The One You Feed - Special Episode: Finding Hope on the Path to Sobriety
Episode Date: July 11, 2023Eric is joined by special guests Gillian Tietz, Laura Cathcart Robbins, and Paul Churchill where they share their experiences in early sobriety. While each of their journeys is unique, there is also a... shared understanding of what it’s like in those first days of recovery. This episode will provide helpful insights, inspiration, and hope from those who have lived through such painful experiences and have come out on the other side to share what they've learned, including... Their similar and unique experiences in the early days of sobriety How gratitude plays an important role in recovering from an addiction Recognizing the shared emotions and feelings when suffering from an addiction Learning to be honest and vulnerable with people you trust Uncovering the hope that life will get better The importance of finding a supportive community Self-examination and discovering why you are reaching Paying attention to what triggers you How you can’t outthink an addiction, but use your past experiences to think forward To learn more, click here!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
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I think one of the worst things somebody can do is to just quit drinking or just quit using
because there is this beautiful, loving, authentic, welcoming community just waiting for you.
Welcome to The One You Feed.
Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts we have. Quotes like, garbage in, garbage out, or you are what you think, ring true.
And yet, for many of us, our thoughts don't strengthen or empower us.
We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear.
We see what we don't have instead of what we do.
We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit.
But it's not just about thinking.
Our actions matter.
It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living.
This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction.
How they feed their good wolf. I'm Jason Alexander and I'm Peter Tilden and together our mission on the really no really
podcast is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions like why the bathroom door
doesn't go all the way to the floor,
what's in the museum of failure,
and does your dog truly love you?
We have the answer.
Go to reallynoreally.com
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Thanks for joining us.
Today we have a collaboration episode with three amazing guests or wherever you get your podcasts. from Recovery Elevator, Laura Cathcart-Robbins from The Only One in the Room, Jillian Teets
from Sober Powered, and of course, our own Eric Zimmer from The One You Feed. Enjoy this
incredible conversation.
Welcome to the show, Laura, Eric, and Paul. I thought for anyone that doesn't know any
of us, we could take a moment to go around and just introduce ourselves. Laura, do you
want to start
us off? I would love to. Thank you, Jill. I'm Laura Cathcart-Robbins. I am the host of the
Only One in the Room podcast. And I am also a debut memoir author. My memoir, Stashed,
My Life in Hiding, came out a little bit earlier this year and has been featured in the New
York Times and Oprah Daily.
It's on the Oprah Daily homepage as we record this, an excerpt from it.
And I am very active in recovery, in the recovery communities, and I'm really excited to be
here.
Thank you.
Eric, do you want to take a moment and introduce yourself?
Sure.
be here. Thank you. Eric, do you want to take a moment and introduce yourself? Sure. My name is Eric Zimmer, and I am the host of the One You Feed podcast and the creator of a program called
Spiritual Habits. And I can say that Laura's memoir is awesome. I read it, so I will say that.
It's very well done, but that's kind of me, One You Feed podcast and the Spiritual Habits program.
Thank you. Paul, Want to take it away?
Yeah, Jill, thanks for having me. Thanks for the invite. Laura, Eric, great to meet you guys. Wow,
I'm walking in the footsteps of giants right here. This is going to be a fun conversation
we're going to have. Okay, Paul Churchill is my name. I'm 41 years old. I'm zooming in right here
from Bozeman, Montana. I was recently married last year. I have a standard poodle named Ben,
four Nigerian dwarf goats, a couple of reptiles. And I'm so thankful that sobriety is the main
focus of my life and that I'm not drinking alcohol anymore. And what almost killed me
is a pathway to find accountability and sobriety for myself has opened up so many doors. One of
them has been the Recovery Elevator podcast, which I launched in February of 2015.
And we've had an episode that comes out every Monday.
And we're at like episode 432.
And again, I selfishly started this for accountability because I could not quit drinking.
But 10 million downloads later, what an adventure.
Here we are today.
And I'm excited to see you again, Jill, and learn from Laura and Eric and connect with these other rock stars.
Thank you, Paul. I think Recovery Elevator is everybody's first podcast, basically,
when they try to quit drinking.
Oh, yeah. I'm honored.
Paul's much better at the intro game than I am, we can see.
The Nigerian dwarf goats were like the one that got me.
Totally.
They're the superstars in my life right now. of them's named hot dog uh oreo mocha
and elliot and they are all about having fun that's it they're my teachers right now yeah
those are great names um i'm gonna go back to the simple intro um i'm jill if you don't know me i
host the sober powered podcast i have a community for support called Living a Sober Powered Life, and I'm also
a chemistry professor in the Boston area. That's my side hustle. And I'm really excited to do this
conversation today because we're going to talk about our experience in the beginning. And I
think a lot of people look at us and they see how much time we have, and it feels overwhelming,
like they'll never get there.
And I also like to talk about the beginning
because I never want to forget what I used to go through.
I think the more distance you get from it,
the easier it is to kind of minimize it in your mind.
So I love talking about early sobriety.
So I thought the first thing that we could do
is just talk briefly about our experience in the
first week or the first month, whatever you prefer, any challenges that you had, surprises,
and how long ago that was for you. So Laura, if you want to start.
I'd love to. This is something I like to talk about a lot. So thank you for this question.
So my first month was spent in rehab, which I hated and felt sentenced to and ashamed to be there and was really resentful about all the people who seem to feel safe there and enjoy it.
So that's kind of what I consider to be my first month because I spent it, you know, sequestered basically.
So I wasn't in real life yet.
So my second month is kind of my first experience with living sober.
And I was in the middle of a divorce and I was a mom to two young boys. I was the parent
association president at their school. I had just been asked to join the board. So I had this very
demanding outward life that I just didn't know how to show up for. I have no idea why I still
went to three meetings a day. I went to 12-step recovery meetings and I went to three of them a
day. And again, I felt sentenced. I was the only black one there. I was the only black one in
treatment. I was the only black one in these meetings. And occasionally there might be another
one, but basically it was just me. And
I saw all the reasons why I was different from everybody and none of the reasons why I was the
same until much later. And so all I remember is being incredibly physically uncomfortable
because I was still going through withdrawal, night sweats, brain zaps, the inability to make eye contact, shakiness, headaches,
showing up for my kids and trying to put on a smile for them, and then just going through the
motions of everything else. But the motions I went through, in addition to my regular life, were
of showing up in recovery meetings and doing what I was told.
Thank you, Laura. And how long ago was that?
So I will be 15 years sober in August.
Oh my God, 15. I didn't know that. I thought it was like closer to 10, 15.
Yeah.
That's amazing.
It was 2008 when I got sober. That thing you said about forgetting, I have not forgotten.
Like it is impressed on my memory how bad it was.
