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Recovery Elevator

RE 589: The Little Things

Recovery Elevator

Paul

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

4.71.8K Ratings

🗓️ 1 June 2026

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today we have Brooke. She is 55 years old, lives in Denver, CO and she took her last drink on February 17th, 2026.

 

This episode is brought to you by:

 

Sign up and get 10% off: Better Help

 

If you're wondering what you can expect in your first seven days alcohol free, well, we just created a FREE 7-day guide for your first seven days. 

 

[02:39] Thoughts from Paul:

 

In the upcoming book, This is How We Quit, we are currently narrowing down the submissions from 66 to around 20. While reviewing these all, Paul shares with us a snippet from one of them by Kristi, who was the guest on episode 492.

 

[07:45] Paul introduces Brooke:

 

Brookes lives in Denver, CO, has been married for 25 years and they have two sons. She has a background in education and for fun she enjoys being outside. They enjoy hiking, skiing, walking and playing tennis.

 

Growing up, Brooke believed that alcohol was necessary part of living. She saw her parents drink casually and was in a lot of environments where drinking was a given. Brooke took her first drink in high school, and it was just part of socializing throughout high school, college and her early professional years.

 

Brooke says it's hard to imagine a time when she didn't think drinking was normalized. Whether drinking for celebration or drinking for grieving, alcohol was always present.

 

Once Brooke reached her 40s, she noticed that it wasn't as easy to get up the next day without some sort of hangover symptoms even if all she had was one or two drinks after a hard day at work.  

 

Brooke was starting to question her drinking but the talk about alcohol being "good for us" was conflicting. She was beginning to see the signs of alcohol interfering with her health. She was participating in cleanses for 10 or 30 days and found that she felt so much better when she took breaks from drinking. It was hard for her to think about quitting completely because if how much it was present socially.

 

When Brooke's mother was diagnosed with cancer, she noticed that all of the doctors discouraged alcohol. This got the wheels turning for Brooke and she did a deep dive on the detriments of alcohol on our bodies.

 

Brooke was recovering from shingles this past February and that is when she decided she was done with alcohol. She doesn't feel like it was a rock bottom moment, but more of a realization that she was just exhausted from the inner dialogue around her drinking.

 

When she initially quit, Brooke was questioning how she was going to show up in her life without the drinking. She had experience quitting from doing cleanses in the past, so she knew it would be tough initially, but was prepared to be kind to herself throughout the process. She focused on caring for herself as she would care for one of her children if they were in distress or sick.

 

Learning and reading research about what alcohol does to our bodies has been helpful for Brooke. She has learned to slow down and be more aware of her feelings and what she needs to make herself feel better, without alcohol. Brooke uses a breathwork to help calm her nervous system and has also found great healing in nature.

 

In addition to yoga, mediation, breathwork and nature, other resources Brooke has found helpful on her journey are attending therapy, reading Quitlit, research on functional medicine and reading the bible. Attending meetings with sober communities has been important as well.

 

At about two months sober at the time of this recording, Brooke says she feels stronger than she's ever felt. She feels free and clear in both her head and heart spaces and is excited to explore life free of alcohol.

 

Recovery Elevator

Go big. Because eventually we'll all go home.

I love you guys.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hi, my name is Dave, and I've been part of the Cafe RE community for nearly three years now.

0:06.7

I showed up broken, lost, and uncertain of how I was going to stay sober.

0:11.2

But when I regularly started attending the Cafe RE Zoom meetings, I found such a warm, welcoming, and caring community,

0:18.8

full of the type of people who will listen when I need help

0:22.4

and who will lean on me when they need help.

0:25.1

I learned so much about myself and how to recover from my addiction, all at the same time

0:30.3

making lifelong friends.

0:32.3

For me, the CAFE RE community was the missing piece to my sobriety puzzle. If you'd like to check out the community,

0:40.1

go to www.comfay-dre.org and enter the promo code Connect for your first month free. Again,

0:48.6

that's cafe-dre.org and use the code Connect for your first month free.

0:55.7

I hope to see you there.

0:57.1

Recovery Elevator Episode 589.

1:00.7

I feel stronger than I've ever felt.

1:03.1

I feel more clear in my head space.

1:06.0

And in my heart space, I feel as though there's just a lot more possibility.

1:13.6

Music space, I feel is though there's just a lot more possibility. Welcome to the Recovery Elevator Podcast.

1:32.9

My name is Paul Churchill, and this is how we quit.

1:36.2

On today's episode, we have Brooke.

1:38.4

She's 55 years old from Denver, Colorado, and she took her last drink of alcohol

1:43.7

on February 17,

1:45.6

2006, Great Job Brooke. Hey, we get about 10 to 15 interview requests per episode, right? And only

1:55.3

one person is on the podcast doing an interview. So if you've emailed us to be on the podcast or even sent info

...

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