he took his last drink |
| 0:47.5 | of alcohol on July 12th, 2004. Great job, Tom. Happy March, everyone. Spring is right around the corner. And the Cafe |
| 0:57.9 | R.E monthly theme for March is mindfulness and awareness. All of our monthly themes are great, |
| 1:04.7 | but this is a big one. When we are mindful, we build awareness. When we have awareness, |
| 1:10.2 | we are building space. When we have space, we build awareness. When we have awareness, we are building space. |
| 1:12.2 | When we have space, we then have room. |
| 1:14.8 | When we have room, we then, and only then, have the freedom to choose something different than drinking. |
| 1:22.6 | This month in Cafe Re, we've got specialty chats for this specific topic. |
| 1:29.4 | And it was the Indian spiritual teacher, Krishna-Murdy, who said you could take the most powerful medicines of the East, |
| 1:34.6 | the most powerful medicines of the West, combine them, and you still don't have the power of |
| 1:39.8 | awareness. A footnote, I'm 95% sure it was him who said that. Recovery Elevator is compiling recovery |
| 1:47.0 | stories for a new book called This Is How We Quit. And if all goes as planned, this thing |
| 1:52.9 | comes out July 24th. If you want to be part of this project and submit your story, we'd love to |
| 1:58.7 | have you. There's no sobriety time requirement. |
| 2:02.2 | So if you're thinking, well, I've only been sober for 30 days, I can't submit my story. |
| 2:07.7 | That's nonsense. |
| 2:08.8 | We still want to hear from you. |
| 2:10.1 | The whole point of this book is helping others find hope and freedom from alcohol. |
... |
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