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The Addict Who Still Suffers

 Brothers and Sisters in Recovery πŸ™ Yesterday was sobering — no pun intended. I learned that my very good friend’s stepbrother passed away from an overdose. It hit hard. Real hard. Because every one of us knows the truth deep down… this disease does not play fair. Addiction does not care about age, family, intelligence, kindness, or potential. It steals sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, and friends. It leaves empty chairs at dinner tables and broken hearts that never fully heal. And the hardest part? Most of us know that person could have been us. Some of us have overdosed and somehow made it back. Some of us woke up in hospital beds. Some of us were brought back with Narcan. Some of us buried friends we laughed with just weeks before. We’ve watched addiction turn beautiful souls into statistics. That reality should shake every recovering addict to the core. But here’s what I also know: recovery gives us a responsibility. We are not just staying clean for ourselves anymore. We ar...

Bad Days Don't Define Your Reality

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery πŸ™


Some days are just some days. Life on life’s terms can hit hard, and yesterday tested me in ways I didn’t expect. I handled things the way I’ve been taught—until a line got crossed and I reacted in a way I’m not proud of. For a moment, I even questioned whether I should keep going or take my recovery somewhere else. But that’s the trap, isn’t it? One bad moment trying to outweigh all the good we’ve built.


Here’s the truth: no matter how far we’ve come, we’re still human. We still get triggered, we still stumble, and we still have days that don’t go our way. A rough day or a bad decision doesn’t erase your progress—it proves you’re still in the fight. What matters is what you do next. Get back up, get honest, and keep moving forward.


Life is going to happen whether we like it or not. The difference today is we don’t have to run from it or let it take us out. We face it, we learn from it, and we grow through it. Stay grounded, stay connected, and don’t let one moment steal your purpose.


Keep coming back. It works if you work it. One day at a time. Progress, not perfection.


With love and gratitude,

Gary G

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