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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...

Gratitude for Recovery

 Brothers and Sisters in Recovery πŸ™


Have you ever really sat with the thought of what life would look like if recovery wasn’t available to us? Not just a passing thought—but a real, honest look at where we’d be, who we’d be, and what we’d still be fighting through alone. I think about that sometimes, and yeah—it stirs something in me. Frustration, even anger. Because I know exactly where that road leads.


But here’s the truth that cuts through all of that: we’re not there anymore.


We’ve been given a way out. A path that’s not always easy, not always comfortable—but it’s real, and it works. Every day we choose to stay in this fight, we’re choosing something better. We’re choosing clarity over chaos, connection over isolation, and purpose over pain.


That anger? It can be fuel—if we let it push us forward instead of pulling us back. Let it remind you of what you’ve escaped and why you can’t afford to go back. Let it strengthen your resolve to keep showing up, even on the days when everything in you wants to check out.


Recovery didn’t just give us a second chance—it gave us a life worth protecting.


So keep going. Keep leaning in. Keep reaching out your hand to the next person who’s still in the dark. Because what we have here is powerful, and it’s worth holding onto with everything we’ve got.


Just for today, stay grounded in what matters. Progress, not perfection. Easy does it, but do it. One day at a time.


With love and gratitude,

Gary G

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