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Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader

53 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader

Descripción

Today, Kriya Lendzion is one of the most respected voices in the field of youth substance use prevention. As a counselor, prevention specialist, educator, and keynote speaker, she has spent decades helping schools, parents, and communities understand how to better support young people as they navigate the pressures and realities of alcohol and drug use. Her work has impacted countless students and families, and her expertise is sought after by organizations across the country. What makes Kriya’s work so powerful, however, is that her knowledge isn’t purely academic. It is deeply personal. Long before she was leading workshops and speaking from conference stages, she was a teenager struggling with alcohol herself. During our conversation, she shared a story that was equal parts heartbreaking, inspiring, and hopeful. It is a story about family, identity, recovery, and discovering that the life waiting on the other side of alcohol can be far richer than the one we fear leaving behind. https://youtu.be/cRPa2TwlpCc Growing Up Between Fear and Fascination Kriya’s earliest understanding of alcohol was complicated. Her father struggled with alcoholism and was no longer present in her life after her mother made the difficult decision to remove him from the home because of his drinking. As a child, she understood alcohol as something dangerous, something capable of destroying relationships and disrupting families. Seeing the impact it had on her father left a lasting impression, and she remembers growing up with a firm determination that she would never follow that same path. At the same time, she was receiving a very different message from the world around her. Like so many children growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, she was surrounded by cultural images that portrayed drinking as glamorous, sophisticated, social, and fun. Her mother worked at a restaurant, and after school Kriya often spent time there. She remembers sitting at the bar doing homework while watching adults laugh together, celebrate, and socialize over drinks. To a young person observing from the sidelines, alcohol seemed connected to confidence, connection, and belonging. The contradiction was subtle but powerful. On one hand, alcohol had damaged her family. On the other hand, it appeared to be the thing that made adulthood exciting. Those mixed messages created a foundation that would later influence her own relationship with drinking. By the time she was around twelve years old, curiosity began to take over. Because alcohol was easily accessible both at home and in the restaurant environment, she started taking small exploratory sips. What began as experimentation quickly became something more significant because she immediately loved the way alcohol made her feel. “I loved the feeling of ease and calm. It seemed to take away the social anxiety and make everything feel easier.” Like many young people who later struggle with alcohol, Kriya wasn’t drinking because she wanted to create problems in her life. She was drinking because, at first, alcohol seemed to solve problems. It quieted insecurities, reduced awkwardness, and helped her feel more comfortable in social situations. As she moved through middle school and high school, alcohol became less about the drink itself and more about the identity she was building around it. She began to cultivate a reputation as the person who brought energy into every room. She loved being the friend everyone was excited to see arrive at a party. She loved hearing people say, “Now the party can start.” Over time, that role became part of how she saw herself. Being the life of the party wasn’t just something she did. It became who she believed she was. When the Consequences Became Impossible to Ignore The problem with building an identity around alcohol is that eventually alcohol begins taking more than it gives. What initially felt empowering slowly became limiting, though it took time for Kriya to fully recognize it. By the age of nineteen, the consequences of her drinking had become serious. She had already developed an ulcer, her academic performance was suffering, and she was failing out of college. The life she envisioned for herself was beginning to slip away, and she found herself facing a reality she never imagined. The cautionary tale she had grown up hearing about her father no longer felt distant. For the first time, she could see similarities between her own path and the one she had promised herself she would never follow. That realization led her to make a courageous decision. She entered an intensive outpatient treatment program while continuing to attend college. Looking back, it would have been understandable if she had chosen to withdraw from campus life entirely while focusing on recovery. Instead, she did something far more challenging. She decided she was going to learn how to live sober in the very environment where she had spent years drinking. As a member of a sorority, she was surrounded by parties, social events, and a college culture where alcohol was deeply ingrained. Rather than isolating herself, she chose radical honesty. She simply began telling people the truth. “I’m not drinking anymore. I’m in treatment.” Today, that kind of openness may not seem particularly unusual. In 1990, it was almost unheard of. Recovery conversations weren’t happening publicly. There were no sober social media communities, recovery podcasts, or alcohol-free movements gaining mainstream attention. Most people simply didn’t talk openly about seeking treatment. The response she received revealed something important about relationships. Some people were uncomfortable because her decision challenged their own assumptions about drinking. Others immediately stepped forward to support her. Those supporters became an essential part of her recovery journey. “My real friends became invested in my success.” At parties and social gatherings, they would surround her with encouragement and protection. If someone handed her a drink, a friend might quietly take it and redirect it elsewhere. They understood what she was trying to accomplish and wanted to help her succeed. What surprised Kriya most was that sobriety didn’t require her to abandon her personality. She still danced. She still sang karaoke. She still brought energy and enthusiasm into social situations. The difference was that she was finally learning that those qualities had belonged to her all along. They had never belonged to alcohol. “I discovered I could still be the fun person. I just wasn’t drinking anymore.” Finding Purpose Through Service As Kriya became more comfortable sharing her story, something unexpected began to happen. Other people started sharing theirs. Students would approach her at parties and confide concerns about their own drinking. Friends would quietly tell her about family members who struggled with alcohol. Others would ask questions about treatment, recovery, and what it meant to change their relationship with substances. Word spread that she was someone who would listen without judgment. Over time, she became a trusted resource not only for students but for the university itself. She was invited to speak with incoming freshmen about her experiences and help educate students about alcohol use. Faculty members sought her perspective on how to support students who might be struggling. She helped create peer counseling initiatives and alcohol awareness programs that gave students a safe place to seek guidance. What began as a personal recovery journey gradually transformed into something much bigger. Her willingness to be honest about her own experiences created opportunities to help countless others. By the time she graduated, she had become a recognized student leader and received significant recognition for the impact she had made on campus. Yet the most important reward wasn’t the award itself. It was the realization that her greatest struggle had become the foundation for her life’s purpose. A Note From Margy One of the things I loved most about this conversation with Kriya is that it challenges a belief so many of us carry: that alcohol is what makes us fun, interesting, confident, or connected. Kriya built an entire identity around being the life of the party. She wasn’t drinking because she wanted to create problems in her life. She was drinking because alcohol seemed to solve them. And yet, when she removed alcohol, something remarkable happened. She discovered that the qualities she valued most about herself hadn’t disappeared. They had been hers all along. I think that’s a lesson that extends far beyond recovery. How many of us hold onto things that no longer serve us because we’re afraid of who we’ll be without them? A job title. A relationship. A role we’ve played for years. A version of ourselves we’ve outgrown. What Kriya’s story reminds me is that growth often begins when we’re willing to find out who we are without the crutch, the mask, or the story we’ve been telling ourselves. And sometimes, what we discover is even better than we imagined. Keep Up With Kriya: @KriyaCounselor on IG, FB, Tik Tok and YouTube Website: KriyaLendzion.com  The post Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader [https://soberliferocks.com/kriya-lendzions-journey-from-college-recovery-to-national-prevention-leader/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

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Portada del episodio Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader

Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader

Today, Kriya Lendzion is one of the most respected voices in the field of youth substance use prevention. As a counselor, prevention specialist, educator, and keynote speaker, she has spent decades helping schools, parents, and communities understand how to better support young people as they navigate the pressures and realities of alcohol and drug use. Her work has impacted countless students and families, and her expertise is sought after by organizations across the country. What makes Kriya’s work so powerful, however, is that her knowledge isn’t purely academic. It is deeply personal. Long before she was leading workshops and speaking from conference stages, she was a teenager struggling with alcohol herself. During our conversation, she shared a story that was equal parts heartbreaking, inspiring, and hopeful. It is a story about family, identity, recovery, and discovering that the life waiting on the other side of alcohol can be far richer than the one we fear leaving behind. https://youtu.be/cRPa2TwlpCc Growing Up Between Fear and Fascination Kriya’s earliest understanding of alcohol was complicated. Her father struggled with alcoholism and was no longer present in her life after her mother made the difficult decision to remove him from the home because of his drinking. As a child, she understood alcohol as something dangerous, something capable of destroying relationships and disrupting families. Seeing the impact it had on her father left a lasting impression, and she remembers growing up with a firm determination that she would never follow that same path. At the same time, she was receiving a very different message from the world around her. Like so many children growing up in the 1980s and 1990s, she was surrounded by cultural images that portrayed drinking as glamorous, sophisticated, social, and fun. Her mother worked at a restaurant, and after school Kriya often spent time there. She remembers sitting at the bar doing homework while watching adults laugh together, celebrate, and socialize over drinks. To a young person observing from the sidelines, alcohol seemed connected to confidence, connection, and belonging. The contradiction was subtle but powerful. On one hand, alcohol had damaged her family. On the other hand, it appeared to be the thing that made adulthood exciting. Those mixed messages created a foundation that would later influence her own relationship with drinking. By the time she was around twelve years old, curiosity began to take over. Because alcohol was easily accessible both at home and in the restaurant environment, she started taking small exploratory sips. What began as experimentation quickly became something more significant because she immediately loved the way alcohol made her feel. “I loved the feeling of ease and calm. It seemed to take away the social anxiety and make everything feel easier.” Like many young people who later struggle with alcohol, Kriya wasn’t drinking because she wanted to create problems in her life. She was drinking because, at first, alcohol seemed to solve problems. It quieted insecurities, reduced awkwardness, and helped her feel more comfortable in social situations. As she moved through middle school and high school, alcohol became less about the drink itself and more about the identity she was building around it. She began to cultivate a reputation as the person who brought energy into every room. She loved being the friend everyone was excited to see arrive at a party. She loved hearing people say, “Now the party can start.” Over time, that role became part of how she saw herself. Being the life of the party wasn’t just something she did. It became who she believed she was. When the Consequences Became Impossible to Ignore The problem with building an identity around alcohol is that eventually alcohol begins taking more than it gives. What initially felt empowering slowly became limiting, though it took time for Kriya to fully recognize it. By the age of nineteen, the consequences of her drinking had become serious. She had already developed an ulcer, her academic performance was suffering, and she was failing out of college. The life she envisioned for herself was beginning to slip away, and she found herself facing a reality she never imagined. The cautionary tale she had grown up hearing about her father no longer felt distant. For the first time, she could see similarities between her own path and the one she had promised herself she would never follow. That realization led her to make a courageous decision. She entered an intensive outpatient treatment program while