I remember it every day for some degree, only to remember to be grateful for what I have right now.
Like I'm so grateful to wake up without body aches. You know, I can work out and if I am sore,
it's because I worked out, not because I went and withdraw from pills, you know, and I can show up
and I can remember conversations. Like, so I remember the bad stuff only because I'm in withdrawal from pills, you know, and I can show up and I can remember conversations like, so I remember the bad stuff only because I'm so grateful for the good stuff.
Yeah. I think gratitude is so important. Back when I was drinking, I thought gratitude was dumb.
And now that I'm sober and I can actually feel real gratitude. It's very important.
Yeah. I agree.
So Eric, what was your first week or first month like?
Well, I have kind of two periods of sobriety to talk about. One was, you know, I was 24 and I got
sober from heroin use and I stayed sober about eight years and very active in recovery and then
went back out and drank for a few years and then got sober a second time and have been sober 16 years since then. So there's these
kind of two different recoveries for me. And they're both illustrative in their own way.
The first time, like Laura, I was in treatment and I desperately actually after a little while
did not want to get out of treatment. I was like, you keep me in this building as long as you
possibly can, because I'm really anxious about
what's going to happen when I get out there.
The second time, the more recent time, 16 years ago, I did not go to treatment and I
did 12 step recovery.
And I think the thing to me that I really remember about the early parts of recovery
is it just felt torturous to me. And it felt torturous to me because it felt
like I was being sort of torn apart inside. And that there was this part of me that was screaming
for drugs or alcohol. And there was another part of me that was equally screaming like,
do not do it. You know, when I got sober at 24, I weighed a hundred pounds. I had hepatitis C.
I was facing 50 years of jail time. I mean, there were very compelling reasons not to do it.
And so I just remember that early phase and that idea that I think is really important is that
sometimes we talk about, well, just quit and everything will get better. Well, that's not
what happened, right? Things,
at least in my inside world felt worse for a while. And like Laura, I like to remember that a lot because that is fuel for me often. It's just like, I never want to feel that way again.
I never want to feel that at war with my own sort of self inside like that. And the beauty of recovery for me is that
that war ends, you know, and that over time, eventually, it's just not like that anymore.
But that's what I remember about early recovery and just all the other stuff. I mean, the first
time I was coming off heroin and a lot of it and I was I mean, I was just in really bad shape,
you know, and second time wasn't quite as much the physical withdrawal, but it was the psychological withdrawal of just all my nerves being exposed to the world.
So that's kind of the two recoveries for me and what it was like early on.
And what I remember most is that internal turmoil.
Thank you, Eric.
I'm glad that you described that because I think a lot of people can resonate with that. You know that you don't want to do it, but you do, and it's just like a
constant back and forth. So I'm really glad that you described that. Paul, how about you? What was
your first week or month like? Yeah, Jill, thanks for asking. And Laura and Eric, thanks for sharing
your stories. 15 and 16 years. Wow. What a rockstar group we have on this podcast.
I'm honored to be here.
So in August of 2014, about a month after getting a DUI, finding myself waking up in
a suicide-proof jail cell, I found myself driving drunk to a wedding where I was the
wedding DJ.
Greatest job ever, by the way.
And we've heard these words like surrender, a moment of clarity, right?
And I recall DJing the ceremony as the bride was
walking down the aisle, closing one hand on one eye, praying, hoping that I picked the right song.
And I did, luckily. And I was in the reception for cocktail hour and I took four glasses of wine
off the person who did the circle, like the waitress or waiter. And I knew, I hit this moment,
it's like, you know what? A, I'm going to ruin this wedding and B, I'm in rough shape. I cannot keep going on like this. And there was this moment of clarity and
the universe had my back. I had another DJ who finished the event. He came over, filled in for
me. I told my parents, everybody in voice memos that I was going to rehab. And that was the
surrender component. The next day I woke up, I remember this. I heard birds for one of the first
times. And the plan was to go to the rehab,
go to treatment, however that was going to go. But I remember hearing the birds and I told my
parents, you know what, give me just a couple more days here. And what I did those first 30 days
was I got in nature. There is a waterfall about 30 minutes away from me, the trailhead,
and about a two and a half mile hike. I think I did that hike 20 out of the 30 days in September
of 2014. I also went to Alcoholics
Anonymous. What a phenomenal program. And a drinking problem or an addiction can put yourself
in such a difficult, but a beautiful spot where I could clearly see I didn't have control and every
problem that I've had, I was part of it. Like I was the problem. And so when that happens, yes,
it sucks to realize that, but also you start asking for help and you're like, Hey, this isn't
working for me. Like did it work for you?
There's the openness.
There's a willingness.
And I ended up not going to treatment.
Nature did so much to my nervous system that first month, AA, the support, and really just
doing anything that it took to stay sober.
So I'm so thankful for my addiction.
Obviously, it was a difficult month.
And those withdrawal symptoms that Laura and Eric spoke about, I went through all of them.
They're horrible, terrible, and I don't want to forget them. We've heard the phrase that the
newcomer is the most important person in the room. And I think for that, it reminds us,
oh yeah, I don't got it. And if I go back, it's going to be rough. So yeah, thank you, Jill.
I resonated with so much of that, especially the one eye. I did that a lot. The closed one eye,
so you can see, like trying to text people are so bad. Or driving, God forbid. I did that a lot. The closed one eye so you can see, like trying to text people or so bad.
Or driving, God forbid.
I did that too, yep.
To think about how reckless and dangerous that is now, but it was a common thing.
Oh, yeah.
So I'm the baby sober in the room. As of today, I'm three and a half years sober.
Congratulations.
Thank you, guys.
Yeah, that's what's up. half years sober. Congratulations. Thank you guys. Thank you. So I was a daily drinker,
but I held it together on the outside. I was the person that no one thought had a problem,
even though looking back, I'm like, how did you guys not like those times you were there and you
saw all these things? How did you not think that was bad? But I used that
to justify why I didn't have to stop for a really long time. I used my educational background to
justify it. And I quit because I got really suicidal and I was afraid of myself and what I
would do. And because I felt that way, I thought that no one
else had ever felt suicidal from their addiction before, which now I know like a lot of people do.
But in the beginning, I thought it was unique to me. So I kept it to myself and I didn't tell
anyone except my husband. And I tried to just be sober by myself with no support.
I really believed like if I started telling people, they would do like the 72-hour hold on me,
even though I didn't feel that way once I quit. And it took me a while until quarantine started
when I was four months sober to actually start getting support and getting out
there. So I don't recommend doing it on your own, but I was just really scared of how other people
would respond to me. And now I'm grateful to have so much support because as time went on,
I started trying to talk myself back into it. Like, oh, look at this person's story.
