Your recovery story inspires change.
My mission is to inspire a million people for change. I provide a safe place where people can experience and share their stories of recovery. When we recover out loud, no one dies in silence.
Trippy Hippy Gypsy sharing peace, love and laughter through words and music.
My drinking career blossomed in my twenties and in time I bloomed into a full blown blackout drunk and I drank my way through my youth, all the way up to 37 years old. I drank until my kids caught on to the game, and they started calling me on my behavior.
I drank, smoked and did cocaine every single day since 8th grade.
Very proud to share that by the grace of God and very hard work I am sober. I work hard everyday to keep the demons at bay and put me in a winning place.
I host a recovery podcast The Retired Blackout Artists where I meet and connect with addicts around the globe!
Over the years, my drinking progressed to nearly an everyday occurrence. My three oldest children moved out because they couldn’t take the madness.
Ashley and Jay speak about their sober journey—and we were all eyes and ears
I am delighted to present Ashley and Jay’s stories of sobriety. This will be my first story of a sober couple involving two separate souls and paths which converge into an incredible culmination of stories. I admire them as they are each unique and presented uniquely. Their hearts and souls are just amazing.
“My goal is to demonstrate that a SOBER LIFE is an exhilarating one, and anyone can reap the benefits.”
My true passion is empowering and inspiring others—I AM...... is the way I start helping others to regain their self esteem morning and night I send a word for others to remember the qualities they have forgotten they posses.
My passions are helping other women, my husband and my grandkids. I love kickboxing and hiking.
My passions are helping other women, my husband and my grandkids. I love kickboxing and hiking.
I turned to the ancient wisdom of yoga, mindfulness and meditation and learned how to set boundaries for myself.
I am recovering from Codependency, where my happiness was dependent upon my partner's actions and emotions.
My parents used to give me wine at the table from being around 9 or 10 years old.
My parents used to give me wine at the table from being around 9 or 10 years old—and there was a lot of drinking around in the 1970s—it was considered smart and racy. I prided myself on being able to drink anyone else under the table in my teens
It took over 9 years of repeated attempts to fix myself
Right from the get go, it was awful. The 9 years I was active in my addiction, my life was ugly and exhausting. It’s not about the actual drinking but what happens before, during and after.
After college I moved to London. The rave scene was kicking off. Drugs were everywhere. Acid and ecstasy were huge. I tried it all.
I was drinking in pubs by age 16. I also spent my formative years working part time in a very busy Galway pub. I loved it. And I was a really good and very fast bartender. Galway is famous for its pubs. It was very loose looking back on it. You could smoke hash openly in some bars.
My success came at too high a price . . . A 10 year nightmare of addiction.
“I was born in Cape Town, the capital of South Africa, but I later spent the majority of my adolescence and early adulthood in Johannesburg. This would be where my career in entertainment would ultimately begin - I have hosted numerous radio shows, done voice work for commercials and TV promos and I’ve begun a podcast, which surprisingly enough enjoys great response overseas
Drugs and alcohol and money were my way of coping. Self medicating.
My life of crime, violence, meaningless sex and substance abuse ensued.. for close to 20 years. In and out of handcuffs, rehab, penthouse suites.. to homeless shelters. A roller coaster of resentment, abandonment issues, hatred, rage, love of money and drug and alcohol abuse.
I was always a happy drunk . . . a Good Time Charlie.
I never got arrested or got into fights or woke up on the tarmac at the Lubbock Airport with one boot missing and a Pez dispenser in my pocket. Which is good because I’m fragile. My experience as a drunk was kind of like a hockey game.
Christy and Nichole have a very unique story for us.
Christy and Nichole have a very unique story for us. They are regular folks (a mom and daughter), but with a story that is both heartbreaking and inspiring all at once.
“I love the fellowship. It is the glue that holds my sobriety together.”
I grew up out in the country outside of Houston. As I reached my teen years, I didn’t feel like I fit in with my family and wanted to be somewhere else. Wanting to be somewhere else became a pattern for me. Alcohol let me deal with that. When I was drinking, I was somewhere else.