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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...

Loving Yourself

 Brothers and Sisters in Recovery πŸ™


Love is an interesting thing. It can take many forms, but at its core, real love is selfless. It gives without keeping score. It sacrifices. It forgives. It shows up when things get hard. So then the question becomes… how can we truly love ourselves if love is supposed to be selfless?


The answer is found in recovery.


For many of us, before recovery, what we called “loving ourselves” was really just feeding our addiction. We chased comfort, escape, control, and instant gratification while destroying ourselves and everyone around us. That wasn’t self-love. That was survival mixed with sickness. Addiction convinced us that selfishness was strength, when in reality it was slowly hollowing us out from the inside.


Recovery teaches us something completely different.


Real self-love is selfless because when we begin taking care of ourselves spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and physically, we become capable of loving others the right way too. When we stay clean, work a program, make amends, help newcomers, and learn honesty, we are not just saving our own lives — we are becoming better fathers, mothers, sons, daughters, husbands, wives, friends, and human beings.


That is selfless love.


Every meeting we attend instead of getting high is an act of love.

Every honest conversation with a sponsor is an act of love.

Every time we choose humility over ego, truth over lies, and growth over comfort, we are practicing love in action.


Sometimes loving ourselves means doing hard things:

Getting up when depression says stay down.

Making amends when pride says stay silent.

Walking away from toxic people and old playgrounds.

Feeling emotions we spent years trying to numb.


Recovery is not about becoming perfect. It’s about becoming real.


The beautiful thing is this: when we finally begin to love ourselves in a healthy way, we stop taking from the world and start giving back to it. We become proof that people can change. We become hope for the newcomer walking through the doors terrified and broken. We become living examples that no matter how dark addiction gets, recovery can still bring light back into a person’s soul.


Never forget — your recovery matters more than you know. Someone is watching you survive what they are still drowning in. Your honesty may give another addict permission to stop hiding. Your perseverance may help another person stay clean one more day.


So keep going.

Keep fighting.

Keep healing.

Keep loving yourself enough to do the next right thing, even when it’s difficult.


One day at a time.

Easy does it.

Progress, not perfection.

Keep coming back — it works if you work it.


With love and gratitude,

Gary G

Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing your experience strength and hope on such an important issue.some one asked me a simple question. How can you love others if you don’t love yourself?this message of yours answers that question in a honest and insightful way.God bless you my good friend

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