You weren't that bad. Like maybe you just went overboard and maybe you
can drink again and it's not a thing. So it's good for me to be present here and hear from all of you
because I remember the one eye thing, like that's not normal behavior. You shouldn't have to do that.
And it helps keep those thoughts away when they pop up. I also had a gigantic pink cloud. So the beginning was the nicest time for
me. And then the bad time came later when the pink cloud wore off and I realized like I still can't
drink and I had to accept it again. But the beginning was actually a great time because I
had so many benefits right away mentally. Like I wasn't suicidal anymore. And that's its own high when you hate yourself less
than you did last week. So I think it's interesting how much our experiences differ and how similar
they are at the same time. I agree. I don't know as much about your story, Jill, as I would like
to, but I think the feelings you just described are so easily relatable, whether the particulars in the story match or not doesn't matter.
And, you know, Eric, I know your story pretty well now from listening to you and from interviewing you.
But, Paul, I love that you got out of a suicide-proof cell and drank and drove to do a job,
because that makes perfect sense.
It wasn't the same day, but shortly after.
I mean, it just doesn't make sense to anyone else, right?
That seems like insanity.
And then for us, it's like, of course you did.
Of course, however many days later, you're going to DJ at a wedding,
so you have to drink, right? You can't show up there sober. That would be dumb. No way.
No way.
And then looking back at it with the perspective that we have, that's the thing I think that
people would like me to impart to them when they're in it, when they're in the addiction,
is that perspective. And I can't. I mean, I can
tell them my story, but I can't give them their own perspective. You know, they're like, what's
the secret? How can I get out of this? And, you know, it's just so hard. I'd love to be able to
say, look, you're going to look back at, you know, driving or, you know, drinking again, you know,
whatever it is and think, you know, this was a left turn for me. But I had to go
through all those left turns and get there myself. And nobody else's perspective was
particularly helpful to me. Yeah, that mystery of when it's time for someone.
Yes. And then what the best path for them is,
is certainly a mystery. And I've listened to Paul on your podcast. I've
heard you really break down the components of recovery and the internal external splits and
lots of really great thinking about how we can think through this recovery journey. And I know
Jill, you do, and Laura, we've all spent a lot of time around this. And yet there is to me a fundamental mystery
a little bit about what causes somebody to suddenly be at that point where they're done.
Now, the problem with that, we say that all the time, like, well, you know, when you're ready,
when you're done, we only know that in the rear view mirror. Like I didn't know it at the time,
right? Because every single time up till then that I had said, I'm done, I was not done. Right? I'm ready. No more of this. Well, clearly that was not the end then. And so that question, I think we's worth jumping on it to the best of our ability at
that time. And then we'll see over time, was that the last time or was that one of the learning
experiences, you know, because I could have given you six other stories about my first 30 days in
recovery, right? Where it was like, I got five days, I got 30 days, I got 18 days. I mean,
my first time around, I guess stayed sober 30 days, I went on my 30th day sober. I watched my sponsor talk and immediately left and went and got high, which I love to tease him about what a great message he had. But again, it's like we don't know we're done until, it is so confusing and so baffling, but I feel it's almost this
universal divine intervention and an idea or concept that I could be totally wrong on.
But I found traction with is that nothing in this universe exists without a purpose. This is called
endowment theory in biology. And that applies to an addiction. Like what's the point of it? I don't
think it's a malfunction. I think it's something that flexes us so intensely internally with the pain points that we get a front row lesson. It sounds great on paper to say,
you can be right or you can have peace. That's a beautiful phrase on a key chain or whatnot.
But I think those who go through addiction get a front row seat. You can be right or you can
have peace. And peace is sobriety and right is continue drinking for me. I really struggled with
that. And Eric, as you said, I made those internal declarations. I'm done. I'm done forever, forever. But it really, I wasn't
until I was. And if somebody is listening right now, my advice is to keep going, keep building
the idea of your sober life internally with the very powerful human brain, which can be leveraged
either way for destruction or to create love in an environment where alcohol isn't needed. But
that's a tough one. It is for sure. It's great to hear your perspective, Laura, as you as well, Eric. We've given our Instagram account a new look and we're sharing content there that we don't share
anywhere else. Encouraging positive posts with wisdom that support you in feeding your good
wolf, as well as some behind the scenes video of the show and some of Ginny and I's day-to-day life, which I'm
kind of still amazed that anybody would be interested in. It's also a great place for you
to give us feedback on the episodes that you like or concepts that you've learned that you think are
helpful or any other feedback you'd like to give us. If you're on Instagram, follow us at at one underscore you underscore feed. And those
words are all spelled out one underscore you underscore feed to add some nourishing content
to your daily scrolling. See you there. I'm Jason Alexander and I'm Peter Tilden. And together on
the Really No Really podcast, our mission is to get the true answers to life's baffling questions
like why they refuse to make the bathroom door go all the way to the floor.
We got the answer.
Will space junk block your cell signal?
The astronaut who almost drowned during a spacewalk gives us the answer.
We talk with the scientist who figured out if your dog truly loves you.
And the one bringing back the woolly mammoth.
Plus, does Tom Cruise really do his own stunts?
His stuntman reveals the answer.
And you never know who's going to drop by.
Mr. Brian Cranston is with us today.
How are you, too?
Hello, my friend.
Wayne Knight about Jurassic Park.
Wayne Knight, welcome to Really No Really, sir.
Bless you all.
Hello, Newman.
And you never know when Howie Mandel might just stop by to talk about judging.
Really? That's the opening?
Really No Really.
Yeah, really.
No really.
Go to reallynoreally.com
and register to win $500, a guest spot on our podcast or a limited edition signed Jason
bobblehead. It's called really no really. And you can find it on the I heart radio app on Apple
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. People used to say to me when I was trying to
moderate for years, I was in sober Facebook groups and I didn't make the connection there that I wanted to moderate, but I had joined sober groups.
But people used to say to me all the time, like, you're just not ready. And that used to make me so mad. Like, of course I'm ready. Like, what are you talking about? How can I not be ready? I'm so ready. Like, I'm so sick of this. I feel horrible.
And then when I finally quit for good and I felt that readiness and that peace, I knew
what they meant.
When you guys quit for good, did you know that it was forever or did it take a bit before
you realized that?
For me, I went to treatment not to get sober,
but to stay in my children's lives. Sober was not at all my goal. But I did think, you know,
I'll get a system reset and I can use and drink as needed and not be mastered by it. So the idea
of quitting for good didn't really occur to me until I was about a year sober.
So were you just moving the goalposts like after you got out of treatment? Were you saying like,
I'll just do another month? Did you set a goal for a year?
I had a very prescriptive divorce attorney who put me on a 90 day plan of drug testing
and therapy and AA meetings. And so those kept me away from drugs and alcohol
because I didn't want to blow a drug test. And I also wanted all the ammunition that she was
asking for in case we went to court, which we didn't end up doing. But that became my priority
over getting loaded, like those switched for whatever reason. And it could be divine
intervention. Like Paul said, I believe there are moments of grace in my life that I stepped through.
Basically, she just kind of gave me a third rail. Like this is the thing that will kill you. So you
must do all these things so you don't get electrocuted. And so I did. And then that took
me till, you know, about four months over because it was 90 days out of treatment.
And then I was scared.
I think the thing that kept me sober that first year was just fear.
Then I was newly divorced with two little kids.
So what happened for real if I knocked myself out in the middle of the night?
You know, I was by myself with my kids because I did. I vowed.
I swore off many, many times before I actually got sober.
If I allowed myself even a little bit, I wasn't sure.
Actually, I was sure.
I was sure that that little bit wouldn't be it.
It was so unpredictable.
So I decided to stay away from it for fear of harming my children or not being able to
be in their lives.
And what changed around a year?
In California, in Los Angeles, anyway, we take cakes in 12-step recovery to celebrate milestones.
And I was not going to take one.
Someone made me take one.
And I took one and I gave like the shortest kind of like cake speech ever.
And someone came up to me afterward and asked me to sponsor them.
And I'm like, oh, you don't want me.
I'm not even staying.
And I don't know anything about this program. And they were like, no, I've been watching you.'t want me. I'm not even staying. And I don't know anything about this program.
And they were like, no, I've been watching you. I want you. And so being like the good student or
whatever preparer that I am, I decided to read this book so that I could take her through it
and be done. But she touched my heart and she needed help and So I read the book and in the process of reading it with her
I found myself in bits of it not all of it
And then someone else asked me once they saw kind of the bond that she and I were forming
Someone else asked me to take them through the work
And so I stayed and probably about two years is when I was like, oh
I'm better. I don't like the stuff I had to do to get better
But it's like working out like I hate working out, but i'm better. I don't like the stuff I had to do to get better, but it's like working out.
I hate working out, but I'm better because of it. And I didn't like the process. I didn't like the
meetings. I didn't like the joining and the engagement and the fellowship. And you can
tell by the tone of my voice, I still don't love all that stuff. But I'm much more tolerant of it
now. And some of it is desirable. But I started falling
in love with who I was as a result of it. And for me, it was really just the honesty piece.
I had been so dishonest my entire life. The program, as I worked it, required me to be honest,
as honest as I could be. Not just cash register honesty, but vulnerable honesty, being real with people.
Not everyone, because that would be inappropriate, but being real with the people that I entrusted
with my recovery and sometimes just in big rooms full of people I didn't know or trust.
And that was helpful to me, which shocked the shit out of me because I always thought
I have to keep this close, this yucky stuff close,
because I thought it was life or death. It felt like survival to me. And then in the end,
not only was it not survival, I saw the harm I was doing myself and keeping it close.
When I got sober at 24 in treatment, I don't think I knew it was the end, but there was a process of going from I'm here because I don't
want to be dope sick. And I'm here because I don't want to go to jail for a long time. And the fear
of that started to mix or mingle a little bit with some hope around the fact that life could get
better and could be a good thing. And so, you know, I often think about
the consequences get us, you know, sometimes to recovery. But as I've thought more about it,
I'm like, well, consequences sort of need to come together about the same time that some hope shows
up. Because just consequences, at least for me, I went through a phase like that where I went to
treatment a couple times and didn't get sober. and bad things kept happening. And that was a really
dangerous and dark period for me because I thought, I don't think we say it much anymore,
but in the early nineties we did, which is once an addict, always an addict. And I thought I'm
going to die like this. And so all the bad wasn't enough. It was actually dangerous. And so I needed the hope to both those things to come together.
But in both my recovery periods, I think there's that mixture of I'm trying to get away from
the bad things, but then I'm starting to be pulled towards the good things.
And they both play a role for me in getting sober and staying sober.
They're both there.
There's all the amazing and wonderful
things I've gotten out of recovery that I never would have gotten otherwise, liking myself and
all the things, Laura, that you talked about. And then there's also, as we said a little while ago,
like looking back going, uh-uh, no, thank you. Don't want any of that either. So for me, it was
kind of a blend, but I don't think I knew it was the end. But there was a certain point where I really hoped deeply that it was, you know, like, I really hope this is the last time.
I don't know if it is because I have a healthy fear of this, but I want it to be.
How long did it take for you to start feeling hopeful?
I would say within the first 30 days, there started to be moments of it. You know,
there certainly started to be periods. And I think that's why community, wherever we find it,
is so important. Because I could not have seen that hope on my own. I simply didn't have it in
me. It was seeing other people saying, I was just like you. And now my life is really, really good. And going,
oh, well, I didn't actually didn't think that was a possibility. I thought I've got to give this up
because it's killing me or it's going to send me to jail, but it's going to suck. You know,
I got to do it, but it's going to suck to seeing other people saying, no, not only can you get sober,
this can be a beautiful and wonderful life. And that was really powerful for me. So I think we sometimes talk about these stages of recovery as if they're this monolithic things. Like I was in
despair, I was happy. And the reality for me is my emotions were probably kind of all over the
place. Like I'm feeling really hopeful for two hours. And then for the next two hours, I'm feeling deep despair and want to get high. And then,
you know, so I think for me, there was a lot of kind of back and forth between all these states.
But over time, the states that begin to become more prevalent were the ones of hope.
And, you know, the despair was going down and the craving was going down.
I like that. It's not just a switch like you get
sober and everything's hopeful and lovely. It's a slow switch over time. And then the good stuff
starts to become more and more. Yep. How about you? Did you know you were done? Yep. When I quit,
my husband was with me because he used to stay up all night with me. Wow.
Yeah.
I have a good husband.
He's like, he's a really supportive guy. He used to stay up all night with me and like try to help me when I was hating myself and like having really bad alcohol anxiety.
And we were sitting on the couch and watching the sun come up.
I had kept us up all night again, which was like not new.
And I looked at him and I was like, I can never drink ever again.
And I knew and I felt so much peace when I said it.
So I know a lot of people don't like the idea forever.
But like that helped me because now I don't consider
it. Like I just knew never. And I had had an experience where literally the same experience,
five 30 in the morning, watching the sun come up. And I said to him, I can't drink for 90 days,
like the same copy paste, like same spot on the couch, everything. And I did the 90 days and I went back,
just like you were saying, Laura, where like, you just need a reset. And then, you know,
just sometimes our tolerance is the problem. And I found that it was the same. And that I think was
why I could say forever, because I had a very clear example of what happens when I take a break,
that it just relaxes back to normal.
I immediately said forever,
and then it stressed me out later when my pink cloud went away,
but in the beginning, I did say forever, and I knew.
How long did you say your pink cloud lasted?
Almost six months.
Yeah, the benefits were increasing a lot.
And I was really excited about those.
I mean, it was obviously more intense in like month one.
But then around like five to six months, the benefits completely stabilized.
And then I just couldn't drink.
And it's like, okay, so now my life is good,
but then I can't do my favorite thing. And that was really hard for me to accept. So month like
six to nine was really, really hard emotionally. And then I worked through it.
I want to ask you a question, but I want to grab Paul while he's here.
Catch him while he can.
I know.
Paul's in and out.
So just could I put a pin in the question I want to ask you, Jill, and then go to Paul to talk about what were we talking about?
We were talking about whether when we got sober, we sort of knew.
Right.
That this is it, you know, or, you know, how we thought about that question, you know, in the beginning.
Okay.
It's good to be back.
Thank you.
I apologize.
In springtime in Montana, it was, it was sunny this morning and I looked up and there was a massive hailstorm and I might be here for 20 seconds.
I don't know, but let's take advantage of it.
It's good to be back.
Okay. I might be here for 20 seconds. I don't know, but let's take advantage of it. It's good to be back. Okay, I wasn't certain that September 7th, 2014 was gonna be my last drink of alcohol,
but I mentioned when I woke up right before,
about six days before that,
I heard the birds for the first time.
And my last drink was about six days later
on a Friday night and went camping with people.
And we talk about this moment of clarity and whatnot.
I drank half of a beer and I looked at it
and I knew unequivocally internally
that if I finished that
beer, my entire life was going to go down a totally different route. And the entire life
would have been condensed two, three years more. Suicide was already, already gave it a go.
So I didn't know, I didn't know that was going to be my last sobriety date, but I knew something
was different. And after interviewing hundreds of people for the RE podcast, that's a line that
sticks out that, you know, I just knew that something was different that time. And what I
didn't know at the time what I had done or what I was doing was I was connecting. We've all heard
that phrase, the opposite of addiction is connection. But I was connecting with the land.
When I walked up to that waterfall, almost 20 days out of 30 days, I was connecting with the
stars. There was a time where I wouldn't go back to Bozeman, the town I live in, until I saw the first star. So I would sit on this picnic bench in the
wilderness, in the forest, and I'd wait till the sun went down. And as soon as I saw that first
star, I would come back. And those are the lengths that I had to go to. I just knew that's what I had
to do. And at about two months away from alcohol, I went to an AA meeting and the voice was like,
ah, I've got this.
And I remember I was going to turn around in my car. I looked at my watch, like, you know,
I don't have time for this. I've got two months of sobriety, totally under wraps. And there's a
bigger voice showed up. It's like, no, Paul, you don't have this. You're going to that meeting
and you need to do everything. And I had loved podcasts. And at that moment, there wasn't a lot
of sobriety podcasts. Thank goodness now there's a lot, which is awesome. And so had loved podcasts. And at that moment, there wasn't a lot of sobriety podcasts.
Thank goodness now there's a lot, which is awesome. And so I selfishly started a podcast
just to keep myself accountable. And so, yeah, I didn't know that was going to be the run and
that run might not stick forever. I really, truly have accepted that it's just one day at a time and
that simplifies everything. And another thing, there's a spiritual phrase that has been remixed
hundreds of times, whatnot, is ask and you shall receive. We've all heard that. And another thing, there's a spiritual phrase that has been remixed hundreds of times,
whatnot, is ask and you shall receive. We've all heard that. And when we get to those moments of
such intense pain, such intense discomfort internally, we don't know who we are.
There's a bigger voice that starts to emerge. It's like, dear God, please help. It's the foxhole
prayer. And I began asking for help, right? I didn't know it at the time, but it was like,
I can't live like this anymore. Please help. I remember turning my gaze to the stars, to the clouds, to the earth, to whatever. Like, I can't do this anymore. Please help. And the help arrived. It did. The help arrived in a beautiful format of a standard poodle. And he went to the waterfall every single time I went there. And I leaned into other energies on the universe that were there to help me. And yes, my parents were there and yes, I had great friends, the AA community. And I'm so thankful for the RE community
as well. I needed a lot of help to quit drinking. I did. And everybody needs help to depart from
addiction. And I asked for help to the universe and I got it. And before the hailstorm kicked me
off, I heard Laura say something about loving herself, right? And I think, and again, in
addiction, one of those points is to unite ourselves with our true selves, right? All the higher self,
the lower self. And when we are ready, we talked about this earlier, is you have to get all parts
of you on board before quitting drinking. If you just internally say, I'm done quitting drinking,
that's kind of the conscious self. It's like, yeah, I'm done quitting drinking. But you need
to line up the soul, the conscious,
the unconscious, the heart, the mind, the whole body,
the whole compartment that is you
and say, we are doing this.
This is the trajectory we are moving in.
And it takes a long time to gather all the parts
of the personality to do that and move forward.
So hopefully the streak goes.
I've already learned a lot from Eric and Laura
and you too, Jill.
So thanks for having me.
And hopefully I'll be here for the remainder of this.
I really do.
I wish I, I'm sorry I missed a little bit there.
With a hailstorm, I'm worried about the goats.
That's the main thing that's kind of on my mind.
Are the goats okay?
Are they sheltered?
Are they?
I thought about that.
They're on the backyard.
They know where to go.
But my wife's outside on her bike.
I called her and I think we'll be okay.
Well, now I'm worried about your wife and her bike in a hail storm.
He'll stop hailing. I think we'll be okay. Yeah.
Paul, there's just something so illustrative about the way you speak. It's really like
having the beer in your hand and having it be half empty and knowing that that's your crossroads.
half empty and knowing that that's your crossroads. And, you know, like the jail cell, it gives me a visceral response. I can visualize your story really well. I just,
I'm appreciating the description that you're giving us. I love that. I love stories. That's
why I have a storytelling podcast, because I love these stories. And yeah, I love to have you come on.
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I wanted to ask Jill a question that kind of piggybacked on your experience from getting sober and having that pink cloud and that last drink that you talked about, or that last night on your sofa.
And it kind of goes into the trigger conversation that I know
we were going to have. But what was your experience, like your first experience that you remember
being out at a social situation where cocktails were being served? What was that like? And did
you prepare for it? Good question. So my first almost four months of sobriety, I was doing it entirely alone.
Although I was listening to Craig Beck's podcast and he was like saving me.
So I was reading some Quitlet and listening to like, I eventually discovered Paul's podcast,
but I was not like doing very much.
And I just knew I would go and not drink. And there's a lot of
drinking in science. And I quit in November. So I quit right before the holiday season. So there
were a lot of parties, there were a lot of happy hours. And the first one I ever went to was like
a goodbye party for somebody, they had quit and got another job. And I got a
little mocktail and I was like, okay, I'm good. Nobody's going to detect that I'm sober. They're
going to leave me alone. And somebody like had heard me say it or like someone mentioned they
got a mocktail too, because a couple people were trying to be supportive, even though I wasn't really telling anyone.
And this woman cornered me.
When I tell the story, I always call her like the crazy lady.
And she cornered me and she very loudly was like, you're still not drinking?
Why?
Like she demanded to know in front of everybody, like all the bosses all the way up
the chain. And I was cool. I was like, yeah, I'm not. Thanks. And I just kind of looked at her
and made it uncomfortable. And she answered her own question. She decided I was on a cleanse,
whatever. But every time I went to one of these happy hours, I would leave and I would cry in my car from the stress.
And it wasn't that I was like having an internal debate, like I want to drink, but I can't.
Oh, but maybe I can if whatever.
I knew I wasn't going to drink, but it just sucked.
And I felt really uncomfortable and I didn't know what to do with the uncomfortable feeling.
So I would just hold it in for two or three hours and then cry. And I felt really uncomfortable and I didn't know what to do with the uncomfortable feeling.
So I would just hold it in for two or three hours and then cry.
But then after I cried, I remember I felt like insanely proud of myself after I got the feeling out.
And then it got easier and then quarantine happened and I didn't have to socialize with
any of those people.
At all.
So it kind of backed right up into that, right?
The quarantine.
That's awesome.
Yeah.
And then I got out of practice, though.
So coming out of quarantine was a little bit hard.
I had a lot of time, but I had not very much experience.
Really interesting.
What about you, Paul?
For repeat the question? Basically,
we were talking kind of about triggers and just if you were at your first experience
at a place where drinks were being served and you weren't drinking, and what was that like,
and then how did you prepare for it? For sure. And again, I had to get to the point where
unequivocally every cell in my body knew, right? And I'd burned the ships in MP3 format. I was terrified, but it had landed that
I can't, if I drink, I die, right? So I had versed that and we make it so overcomplicated of, you
know, we think the planets will fall out of orbit, but I burned the ships completely unequivocally.
And one of my favorite stories with this is I was on an adult kickball team, probably three years of sobriety, and we won the championship. Hell yes. I still play in that kickball league. And we won the championship and we were at the sponsor bar or where we go afterward. And the team we played against, I went up to get a water or soda water, whatever. And there's about six or seven people getting shots. And they saw me show up and they're just like, shots, shots, shots. Just like the LMFAO i'm like no no i'm good i'm good i'm good no no no no shot shot shots and just like do it
and i go guys i appreciate it my last drink was three and a half years ago i can't take a shot
and there is a chemical response in people when somebody's vulnerable and authentic and they lay
it out how it is not one of those people was like, oh, everybody was like, oh shit, great
job.
Like, that's incredible.
No way.
We'll take the shot.
And so if you stand in your authority and know who you are, as I mentioned, a part of
an addiction is to connect you with your more authentic self.
The deeper you, then you're going to be okay.
And people, 95% of them are like, wow, great job. Like you do you,
they want to support your mission. But a couple of them sometimes get defensive when you say you
don't drink, but here's why they're also questioning the role that alcohol is playing in their own
life. And we can be intimidating some people like, wait, Jill quit drinking. Laura did. Eric,
I drank more than they did. So a lot of the results are mixed, but overall not drinking and
relaying that information to people has been the best filter I could have ever asked for,
especially dating, right? I found out date one, if this was going to be a fit or instead of five,
10 dates down the road, it's been a phenomenal filter for friends, for family, for workplace,
for everything. Yeah. Thanks for asking Laura. I can tell you're a very good podcaster and same with you, Eric. Everybody is very attentive and good listeners. So thank you.
Well, and clearly the dating work because you are newly married, you said, right?
Yeah, yeah. Mid-pandemic, I had had enough of quarantine and I went to the country of Colombia.
Very cool.
And yeah, I met my wife. It was phenomenal.
What about you, Eric?
Well, I feel like a Dickens novel, right? Because I'm like the tale of two sobrieties,
but they're so very different. And I talk about them because the first one was significant enough
in that I got sober for like eight years and was so in recovery that it didn't feel like a trial
run. And so the first time I was in treatment and my primary addiction at that point, well,
I was addicted to everything, but the thing that was most on my mind was heroin. And so
I just stayed as far away from all of that as I possibly could. But I remember I went into a
halfway house after the treatment center and I was in there. And one day they admitted a new guy
and he was in the kitchen and they were sort of unpacking his stuff. And I walked in and there were like 10 syringes on the counter. He was a diabetic. But the response in me was so overwhelming that I turned around and just started vomiting. The trigger was so like, oh, just brutal. And so there's a lot of benefit, I think, to being like just totally away from it.
Right.
But then you do have the challenge of when you run into it, you've got to be particularly
prepared because as Jill said, you didn't have a lot of practice with that.
When I got sober the second time, I was primarily a drinker and a lot of marijuana smoking.
I had a job where I was in a sales role.
Part of my job was to take people out who were drinking.
And my wife at the time was a daily drinker.
And so from day one, I was around it all of the time.
And I don't recommend that as a strategy.
I think if you've got the choice to kind of get away from it, that's probably wiser.
I feel like I made
it a lot harder on myself. You know, I wanted to drink. The first time my cravings went away
semi-quickly. This time it felt like I was dogged by them for six months. And I think part of it is
I just was around it all the time, but I was pretty well used to it at that point. And so,
you know, my triggers that second time were far more emotional.
I think the first time they were location based, they were certain situation. The second time they
were very emotionally based, you know, over time, what I would notice is my brain would just sort of
start saying, I need a drink. I need a drink. I need a drink. And it took me a while to sort of
go, okay, well, in the beginning, that's just kind of what the brain does. But after the early stages, I was like, this still comes up pretty regularly.
And so then I had to kind of do the next level down.
Like, what am I actually feeling when that tape goes off in my head?
I was able to identify what some of the different things were for me, what those triggers were.
So I think triggers come in different kinds.
You know, there is that location-based trigger, right? I drive by the bar where I got drunk every night after work,
I'm triggered, right? There's the people triggers, like, oh, I'm seeing Bob and Bob and I used to get
drunk all the time together. But there's time triggers, right? Like for me, right at the end
of the day when work ended was always a very difficult time. And then there's like
emotional based triggers, right? The things that are going on inside me or the situations and the
people around me. And so I think for me, sort of understanding all of those and how to respond to
each of them is an important part of kind of getting to the point where I felt pretty safe
and secure in recovery. I'm really struck by what you said about examining what's behind
I want to drink. I mean, I think that ability for a self-examination in that moment, that's
wonderful that you have that ability to even slow it down long enough to see. I think for me,
that was practice to get to that point. It feels like stopping time a little, right?
Like you can feel like yourself reaching for something and you freeze it. What I've learned about triggers here
is they pass. I came across somewhere that the average timeframe of a trigger or an emotional
front that is extremely uncomfortable is 20 minutes, right? And I remember those first 30
days, I would set a timer with Siri. Hey, Siri, set a timer for 20 minutes. And I would also
trick myself and say, yo, dude, let's just go for a run first, Paul, and then we'll drink. And then I would say, oh, that's
cool. We're going to drink. No worries, but let's do laundry first. Hey there, big guy,
not a problem. Let's just cook dinner first and then we're going to get blasted.
Right. And then after four or five of those, they'd go away. One of my favorite resources
or techniques here is look, you can't outthink your drink. You cannot think yourself out of an addiction.
If you could, we wouldn't be on this call right now.
You just can't.
But we've got a lot of data in our past.
You can play the tape forward.
I've got a pretty good idea right now after not having a drink for almost eight plus years.
I've got a damn good idea of what will happen when I take that drink.
I can play the tape forward.
Is it going to be one?
Probably not. Is it going to gonna be one? Probably not.
Is it gonna be under five?
Probably not.
Will I cut it off after a night?
You know, the last 50, 100 times I drank,
I was unable to stop in one night.
It would go into the next morning.
So I'd play the tape forward
and I would keep playing it forward,
be like, yeah, we're probably gonna end up in jail perhaps,
or, you know, five or six day binge.
And I would sit with that, like, ah, you know,
alcohol, it's not working for me as much anymore.
Is that really worth it?
Again, you can't think yourself out of an addiction,
but sometimes you can see things.
You've got a good idea based off the past experiences
of what is going to happen.
And that doesn't always work.
Sometimes, you know, just the universe lines up.
It's more of a challenge than that.
I have pound my fists into the grass before.
I've gone out to the forest and yelled. It's more of a challenge than that. I have pound my fists into the grass before.
I've gone out to the forest and yelled.
And sometimes I'm still learning tools on how to get through triggers.
But thank you, universe, and the help that I've had that, you know, alcohol, that's not the go-to right now.
I don't think about taking a drink when I have difficult times. I'll throw a temper tantrum, you know, in my basement and yell.
And I'll pull my ukulele off the wall and strum some chords, a minor chord and just sing and make a song up. And really, you know, sometimes it can get messy
and ugly to get through a trigger or craving, but it doesn't matter at the end of the day.
And here's the neat part about sobriety and this stuff is, Eric, I've just met you and I've heard
about your podcast a lot. I love your logo. It's really cool to finally meet you, Eric. I've been
seeing your stuff for years now and Laura's great, but there's a camaraderie with sobriety and you don't have to
go through any of this stuff alone. You can go to one AA meeting, you get 30 numbers, call any of
those people up at any time the next year or two, whenever, and they reach out to help. And I feel
honored to meet Eric and thank you, Jill. And same with Laura, because I feel like I have three new contacts that we go to bat for each other at any moment. So to leverage the
community that is just waiting for you. And I think one of the worst things somebody can do is
to just quit drinking or just quit using because there is this beautiful, loving, authentic,
welcoming community just waiting for you. I've gone to AA meetings and I think seven or eight
different countries. And it's the same thing and I think seven or eight different countries,
and it's the same thing. Every country you walk in, Hey, I don't know the language,
but I'm at a barbecue afterward, right? Somebody always like your home, your family,
right? And the camaraderie of this sobriety or sober movement, which really is authenticity.
It's the movement of finding your true self without an external substance, alcohol, heroin,
drugs, whatever it may be, that's a badass movement.
Sign me up for that.
Has it been easy?
Hell no.
I think life in general is not easy, right?
But what a beautiful trajectory.
What a beautiful pathway.
When I'm triggered, I recognize that.
What is that phrase?
All things pass.
This too shall pass.
Just wait it out.
Live to see another day sometimes.
As I mentioned, sometimes it's not pretty at all. But you know what? You wake up the next day and say, what was the problem yesterday?
It doesn't matter. Yeah. Yeah. I love that idea of delay. That is a very useful strategy. Just
not now, you know, put something else in front of it because yeah, it does tend to pass.
Yeah. Well, that's the opposite of addiction though, isn't it? Because addiction is instantaneous. It's a fix. And so to delay that fix is very counterintuitive for me. And I just,
yeah, I was just really struck when you said that, that that was the process through which you went.
And I think if I were new and I heard that, that would be what I would work toward after I heard someone say that. I would work toward giving myself even a timer of, okay, I'm just going to wait one minute in
my car before I go back in and order a shot or whatever it is. And I don't know if I would be
able to reflect back, like you said, and examine what's underneath it, but it is what I do now as
well. It's second nature now. It's not something
that I have to kind of talk myself through. I observe myself doing it and I'm like, you go girl,
look at that. Look what you just did. That was dope. Yeah. I'll just say really quickly,
I was going to just talk briefly about an experience I had the other night where I was invited to a party where I was the guest of honor and everyone was drinking.
It was a small cocktail party.
And for the first time in a really long time, it looked fun to me.
Like it usually doesn't.
I'm usually really bored and irritated by drunk people and I just want to go home.
But this time they weren't drunk. It was just convivial. It was that black people call it kiki-ing,
when everybody's talking over each other. And I was drawn into that. But what I realized
toward the middle of the party is that they were all matching my level of vulnerability and generosity. Like I was
already like that. They came in a little bit stiffer. And as they drank a couple of drinks,
they kind of became like I was. Like, you know, I'm very affectionate. I hug people. I want to
listen to what they're talking about. I have a warmth about me that is authentic. It's natural.
I have a warmth about me that is authentic.
It's natural.
And I think when I was in my addiction, that was squelched.
I couldn't be that person.
So that's who I am naturally now.
And I was like, oh, I don't need to drink to have what they're having because I actually have this naturally.
And I know not everybody does.
I know there's social anxiety and people go in rigid and they endure and then they leave,
which is sometimes my experience. But at this particular party, I felt very free and warm and
just able to navigate it in this, again, observing myself like, wow, look at this.
You don't need a drink to have fun, basically. And when it really looked like everybody was having fun with their drinks.
And I was the only one not drinking there.
I was the only one.
Was it when you had that insight like, oh, wait, I'm already kind of where they're getting to.
It no longer looked good to you.
I'm curious where the transition happened.
Because in the beginning, right, you were like, wait, that looks really good.
