Skip to main content

The Addict Who Still Suffers

 Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™ 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...

UPDATE: Everything is okay

 

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™

I finally made it out of the hospital after a rough PTSD episode. I’m doing okay, and I want to thank each of you for your support, your patience, and your understanding. It truly means more than I can say.

This was something I needed to face head-on. I know where my past can take me if I ignore what’s going on inside, and I wasn’t willing to go back there. So I did what we’re taught to do—I reached out and got help.

That’s what this program is about. Not being perfect, but being honest. Not handling everything alone, but leaning on each other. There is strength in asking for help, and there is freedom in staying willing.

If you’re struggling today, don’t isolate. Pick up the phone. Talk to someone. You are not alone, and you don’t have to fight this by yourself.

Just for today, stay clean. Easy does it. One day at a time. Keep coming back—it works if you work it.

With love and gratitude,
Gary G

Comments

  1. Gary - you are truly the inspiration for the strength we all need in this journey. I have prayed for your healing and strength during this difficult time. Prayer works & there is strength in numbers. It’s quite a paradox that our backgrounds are so different, yet so similar! I’m looking forward to your messages. I’m filled with gratitude for your safety and the example you have set for others. Thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Glad to hear you're doing well and took the initiative to ask for help and maintain the focus on staying on path. Just started following you on NewForm and love catching up on your blog and updates. Keep it up! šŸ’ÆšŸ’Ŗ

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Self-Sabotage in Recovery

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™ One of the biggest dangers in both active addiction and recovery is self-sabotage. A lot of us think relapse happens only when life gets bad. But the truth is, for many addicts, relapse can also happen when life starts getting good. Why? Because our brains became conditioned to chaos, pain, destruction, and survival mode. In active addiction, we trained ourselves—over and over again—to live in dysfunction. We got used to crisis. We got used to shame. We got used to tearing things down before life could tear them down for us. That is why self-sabotage is so common in recovery. When things finally begin to improve—when relationships heal, when peace shows up, when hope returns, when bills are getting paid, when we begin feeling proud of ourselves—that unfamiliar peace can actually feel threatening. To a brain that spent years wired for destruction, stability can feel uncomfortable. Safety can feel suspicious. Joy can feel foreign. That old addict...

The Struggle is Real

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™ I just want to say how grateful I am for life today. It has been a struggle, and I’ve dealt with a lot of hard things—just like so many of you have. We all have different stories, and every single one of them is unique, powerful, and deeply meaningful. No two journeys are exactly the same, but we all know what it means to fight for our lives. I also want to share something I just realized today: as you read this, I have 9 months and 4 days clean. That is a huge milestone for me. To some people, that might sound like a short amount of time—but to me, it is a lifetime. After more than 20 years in addiction, and 10 of those years trying to truly find recovery, this means everything to me. This is more than clean time. This is freedom. This is peace. This is proof that change is possible. One of the biggest things I’ve learned along the way is the importance of trusting a Higher Power. In Narcotics Anonymous and other fellowships, surrendering to a High...

Start Today With a Smile 😁

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™ I’m starting today with a smile. It’s shaping up to be one of those charged-up days where life shows up on its own terms—and yeah, I’m not exactly thrilled about it. So what do I do? I lean into dad jokes. Why? Because sometimes the simplest, corniest things are exactly what break the tension and remind us not to take everything so seriously. Laughter and smiling aren’t just nice ideas—they’re tools. In many Hindu traditions, laughter is seen as a form of healing energy. There’s even a practice called “laughter yoga,” built on the belief that intentional laughter can reduce stress, calm the nervous system, and restore balance to the mind and body. The idea is simple: the body doesn’t always know the difference between forced laughter and real laughter—either way, it releases the same feel-good chemicals. That’s powerful when you think about it. Even when we don’t feel like it, choosing to laugh can shift something inside us. That ties directly into r...