Recovering Out Loud
Is alcohol the problem, or is the person holding the glass? Anthony breaks down the science, the shame, and the honest answer most people in recovery won't say out loud. Full description: Is alcohol the problem — or is the person drinking it? It's one of the most argued questions in addiction recovery, and how you answer it changes everything about how you get sober and stay sober. In this solo episode of Recovering Out Loud, host Anthony — alcoholic, addict, and addiction counselor in training — pushes back on the growing "alcohol is the villain" movement on social media and asks the harder question: if alcohol were really the problem, why do most drinkers never develop alcohol use disorder? And why did rehab alone never keep him sober? Anthony walks through the neuroscience (GABA, dopamine, why alcohol withdrawal can kill you), the genetics (50–60% heritability, AMA's 1956 disease classification), the 12-step "allergy" model, and the critical difference between guilt and shame in recovery. Then he lands on the answer most camps refuse to hold: both are true. Alcohol is genuinely addictive AND the person has the capacity to change. If you've ever wondered whether you're "broken," whether you can ever drink normally again, or why the just-drink-like-a-normal-person advice feels so damaging — this one's for you. Topics covered: * Why "alcohol is the problem" is the wrong frame for people in recovery * The neuroscience of alcohol addiction (GABA, dopamine, the reward pathway) * Why alcohol and benzo withdrawal can be fatal * DSM-5 alcohol use disorder criteria and WHO global stats * Heritability, co-occurring mental health disorders, and the 14% who develop AUD * The 12-step allergy metaphor and its critics * Disease model vs. agency model — and why both matter * Guilt vs. shame in addiction recovery * Why the anti-alcohol movement misses the point * Anthony's relapse at 7.5 years sober and what he learned Mentioned in this episode: * DSM-5 alcohol use disorder criteria * AMA 1956 disease classification * Dr. Nick Heather's "complex learning disorder" model * WHO data on alcohol-related deaths (5.3% globally) * Previous episode: Is Alcoholism a Disease or a Choice? * Previous episode on peptides Connect: * Instagram: @recoveringoutloudpod * Recovery is simple, not easy.
118 episodios
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