continuing to attend college. Looking back, it would have been understandable if she had chosen to withdraw from campus life entirely while focusing on recovery. Instead, she did something far more challenging. She decided she was going to learn how to live sober in the very environment where she had spent years drinking. As a member of a sorority, she was surrounded by parties, social events, and a college culture where alcohol was deeply ingrained. Rather than isolating herself, she chose radical honesty. She simply began telling people the truth. “I’m not drinking anymore. I’m in treatment.” Today, that kind of openness may not seem particularly unusual. In 1990, it was almost unheard of. Recovery conversations weren’t happening publicly. There were no sober social media communities, recovery podcasts, or alcohol-free movements gaining mainstream attention. Most people simply didn’t talk openly about seeking treatment. The response she received revealed something important about relationships. Some people were uncomfortable because her decision challenged their own assumptions about drinking. Others immediately stepped forward to support her. Those supporters became an essential part of her recovery journey. “My real friends became invested in my success.” At parties and social gatherings, they would surround her with encouragement and protection. If someone handed her a drink, a friend might quietly take it and redirect it elsewhere. They understood what she was trying to accomplish and wanted to help her succeed. What surprised Kriya most was that sobriety didn’t require her to abandon her personality. She still danced. She still sang karaoke. She still brought energy and enthusiasm into social situations. The difference was that she was finally learning that those qualities had belonged to her all along. They had never belonged to alcohol. “I discovered I could still be the fun person. I just wasn’t drinking anymore.” Finding Purpose Through Service As Kriya became more comfortable sharing her story, something unexpected began to happen. Other people started sharing theirs. Students would approach her at parties and confide concerns about their own drinking. Friends would quietly tell her about family members who struggled with alcohol. Others would ask questions about treatment, recovery, and what it meant to change their relationship with substances. Word spread that she was someone who would listen without judgment. Over time, she became a trusted resource not only for students but for the university itself. She was invited to speak with incoming freshmen about her experiences and help educate students about alcohol use. Faculty members sought her perspective on how to support students who might be struggling. She helped create peer counseling initiatives and alcohol awareness programs that gave students a safe place to seek guidance. What began as a personal recovery journey gradually transformed into something much bigger. Her willingness to be honest about her own experiences created opportunities to help countless others. By the time she graduated, she had become a recognized student leader and received significant recognition for the impact she had made on campus. Yet the most important reward wasn’t the award itself. It was the realization that her greatest struggle had become the foundation for her life’s purpose. A Note From Margy One of the things I loved most about this conversation with Kriya is that it challenges a belief so many of us carry: that alcohol is what makes us fun, interesting, confident, or connected. Kriya built an entire identity around being the life of the party. She wasn’t drinking because she wanted to create problems in her life. She was drinking because alcohol seemed to solve them. And yet, when she removed alcohol, something remarkable happened. She discovered that the qualities she valued most about herself hadn’t disappeared. They had been hers all along. I think that’s a lesson that extends far beyond recovery. How many of us hold onto things that no longer serve us because we’re afraid of who we’ll be without them? A job title. A relationship. A role we’ve played for years. A version of ourselves we’ve outgrown. What Kriya’s story reminds me is that growth often begins when we’re willing to find out who we are without the crutch, the mask, or the story we’ve been telling ourselves. And sometimes, what we discover is even better than we imagined. Keep Up With Kriya: @KriyaCounselor on IG, FB, Tik Tok and YouTube Website: KriyaLendzion.com  The post Kriya Lendzion’s Journey From College Recovery to National Prevention Leader [https://soberliferocks.com/kriya-lendzions-journey-from-college-recovery-to-national-prevention-leader/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

Ayer53 min
Portada del episodio What Brad McLeod Learned About Recovery, Reinvention, and Simply Showing Up

What Brad McLeod Learned About Recovery, Reinvention, and Simply Showing Up

If you’ve spent any time in the recovery space, there’s a good chance you’ve heard of Brad McLeod. As the founder of a thriving online recovery community and the host of a podcast that has reached thousands of people seeking support and connection, Brad has become a familiar and trusted voice for those navigating sobriety. Through honest conversations and a commitment to showing up consistently, he’s helped create spaces where people feel less alone in their recovery journeys. But what struck me most during our conversation wasn’t the community he’s built or the success he’s achieved. It was the path that brought him there. Because before Brad was helping others find hope, he was searching for it himself. His story includes addiction, jail time, prison, deportation, and a lifetime ban from the United States. Looking at where he is today, it’s hard not to be inspired by how dramatically his life has changed. Yet as he shared his journey, I was reminded of something I hear often in recovery circles: transformation rarely happens all at once. It happens one decision, one lesson, and one imperfect step at a time. And perhaps that’s what made this conversation so powerful. Beneath the story of recovery is a much bigger lesson about purpose, resilience, and the courage to begin before you feel ready. https://youtu.be/Da1Rwg59jNI When Chaos Feels Normal Brad’s early years were marked by instability. He moved frequently, spending different seasons of his childhood living with his grandparents and then with his parents. The constant changes created an environment where chaos felt familiar and uncertainty became part of daily life. For many people, those experiences leave lasting effects. When life feels unpredictable from the beginning, it can be difficult to develop a sense of stability or belonging. Looking back, Brad can see how those early circumstances shaped some of the choices he would later make. Like many stories of addiction, substances didn’t enter his life all at once. It began with drinking during his teenage years. At first, alcohol seemed to offer an escape, a way to fit in, or simply a way to quiet some of the internal noise. But over time, drinking led to drugs, and drugs eventually led to harder substances. The progression wasn’t dramatic overnight. It rarely is. Instead, it was a series of small decisions that gradually pushed him further away from the life he wanted and deeper into consequences he never expected. There were arrests. There were stints in jail. There were moments when life became increasingly difficult to manage. Yet addiction has a remarkable way of convincing us that tomorrow will somehow be different. We tell ourselves we’ll stop later. We’ll figure things out eventually. We’ll make changes after one more weekend, one more mistake, one more chance. For Brad, that illusion finally came to an end during a trip back to the United States. At the time, he was living in Canada and had returned to visit family and friends. Instead of being welcomed home, he was met at the airport by law enforcement officers executing an outstanding warrant related to selling drugs to an undercover police officer. What followed was a year in prison. After serving his sentence, he was deported back to Canada and permanently banned from re-entering the United States. For many people, a moment like that would feel like rock bottom. The consequences were undeniable. The chaos had finally caught up with him. And in some ways, that’s exactly what made change possible. “The gig was up. I couldn’t keep living the way I had been living.” Starting Over and Finding Purpose One of the things I appreciate about recovery stories is that they don’t end when someone gets sober. In many ways, that’s where the real work begins. Once the substances are removed, we have to learn how to build a life. We have to discover who we are without our coping mechanisms. We have to figure out what matters, what we value, and how we want to spend our time moving forward. For Brad, that process included returning to school and earning a degree. He eventually entered the field of addiction counseling, a path many people in recovery feel drawn toward. After experiencing firsthand how life-changing recovery can be, it’s natural to want to help others find the same freedom. For a while, the work felt meaningful and aligned with his purpose. He understood the struggles his clients faced because he had lived them himself. He knew the fear, the shame, the setbacks, and the hope. But helping people through addiction recovery comes with an emotional cost that often goes unseen. Counselors, sponsors, coaches, and recovery advocates invest deeply in the people they serve. They celebrate victories, support people through relapses, and carry the weight of difficult outcomes. Over time, that weight began to take its toll. The turning point came when two people he had worked closely with died from overdoses. The losses hit hard. Despite all the effort, care, and energy invested in helping them, they were gone. The grief was profound, and it forced Brad to take an honest look at what the work was doing to him emotionally. At the same time, he and his wife were preparing to welcome their first child. Standing at that crossroads, he made a decision that felt both frightening and necessary. He walked away. Without another source of income. Without a clear roadmap. Without knowing exactly what would come next. “Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is acknowledge that something isn’t sustainable anymore.” Building Something Before He Felt Ready What happened next is one of my favorite parts of Brad’s story because it’s a reminder that many meaningful things begin in very ordinary ways. About eight years ago, he started a Facebook group focused on early recovery. There was no business plan. No marketing strategy. No grand vision for what it might become. There was simply a desire to create a place where people could connect and support one another. One person joined. Then another. Then another. People shared the group with friends who shared it with other friends. Slowly, the community began to grow. Over time, it evolved into a vibrant recovery network serving people from all walks of life. Then came another unexpected leap. About four years ago, Brad decided to start a podcast. The funny part is that he didn’t really know how to podcast. In fact, he told me that his parents had given him podcast equipment years earlier, and it had mostly sat unused. When he finally pulled it out, he couldn’t even get it working properly. It’s a story many creators can relate to. We imagine that successful people started with expertise, confidence, and perfect systems. More often than not, they started exactly where Brad did: confused, uncertain, and learning as they went. Eventually, he figured out enough to record an episode. Then another. Then another. And somewhere along the way, the podcast became something much bigger than he imagined. “You don’t have to be perfect to begin. You just have to begin.” The Impact We Never Get to Measure One of the most meaningful parts of our conversation centered around something many people struggle with, whether they’re podcasters, writers, entrepreneurs, or simply people trying to make a difference. How do you know if what you’re doing matters? We live in a culture that loves metrics. Downloads. Followers. Subscribers. Shares. Comments. But recovery communities don’t always operate according to those measurements. Many people listen quietly. Many people never comment. Many people never publicly engage because anonymity feels safer. As a result, it can be difficult to know whether your efforts are reaching anyone at all. Brad shared a beautiful story about receiving an email from a listener whose life had been impacted by something they heard on his show. That single message reminded him that the most important effects of our work are often invisible. We don’t always get to see the ripple effects. We don’t always hear the stories. We don’t always know who needed to hear exactly what we had to say on a particular day. Yet that doesn’t mean the impact isn’t real. “We never really know how our words or actions might affect someone else’s life.” I think that’s a lesson all of us need to hear. Whether you’re sharing your recovery story, encouraging a friend, volunteering, writing, creating, or simply trying to show up as a good human being, much of your influence will happen beyond your view. Sometimes the most meaningful contribution we can make is simply continuing to show up. Why the Journey Matters as Much as the Outcome As Brad and I talked about podcasting, we found ourselves returning to a theme that had very little to do with audience growth. The greatest gift hasn’t been the numbers. It’s been the relationships. Every conversation introduces you to someone new. Every guest offers a different perspective. Every story teaches you something about resilience, courage, healing, or humanity. In many ways, the process itself becomes transformative. Brad shared how much his own life has been enriched through the people he’s met and the conversations he’s been fortunate enough to have. I could relate completely. One of the unexpected gifts of hosting this podcast has been the opportunity to sit across from incredible people and hear the stories they carry. Time and again, I’m reminded that recovery isn’t just about stopping drinking or using. It’s about becoming more connected to ourselves and to others. That connection is where so much growth happens. It’s where empathy grows. It’s where understanding deepens. And it’s often where purpose emerges. “The people you meet and the conversations you have can completely change your life.” Just Start If there was one message that kept surfacing throughout our conversation, it was this: Just start. Not when you’re ready. Not when you’re perfect. Not when you have everything figured out. Start now. Whether that’s writing a book, launching a podcast, joining a recovery community, sharing your story, or pursuing a dream you’ve been putting off for years, the first step matters more than the perfect plan. Too many people spend years comparing themselves to others. We assume someone else is already doing it better. We tell ourselves we’re not qualified enough, experienced enough, or interesting enough. But there is room for all of us. The recovery community doesn’t need more perfection. It needs more authenticity. It needs more people willing to share honestly, connect deeply, and contribute in whatever way they can. That’s exactly what Brad did. He didn’t know where a Facebook group would lead. He didn’t know whether anyone would listen to his podcast. He simply showed up. And that decision changed his life. “You don’t have to compete with anyone. You just have to be willing to show up.” A Note from Margy One of the reasons this conversation stayed with me is because it speaks to something I see over and over again, both in recovery and in life. So many of us are waiting. We’re waiting until we feel more confident. We’re waiting until we have more experience. We’re waiting until we know exactly how everything will turn out. But Brad’s story reminds us that growth rarely works that way. He didn’t have a perfect plan when he got sober. He didn’t know exactly what career path he would follow. He didn’t know that a Facebook group would grow into a thriving community or that a podcast would connect him with thousands of people. He simply took the next step. Then the next one. Then the next. If you’re reading this and feeling called toward something, whether that’s recovery, creativity, service, or personal growth, I hope you’ll remember that you don’t need to have the entire journey mapped out. You only need enough courage for the next step. Trust that showing up matters. Trust that your story matters. Trust that the life you’re building today may eventually become the encouragement someone else needs tomorrow. And if Brad’s journey teaches us anything, it’s that our greatest purpose often emerges from the very struggles we once thought would define us. Stay Connected to Brad: www.sobermotivation.com [http://www.sobermotivation.com/] The post What Brad McLeod Learned About Recovery, Reinvention, and Simply Showing Up [https://soberliferocks.com/what-brad-mcleod-learned-about-recovery-reinvention-and-simply-showing-up/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

4 de jun de 202652 min
Portada del episodio Episode 99: Alcohol-Free Living for Women: How Dupe Witherick Found a Better Life Beyond Alcohol

Episode 99: Alcohol-Free Living for Women: How Dupe Witherick Found a Better Life Beyond Alcohol

Alcohol-free living for women is often less about hitting rock bottom and more about realizing that alcohol no longer supports the life you want to create. In this episode of the Sober Life Rocks Podcast, Dupe Witherick shares how she moved from corporate success, wine culture, and quiet exhaustion into clarity, energy, purpose, and a more aligned way of living. WHEN DRINKING FELT LIKE PART OF A SUCCESSFUL LIFE Before she stopped drinking, Dupe’s life looked polished and successful. She had built an impressive corporate career, navigated leadership roles, and enjoyed a lifestyle filled with dinner parties, wine tasting, and celebration. Alcohol did not feel like a problem. It felt sophisticated, social, and completely normal. “I considered myself to be a normal drinker. There wasn’t some huge rock bottom. It was just time.” WHEN HER BODY STARTED SAYING NO Over time, Dupe noticed her body responding differently to alcohol. The red wines she once loved started causing headaches and stomach pain. She tried switching drinks, adjusting what she consumed, and finding alternatives that still allowed her to participate in the same rituals. But eventually, she could not ignore the truth: something no longer felt right. THE PANDEMIC WAKE-UP CALL During the pandemic, Dupe’s demanding corporate role moved fully online. The boundaries between work, stress, rest, and home disappeared. Her days became a cycle of working, pouring a drink, collapsing into bed, waking up exhausted, and doing it all over again. “I was telling everyone else to take care of themselves, but I wasn’t doing any of it myself.” That contradiction became impossible to ignore. THE 21-DAY FAST THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING After trying Dry January, Sober October, and other temporary breaks, Dupe decided to participate in a 21-day fast through her church. The night before the fast began, she opened a bottle of champagne. But something had changed. “My body was basically saying, ‘No. We can’t do this anymore.’” Once she moved through the first few weeks alcohol-free, she noticed better sleep, clearer thinking, more energy, and emotional lightness. “Once I started feeling better, I didn’t want to go back.” LEARNING TO NAVIGATE SOCIAL LIFE ALCOHOL-FREE Choosing alcohol-free living did not mean life suddenly became easy. Dupe had to navigate dinner parties, work events, and social settings where alcohol had always been expected. At first, she worried people would judge her or assume she had a serious problem. But gradually, she discovered that many people were supportive, curious, or completely unfazed. FINDING RITUAL WITHOUT ALCOHOL One important part of Dupe’s journey was discovering non-alcoholic alternatives that still felt elegant and enjoyable. “I realized I could still feel glamorous holding a beautiful drink in a glass. It just didn’t need alcohol in it.” That realization helped her understand that what she truly wanted was connection, ritual, beauty, and presence. Alcohol had simply been the thing society taught her to attach to those experiences. A NEW CONVERSATION AROUND ALCOHOL Today, more people are questioning alcohol through the lens of wellness, mental health, hormones, sleep, anxiety, and longevity. “Things are changing. People understand so much more now about what alcohol actually does to our bodies.” For women who do not identify with traditional recovery narratives, this shift creates permission to reevaluate drinking without shame. CREATING A BIGGER LIFE BEYOND ALCOHOL After stepping away from alcohol, Dupe began helping other women do the same. Through coaching, speaking, writing, podcasting, and Human Design work, she now helps women create lives that feel intentional, aligned, and fulfilling. Her message is not simply about removing alcohol. It is about creating a better quality of life. A FINAL REFLECTION Dupe Witherick’s story is a reminder that you do not need to wait for your life to fall apart before choosing something better. You are allowed to want more peace, energy, clarity, and joy. Sometimes the bravest thing you can do is listen to the whisper before it becomes a scream. The post Episode 99: Alcohol-Free Living for Women: How Dupe Witherick Found a Better Life Beyond Alcohol [https://soberliferocks.com/alcohol-free-living-for-women-dupe-witherick/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

28 de may de 202654 min
Portada del episodio Episode 98: Dr. Gary Hartman’s Addiction Recovery Story After Prison and Professional Collapse

Episode 98: Dr. Gary Hartman’s Addiction Recovery Story After Prison and Professional Collapse

Dr. Gary Hartman’s addiction recovery story is a powerful reminder that addiction can exist behind even the most successful lives. During this episode of the Sober Life Rocks Podcast, Dr. Hartman shares how he went from being a respected periodontist with a thriving career to battling opioid addiction, serving time in prison, and ultimately rebuilding his life through honesty, recovery, and purpose. THE PRESSURE BEHIND PROFESSIONAL SUCCESS From the outside, Dr. Gary Hartman appeared to have everything together. He was a successful surgeon, business owner, husband, and father. But privately, he was struggling under intense internal pressure tied to perfectionism, achievement, and identity. Growing up with a highly accomplished father, excellence became the expectation. Dr. Hartman described himself as an overachiever who constantly chased impossible standards while silently battling anxiety. When he first drank alcohol as a teenager, the relief was immediate. “For the first time, I felt relief from the pressure I carried inside.” What began as emotional relief slowly evolved into dependency. HOW ADDICTION QUIETLY ESCALATED As Dr. Hartman’s professional success grew, so did the emotional pressure beneath the surface. Alcohol became a nightly escape from stress, fear, and exhaustion. Eventually, his addiction began affecting his marriage and personal life. Although he entered outpatient treatment and achieved temporary sobriety, he later realized that removing alcohol alone did not address the underlying emotional pain driving his addiction. “I wasn’t drinking, but I also wasn’t healing.” After shoulder surgery, he was prescribed opioid pain medication. What started as legitimate treatment quickly escalated into dependency as the medication numbed not only physical pain but emotional pain as well. FROM ADDICTION TO PRISON When his prescriptions stopped, fear and desperation took over. Dr. Hartman manipulated the system to continue obtaining pills while trying to maintain his professional life. The addiction spiraled rapidly. “I knew there was no good ending left.” Eventually, he was caught. The consequences were devastating. Dr. Hartman lost his dental license, career, income, reputation, and freedom. He served time in prison and faced the painful reality of losing the identity he had spent decades building. RECOVERY, REDEMPTION, AND REBUILDING LIFE What makes Dr. Gary Hartman’s addiction recovery story so impactful is that it did not end with prison. After his release, recovery became about far more than abstinence. Through therapy, honesty, support, and personal growth, he slowly rebuilt his life from the inside out. Today, Dr. Hartman openly shares his story to help reduce stigma around addiction, especially among professionals in medicine, dentistry, law, and other high-pressure careers. “The more we hide addiction, the more dangerous it becomes.” He now advocates for early intervention, confidential support programs, and honest conversations around mental health and addiction before lives completely unravel. WHY THIS CONVERSATION MATTERS This episode highlights an important truth: addiction rarely begins with catastrophe. More often, it begins quietly beneath achievement, anxiety, pressure, and emotional pain that no one else can see. Dr. Gary Hartman’s story reminds listeners that struggling does not make someone weak, and asking for help does not make someone broken. Healing often begins the moment someone no longer has to hide. LISTEN TO THE FULL EPISODE Listen to the full conversation on the Sober Life Rocks Podcast to hear Dr. Gary Hartman’s honest story of addiction, prison, recovery, and redemption. The post Episode 98: Dr. Gary Hartman’s Addiction Recovery Story After Prison and Professional Collapse [https://soberliferocks.com/dr-gary-hartman-addiction-recovery-story/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

21 de may de 202642 min
Portada del episodio Episode 97: Sober Curious Journey: How Jodi Clark Redefined What a Good Life Looks Like

Episode 97: Sober Curious Journey: How Jodi Clark Redefined What a Good Life Looks Like

This sober curious journey began quietly, not with a dramatic rock bottom or public collapse, but with a growing awareness that alcohol was taking up more space in Jodi Clark’s life than she wanted. In this episode of Sober Life Rocks, Jodi shares how a simple 100-day alcohol-free experiment transformed her relationship with presence, identity, motherhood, and joy. WHEN DRINKING FEELS “NORMAL” For much of her adult life, alcohol felt woven into everyday experiences. Dinners with friends, celebrations, vacations, stressful workdays, and moments of relaxation all seemed to naturally include drinking. Like many women, Jodi did not see herself reflected in traditional conversations around alcohol misuse because her life appeared healthy and successful from the outside. “We do what we think is normal, because it’s all we’ve ever seen.” THE PANDEMIC AND THE SHIFT TOWARD HABIT During the pandemic, routines blurred and stress levels increased. Drinking became more automatic than intentional. What once felt occasional slowly became habitual. Opening a bottle of wine or prosecco after a long day became the transition from responsibility to relief. At first, the changes felt subtle. Jodi noticed physical sluggishness and overeating, but the deeper concern was mental. She realized alcohol was taking up space in her thoughts. THE VACATION MOMENT SHE COULDN’T IGNORE One family vacation became a defining turning point. Instead of feeling fully present with the people she loved, Jodi found herself thinking ahead to the evening drink waiting later. “I realized I was spending more time thinking about that bottle of prosecco than being present with my family.” That awareness stayed with her. STARTING WITH 100 DAYS Jodi did not initially decide to quit drinking forever. She simply committed to 100 alcohol-free days to improve her health and lose weight. But she chose to do something deeply vulnerable: she shared the process publicly. Every day, she documented the journey online—the cravings, emotional shifts, awkward moments, and unexpected discoveries. What began as a personal experiment quickly became a conversation many women quietly recognized themselves in. DISCOVERING LIFE WITHOUT ALCOHOL Within the first month, Jodi sensed something changing. “Within about 30 days, I knew my life was better without alcohol.” What she feared would feel restrictive actually felt calmer, clearer, and more connected. Instead of losing joy, she gained presence. THE FEAR OF SOCIAL CHANGE One of the biggest concerns during her sober curious journey involved friendships and social identity. Like many adults, alcohol had become central to celebrations, trips, birthdays, and connection. One friend asked her a question that captured a common fear: “If we’re not drinking together, what are we going to do?” Beneath that question was something deeper: Will our friendship still work? Will we still connect? REALIZING JOY WAS STILL THERE Jodi continued showing up fully. She brought nonalcoholic drinks, danced, laughed, and stayed connected. What surprised her most was realizing that alcohol had never been the source of joy itself. The biggest difference was how she felt afterward. Instead of waking up exhausted or foggy, she felt energized, present, and emotionally available. TURNING EXPERIENCE INTO PURPOSE As more women reached out asking for guidance, Jodi realized these conversations carried real weight. She pursued coaching certification through programs developed by sobriety advocate Andy Ramage and eventually created her own 100-day challenge focused on helping women build a new vision for themselves. Her work is not simply about removing alcohol. It is about intentional identity transformation. REDEFINING WHAT A GOOD LIFE LOOKS LIKE One of the most powerful ideas Jodi shared is that sobriety becomes less about deprivation and more about alignment. She encourages women to think intentionally about the version of themselves they want to become and the habits that support that identity. For many people, alcohol is not destroying their lives. But it may quietly stand between them and the life they most want to experience. THE BEST PART OF THE JOURNEY When asked what has changed most, Jodi answered immediately: being a more present mother. Not perfect. More present. She described feeling emotionally available, connected, and aligned with the kind of parent she truly wanted to be. A FINAL REFLECTION Jodi Clark’s story is a reminder that you do not need a catastrophic rock bottom to reevaluate your relationship with alcohol. Sometimes awareness is enough. Sometimes wanting more peace, more energy, more clarity, or more connection is reason enough to choose differently. And sometimes the smallest shift in awareness can completely redefine what a good life looks like. The post Episode 97: Sober Curious Journey: How Jodi Clark Redefined What a Good Life Looks Like [https://soberliferocks.com/sober-curious-journey-jodi-clark/] first appeared on Sober Life Rocks [https://soberliferocks.com].

14 de may de 202648 min