But it sounds like at some point, maybe, I guess you didn't say that explicitly, but
at some point, maybe that changed.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't think that the drink itself looked good.
I just thought it looked fun.
And I think once I realized that I too was having fun, there was an aha moment, like,
oh, I don't need the drink to have fun.
And mind you, the first year, that was not the case for me. I went to several
events where I was pivotal in these kind of leadership positions at my kid's school,
galas, where I had to fake it through the whole event and then get home. And like you said, Jill,
I didn't cry in my car, but the stress of it just, I would like grip the steering wheel when I got in the car and be like, okay, I can breathe now. I got through it. And you know, it was like being
frozen for two hours and then getting in the car and thawing afterward. But I didn't have to get
in the car and thaw this time. I was already thawed and I was fine. But there was an aha
moment for me that it wasn't like, I don't want to drink, but I did want to have fun like that.
And that I was able to do that without a drink was a really cool thing for me that it wasn't like, I don't want to drink, but I did want to have fun like that.
And that I was able to do that without a drink was a really cool thing for me to witness of myself.
I think that learning to do what a drink naturally did for us is a really interesting learning experience and one that I've played with different ways. I mean, still, it takes me a while to warm
up around people. I mean, I don't even mean like 20 minutes. I mean, like I met you like six times.
Yeah.
Like, I mean, it just depends on the situation. But that is one thing that like I just have sort
of gone, you know what? Like that's kind of who you are. It's okay.
Yeah.
It's okay just to be the way you are with this. And the fact that if you put me in a room full of people I don't know, it's going to take me a while. And instead of going, that's bad, that's wrong. Boy, if I had a drink, it would just go, okay, did this not that long ago. We went, me and a couple of friends went out, they're both sober and there was a
sober bar in Columbus, Ohio. You've probably got these all over the place in Los Angeles,
but you don't have many of them here. Matter of fact, that was the only one and it is now gone.
And we went and it was a very, very strange environment and they were doing karaoke.
And part of me wanted to do it. And then like 90% of me was terrified
to do it. And then I went, you know what? If I was drunk, I would just hop right up there.
So to me, there are times where I'm like, I try and push myself almost again, not trying to make
myself be somebody I'm not. But when I recognize like, there's a part of me that would like that,
but I'm afraid. So I was like, I got up and I did karaoke I was terrible um but I did it I wish I was there I know
yeah yeah yeah yeah I did a Leonard Cohen song you know sometimes I'll do that with dancing
same thing like there's a part of me that wants to dance but I'm afraid I just and and I'll just
be like just come on kind of push myself a little bit to kind of learn to do some of these things that are harder for me that alcohol used to make easier.
Again, without trying to be somebody I'm not, but I have found there are times it's helpful to kind of give myself a gentle nudge.
Dancing is one of those things.
It's like the level of self-awareness that one has sober when you step out onto the dance floor is so much different than when you've had a couple drinks.
And you're aware of different things.
You're aware of the music and like it's making you feel this way and let's go.
And as opposed to, is this the right move?
You know, it's just so much different.
Yeah.
But I love that you shared that.
Thank you.
How about you, Jill, with that kind of stuff? I did that did that same thing actually the first time i went to a sober wedding i was sober at
the wedding the wedding was a lot of alcohol with an open bar but i worried about it for like a year
and a half and then i did and then i believe i went to the wedding and I was really stiff and uncomfortable about dancing. I was secure in my not drinking. I was like a little under two years sober at the time and I was okay.
It's okay if you don't dance. It's fine. You don't have to. But I think tomorrow's Jill would feel really good if you danced a little bit.
Then like one of my favorite songs came on and I grabbed the groom, who's my husband's best friend. And we went and we danced and it was like, like awkward. and I had like bad moves, but I did it.
And I made friends with like the drunk girls that just wanna dance all night
and I danced with them and danced by myself.
And I felt really proud of myself.
And I've been to weddings where I haven't danced at all,
but I try to think just like you were saying
with the karaoke, like that you would have done that
and you felt good about it the next day. I don't think I'll do karaoke though. Cause drunk Jill
has done a lot of karaoke and I think it would be like, it hurt my heart to do karaoke again, but
dancing I can do sometimes. I love the way you put that about you don't have to go out there and dance.
But, you know, the Jill of tomorrow will look back and be like, I'm glad I like it.
That's a very like self-compassionate way of nudging yourself.
Like, I just love the way you put that.
I think that really describes the right way to do that in a way that helps us grow instead of making us feel bad about who we are.
So, guys, this was amazing.
I feel like we have to do this again.
This was really helpful for me.
But where can we connect with you and learn more about your work?
And if there's anything that you're up to that you want to share?
Laura, I know you've been like insanely busy.
I have been.
It's actually slowing down now.
But everything that is me is on
theonlyonepod.com. And there you'll find all the events, all my speaking engagements,
all the episodes of the podcast, everything about the book. The only place I really live
on social media is Instagram. And that's at Laura Cathcart, C-A-T-H-C-A-R-T, Robbins, R-O-B-B-I-N-S.
And I just want to thank you all. This has been incredible. And thank you, Jill, for organizing
it. I'd love to do it again. So I'm looking forward to the next time.
Thank you. Eric, where can we connect with you?
Yeah, oneufeed.net. That's kind of all spelled out.
O-N-E-Y-O-U-F-E-E-D.net.
The podcast is there.
Any programs we're doing.
I'm co-teaching a workshop at the Kripalu Institute in Massachusetts this summer.
It's about awakening in nature.
I'm co-teaching it with a Buddhist teacher, Ralph De La Rosa.
So information on that is on the website.
And we are trying to
do more Instagram and that's one underscore Y-O-U underscore feed. I didn't know that you
were coming to Massachusetts. I'm going to talk to you about that later, but we have to meet up.
Okay. All right. Deal. Paul, where can we connect with you and learn about your work?
Okay. So it's recoveryelevator.com. We're also at Instagram at
recovery elevator. We're a private community cafe. We do sober travel trips. We just did a trip to
Costa Rica and we'll see what happens in the world of sobriety in the future. And this was so cool
to be here with Eric, Laura, Jill. Thank you very much for organizing this. This has been a lot of
fun. Thank you. Yeah. And if you search for sobered, you can find me. That's my show, my website, and my Instagram. And thank you guys so much for being here. All the links to everything will be in the show notes if you want to connect with us. And we will definitely do one of these again. So we'll see you in the future.
Thank you. So great to meet you, Paul, and see you too again, Jill and Laura.
Yes. Same, same, same. Yeah. Thanks, Eric, Laura, and see you two again, Jill and Laura. Yes. Same, same, same.
Thanks, Eric, Laura, and Jill.
Great stuff.
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