Dear friend,
This past weekend, I was reminded of why sobriety must come before anything else in my life, even before my family.
I loved watching Philip Seymour Hoffman act in the movies. He was a brilliant actor and I really admired his work.
Recently, I heard in the news that before he relapsed in 2012, he had been sober from alcohol and drugs 23 years. Sober for 23 years!!!! What a heartbreaking tragedy it is that in the end, his heroin addiction killed him.
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I don’t know all of the reasons why Mr. Hoffman’s tragic death struck a particular chord with me. But I do know the way he died and the reason he died slapped me in the face and woke me up and as a result I was finally able to define my own bottom line for sobriety.
My bottom line is this: Without sobriety as the highest priority in my life, chances are 100% that sooner or later my addiction will literally kill me. Even placing my relationship with my family above sobriety in my life could potentially lead me back to living in active addiction and kill me. I cannot risk taking or doing anything that will rob me or my loved ones of my life. I cannot play carelessly with my life and I cannot play carelessly with my sobriety. If I do, I’m dead. It’s as simple as that.
Hoffman's death was also a powerful reminder of the fact that no matter how much “sobriety time” I ever get, I will always, always, always remain just as allergic and addicted to lust today as I was on the day I last acted out. There is absolutely no exception to that rule!
For me, the only difference between living in addiction and living in recovery lies in my God given right to choose which life to live. Heavenly Father has given me my agency of to either claim chaos and death through my own foolish bull-headed pride, or to claim peace and sobriety through the enabling power of Christ’s atonement.
If I blindly choose to numb myself to my inner pain by acting out, I'm playing Russian roulette with my life, and everything I hold dear. If I consciously choose sobriety each hour, God will empower me to arrest my addiction and remain sober. The outcome of either decision is inevitable; it is only a matter of time.
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“But what about fears? Your poor self esteem?” my addict just now screamed! “What about your crippling mental and emotional pain? They will kill you!”
My response to my addict: “They will if I am unwilling to acknowledge, embrace and love them.”
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I've realized that if I will allow myself to feel my mental and emotional pain and sit with it (and there is no doubt for me that at times, sobriety is conceived in severe pain), I never have to doubt whether I’ll be able to figure out where I’m stuck. If I can figure out where I am stuck, I can then ask God for His divine assistance to help me get unstuck. Once I’m unstuck, I can learn what to do or not do to avoid the same pitfall in the future.
In my opinion, the pain that comes with withdrawal is a small price to pay for the enabling grace and serenity that attends any sobering addict. God’s grace is real. This moment I choose to protect my sobriety.
If you are reading this post and you’re suffering from the horrors of addiction in this same moment: I want you to know that I believe in you. I love you, and am praying for your success. I don't have to know you personally to do so. All I need to know is that the Steps work, and that you are my brother or my sister and that the sincere prayers of one addict for another makes a difference and works miracles.
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Like I said before, I believe in you. I love you, and am praying for your success. Please pray for mine. I need your strength to stay sober. This very moment, I choose to surrender my right to lust to the God of my understanding and ask I Him to help me stay sober for the next 60 minutes. Join me!
Your brother in recovery,
John D.
6 comments:
Nice post - thanks. Happy I found this blog
I'm praying for you brother! Great food for thought here!
Hi John, thanks for your post. I tried to make a comment a few minutes ago, but I think it got lost in cyberspace. I hope I'm not making a double comment.
You made some very insightful comments. You said you never acted out when you thinking clearly, you mentioned the fog you are in when you act out. You mentioned wanting to act out without knowing why. I would like to share some information with you that will give you a better understanding of these things you are experiencing. Go to my blog (http://wholsomelives.wordpress.com ) and read the article, "Why you can't stop once you start" Be prepared to think outside the box. I am hoping the information there will be empowering in your life. If you have any questions feel free to contact me.
God bless you!
Arden
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