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...

The Power of Embracing Music

 

Brothers and Sisters in Recovery šŸ™

I am going to go to the left a little today and talk about music. Music can be a double-edged sword to some of us because a song can become a trigger. A certain lyric, a beat, a memory tied to a song can take us right back to places we fought hard to escape. That is real, and it is something many of us deal with in recovery.

But today I want to talk about the other side of music — the healing side.

Music can save lives too.

There are songs that speak to pain when nobody else understands it. Songs that remind us we are not alone. Songs that give us strength when our minds are trying to drag us backward. Sometimes music becomes the voice we cannot find inside ourselves during difficult moments.

There have been nights where some of us sat alone fighting cravings, fighting depression, fighting guilt, shame, loneliness, or fear — and somehow a song carried us through the storm long enough to make it to tomorrow. That is powerful.

Music has a way of reaching places inside the soul that conversations cannot touch. It can calm anxiety, slow racing thoughts, and bring peace into chaos. It can remind us of who we are becoming instead of who we used to be. One song can change the entire direction of a bad day.

In active addiction, many of us used music to escape reality. In recovery, we can use music to reconnect with reality — with hope, gratitude, healing, and purpose. Big difference.

I think one of the greatest gifts in recovery is learning how to feel again. Addiction numbed everything. Recovery wakes everything back up. Sometimes that can feel overwhelming. Music helps us process emotions we buried for years. It gives us permission to cry, to smile, to remember, and most importantly, to heal.

And let’s be honest — there are some mornings where we do not feel strong. There are days when getting out of bed feels like climbing a mountain wearing concrete boots. But then a song comes on that reminds us why we fight. Why we stay clean. Why we keep going. Why surrender was the greatest victory we ever had.

Recovery is not about becoming emotionless. It is about learning how to live without destroying ourselves over those emotions. Music can become part of that toolbox. Part of that spiritual connection. Part of that daily survival kit.

So protect your peace. Be mindful of what you feed your mind and spirit. If certain songs pull you backward, leave them in the past where they belong. But never forget there are songs out there that can pull you forward too.

Find the music that speaks life into your recovery. Find the songs that remind you who you are today. Find the rhythm of gratitude. Find the melody of hope. Find the harmony of freedom.

And remember this: We do recover. Easy does it. One day at a time. Keep coming back. Progress, not perfection. Don’t quit before the miracle happens.

With love and gratitude, Gary G

Comments

  1. I love this! Spot on Gary!! 😁 Well said šŸ‘ 1st time visitor to your blog, after coming across your details on NewForm (1st time using that App too today)! A lot of firsts...haha..but as saying goes..."DAY ONE...OR ONE DAY?" Wishing you lots of positive vibes šŸ™‚ Take Care Jo

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Very glad you enjoyed this. I post nearly every day 😁

      Delete
  2. Gary - you know me well! Music is one of the bulkiest tools in my toolbox & the most healing! Yes, it can bring back old memories, but those are all just signs of victory now! Here today, just for today! Love you G🫶

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment