No, you don’t need to be an addict to relapse.

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You don’t have to be an addict to relapse. 

We all relapse sometimes. 

When I say “relapse,” I don’t just mean using a substance or engaging in a behavior identified as potentially addictive or compulsive. 

I use “relapse” to mean any time our coping mechanisms were temporarily overwhelmed, and we engaged in a self-defeating behavior we had previously decided not to. 

Does using drugs or alcohol when you’re in recovery from drug addiction or alcoholism qualify? Yes. 

But so does being cruel to yourself in your self-talk when you’re trying to recover from depression. 

So does engaging in prolonged avoidance behavior (as opposed to temporary “time outs” in order to catch your breath or regroup) when you’re trying to recover from anxiety. 

So does binging, restricting, or purging when you’re recovering from an eating disorder. 

So does procrastination. 

So does crashing your diet or eating plan in an unplanned, non-purposeful way. 

Every time we take a self-sabotaging, self-defeating step backwards, it’s a form of relapse— and we need to understand exactly what that means. 

It means our coping skills were sufficiently overwhelmed that we got dragged away from our long-term recovery goals. 

Relapse is not our fault— but it IS our problem. 

Relapse has a way of putting unhelpful thoughts in our heads. 

Thoughts to the tune of, “I obviously can’t do this.” 

Thoughts like, “Great, now I have to start all over again.” 

Thoughts like, “Well, I already relapsed; I might as well go whole hog, as long as I’m not in recovery tonight.” 

The thing about those thoughts is: they do not come from a voice that is helpful to or concerned about you. 

That’s the voice of your addiction talking. 

Or your depression, or your anxiety, or your eating disorder. 

It does not care about you. 

It just wants you to do what it tells you to do. 

And it will lie to you to get you to do it. 

If you’ve had a relapse— if you’ve taken some self-defeating, self-sabotaging steps backward, and temporary compromised your recovery goals— the voice of your addiction, depression, anxiety, eating disorder, or other life challenge is going to pipe up pretty loudly…because it knows you’re at a crossroads. 

When we’ve relapsed, we are faced with the very valid question of what comes next. 

That choice is real, and important. 

Think about it this way: in a year, you’re going to be telling one of two stories about your relapse tonight. 

You could be telling the story about how you were doing okay…but then you had a stumble. And that stumble was what led you down the rabbit hole, causing you to sink deeper and deeper into your life challenge. 

That could be the story you tell about this in a year. 

Or, in a year, you could be telling a different story about this relapse. 

You could be telling a story about how you relapsed…but then you realized that didn’t have to be the trigger to an avalanche of prolonged self-defeating behavior. 

It could just be a blip on the radar. 

It could be what woke you up and turned you around. 

This relapse could be what defeats you…or what saves and strengthens you. 

You get to decide which story you’re going to tell in a year. 

Only you. 

 

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Right after a relapse…

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If you’re reading this right after a relapse, there are a few things I want you to know. 

First thing’s first: breathe. 

No, don’t just read that sentence and blow by it, figuring “Yeah, yeah, I know.” 

Really, really breathe. Five counts in; hold for five counts; five counts out. 

Good. Now do it again. Humor me. 

Notice the world inside your head kind of slow down as you breathe. 

Notice your back and your neck start to relax— just a little. 

Now…about that relapse. 

If you’re reading this and you’ve just relapsed, you need to know that this isn’t the end of your recovery— or, at least, it doesn’t have to be. 

You need to know that relapse is incredibly common in recovery.

Of course it’s common. Your addiction, whether it is to a substance or a behavior or an institution or even a person, has been conditioned and reinforced, probably for years. Those patterns don’t change on a dime. 

A lot of people in recovery relapse. It’s not what we prefer, but it happens. Go to any twelve step meeting, and seek out the old timers, those guys with years and years of sobriety— I guarantee that they’ve all relapsed at one point. 

You need to know that you didn’t “fail.” 

Having relapsed doesn’t mean you “can’t” do recovery. 

All it means is, you had a day where the pressure overwhelmed your coping skills. That’s literally all that happened. 

Could you have made different decisions to avoid that relapse? Maybe, maybe not. But it doesn’t matter right now. It happened. 

You need to know it’s not the end of the world. 

You need to know that you can’t take the relapse back— no matter how hard you try. 

You need to know that, if anything positive at all is going to come out of this relapse, then it’s on you to figure out what this relapse has to teach you. 

That’s right. Relapses have things to teach you. In fact, relapse has things to teach you that sobriety cannot teach you. 

(That doesn’t mean we should aspire to relapse…but it means that it’s on you not to waste the opportunity presented by this relapse.) 

But maybe the most important thing you need to know, if you’re reading this right after a relapse, is that it’s not too late—or too early— to get back on the horse. 

A lot of the time, when we relapse, we figure, eh, screw it, I’ve already relapsed, might as well really dive in. 

That won’t make things better. 

There’s a difference between falling off the wagon for an hour…and falling off the wagon for twelve hours. 

(Hell, there’s even a difference between falling of the wagon for an hour, and falling off the wagon for an hour and a half.) 

The name of the game is, getting back into the game as soon as you can. 

As soon as you have control again. As soon as you have a free choice again. 

As soon as your head’s clear enough to think again. THAT is when you want to get back on the horse. 

If you’re reading this right after a relapse, you need to know that I’m proud of you for even being in recovery. 

Recovery is hard. It’s maybe the hardest thing humans do. 

If you’re reading this right after a relapse, you need to know that I don’t want you to give up. 

I want you to try again. 

I believe you are worth saving. 

And I believe there is hope. 

Not just in general— but for you, specifically. 

Please don’t give up. 

 

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Your results are not a reflection of you. Repeat as necessary.

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One of the most important distinctions you’ll ever learn, is to separate you as a person from the results you produce out there in the world. 

Your results are not a direct reflection of YOU. 

And yet, many people remain convinced that their results speak directly to who they are— or who they are not. 

They figure, for example, that if they’ve tried things and have come up short, they are a failure. 

Having failed does not make you a failure. Everyone fails. 

The most successful people in the history of the world have failed more than most— in fact, their failures are often what contribute to them ultimately becoming successful. 

Just like your failures are not a direct reflection of you, though…neither are your successes. 

Your successes are positive and should be celebrated, definitely…but successfully completing projects or achieving goals may or may not directly reflect who you are as a person. 

Many people have achieved plenty of “success” in their careers of various areas of their lives…and still wound up feeling empty and unfulfilled. 

We need to grasp, very clearly, that our results are not a reflection of us. 

Our results may be a reflection of a lot of things— work put in, luck, inherent talent, favorable circumstances, or a dozen other variables— but it’s a mistake to become over identified with either our failures OR our successes. 

The fact is, we’re going to have a lot of results of various kinds in our lives. 

We’ll have a lot of failures. 

And we’ll probably have a lot of successes, big and small. 

If we think that our results are a reflection of us, we’re constantly going to be jostled back and forth between feeling good and feeling lousy about ourselves— because, as long as we’re alive, we’re going to get varied results in our lives. 

What IS a reflection of us, if not our results? 

Our behavior is often a reflection of us. 

What we choose to say and otherwise express is often a reflection of us. 

How we treat people is often a reflection of us. 

Those things may not be perfectly reflective of who we are as people…but the reason why they may be more accurate reflections of us than the results we produce in our lives is this: those are things that we have control over. 

We often have control over what we do— or what we don’t do. 

We often have control over what we say— or choose not to say. 

And we definitely have control over how we choose to interact with and treat other people. 

I think a lot of people buy into the “your results are a reflection of YOU” mentality because they’re in kind of an identity crisis. 

They don’t know who they are. They don’t know what they’re all about. They haven’t thought deeply about their own values or goals— or maybe they’re afraid to think too deeply about their values and goals. 

When somebody is hazy on who they are, OF COURSE they’re going to become over identified with their results in life. Because what else is there, right? 

Resist this urge. 

Remember that you are complex.

Remember that your life is long. 

You’re going to have ups and downs, successes and failures…and none of them can comprehensively define you as a person. 

You can only be truly defined by those things you affirmatively choose. 

Choose wisely. 

 

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Don’t limit your ways to feel good and worthy, please.

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We are in trouble when we’re meeting our needs for self-esteem or personal fulfillment through a limited number of external sources. 

If we need certain relationship feedback to feel good, if that’s the ONLY WAY we can feel good…it’s a problem. 

If we need certain professional feedback to feel good, if that’s the ONLY WAY we can feel good…it’s a problem. 

These are problems not only because those external sources of feedback may not always be available…but also because our self-esteem suffers when we get obsessed with certain sources of feeling good. 

Our self-esteem is not dumb. 

It knows when we are desperately seeking or clinging to certain sources of external gratification, not because we just REALLY LIKE those sources of gratification…but because we know we don’t have anything as a backup that can help us feel good and worthy. 

Our self-esteem watches us desperately scramble to make certain relationship or professional experiences happen…and it gets sad. 

It goes down. 

So what we wind up with is not only insecurity about our needs for enjoyment and fulfillment getting met…but a pervasive feeling that we simply can’t handle life. 

If we’re going to create stable, high self esteem, we need to create a life worth living. 

A life that includes a VARIETY of potentially reinforcing experiences…as opposed to having piled all our eggs into one basket. 

A life that allows us to do well at some things, but not as well at other things…because we’re not depending on any one thing for too much of our feelings of worth. 

As a rule, when in doubt: expand. 

Try more things. 

Try different things. 

Don’t limit yourself to the same types of projects, interests, or connections just because they feel familiar or you know you’re good at them. 

Building a life worth living involves trying new things…and, yes, failing at some of them. 

It’s NOT about finding your “one thing,” that you’ll do over and over and over again for the rest of your days. 

So many people pressure themselves to find their “one thing.” 

Which is a bummer, insofar as not only is that not necessary…it’s counterproductive to developing genuine self-esteem. 

When we develop a variety of ways to feel good, our anxiety goes down. 

When we develop a variety of ways to feel good, we begin to relax. 

We begin to actually enjoy the things we do…because the stakes are a little lower. 

EVERY experience isn’t make-or-break, as a source of self-esteem or enjoyment. 

When you limit your potential ways to feel good, you necessarily put pressure on yourself to excel at those things…or else you’re left with nothing, because you failed to formulate a Plan B. 

In a practical sense, what this means is: get curious. 

Think about what MIGHT provide you with enjoyment. 

Thank about what MIGHT provide you with fulfillment. 

Make lists. 

And then watch your own reaction to potentially stepping outside of your comfort zone. 

It might be scary, yes. 

But it also might—just might— be interesting and exciting. 

 

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Beware of “gurus” who oversell themselves.

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There’s a reason why most personal development pages on the internet (including this one!) can’t dole out the specific strategies that will work for you in your recovery: because the specific strategies that will work for YOU are just that— specific to YOU. 

You— yes you, right there, reading this page— have different needs, experiences, influences, and triggers than anyone else reading this page. 

The very best I, or anyone writing things on the internet, can do, is bring your attention to some of the common PATTERNS we see in how people recover and grow…and then offer our OBSERVATIONS and SUGGESTIONS on how these might be tailored to peoples’ individual needs. 

All of which is to say: I don’t expect the things I post on this page to solve your problems or comprehensively change your world. 

I have way, way too much respect for you as a unique individual to assume that I know the first thing about what you, specifically, need. 

Any personal growth or recovery page on the internet that DOESN’T acknowledge this— that it cannot, by definition, offer you advice specifically tailored to you— is playing a disingenuous game. 

More to the point: they’re probably just trying to get you click on their content…without acknowledging the limitations of what they can do for you. 

Don’t get me wrong: I hope the things I post are helpful to you. 

I hope they are thought provoking. I hope they resonate with you. 

I hope the things I post speak to some things you have experienced, some of the challenges you’ve faced, some of the dilemmas you’ve encountered. 

But my writing on the internet is much like any self help book that’s ever been published: it has its limits, because I don’t know YOU. 

What I want my writing to do is make you curious. 

I want it to validate some things you may be experiencing or feeling. 

I want it to get you thinking about how what I post and write about may— or may not apply to you. 

(That’s right: my writing is JUST as useful to you EVEN IF I post things that don’t quite “click” with you…because it’s made you think deeply about what DOES “click” for you!) 

I want my writing to inspire and motivate you— to take action, to continue in your therapy or recovery journey, to not give up or give in. 

A huge problem the self-help industry has right now is recognizing its limitations. 

Self-help “gurus” often seem to be allergic to the phrase, “I don’t know.” 

They seem to think that “experts” or “leaders” never utter the phrase, “I need to think about that,” or “I need more information.” 

And, don’t get me wrong, I get it: it’s not great marketing for an “expert” to say they don’t know something; or that their experience and expertise has limitations; or that they sometimes don’t know what to do without more information. 

The thing is, we live in the real world here. 

Recovery and personal growth are often non-linear, confusing, counterintuitive processes. 

What we need in our personal growth journeys is not hype or hyperbole about what one’s writing on the internet, or what one’s latest and greatest workshop, can do for you. 

We need realistic acknowledgment of reality. 

And the reality is: “experts” are limited. 

Doctors are limited. 

Coaches are limited, consultants are limited…and don’t get me started on “gurus.” 

On your personal growth or recovery journey, please: keep your eyes open. 

Watch carefully for “experts,” “gurus,” mentors, or guides, who are overselling themselves or their abilities. 

It really, truly does make a difference in the results you produce on your journey. 

 

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Real world trauma vs. “movie trauma.”

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I’m kind of sick of the cultural double standard when it comes to post traumatic stress disorder. 

On the one hand, every Veterans’ Day and Memorial Day, we are flooded with posts and exclamations of how much we value our veterans’ service. 

In popular culture, the zeitgeist has shifted dramatically the last several years toward believing people when they allege they have been the victims of sexual assault. 

The subjects of childhood trauma and attachment trauma are very often addressed in movies, TV shows, and documentaries. 

Looking at the situation from the outside, you’d think that the culture had come a long way toward acknowledging the reality of trauma and its effects. 

But I’m not sure we really have. 

Yes, PTSD gets a lot more publicity than it used to. 

And yes, we give lip service to the fact that it is not victims’ fault when they are traumatized. 

But I work with dozens of trauma patients every month— and from them, I hear a somewhat different perspective on how their difficulties are viewed by the world around them. 

It seems to me we still fantasize about an inherent, nebulous quality called “toughness” that makes some people less vulnerable to, or more able to deal with, trauma than others. 

I know of at least one personal development guru who won’t stop prattling on about “grit” (a quality he has decided that he, specifically, has in abundance). 

As a culture, we produce more popular entertainment than ever that portrays situations that, if they existed in real life, would ONLY result in massive psychological trauma for everyone involved…but the “heroes” of these movies and TV shows rarely, if ever, display even remotely realistic symptoms of post traumatic symptoms. 

It does not seem to me that we glorify recovery from trauma. 

Rather, we seem to glorify immunity to trauma. 

We glorify and mythologize people who seem to be able to “take” a lot of trauma, without flinching or having to pause to regroup their lives. 

We glorify people who “push past” their trauma in order to tell their stories…but we rarely hear about the coping skills those people had to develop and the therapy work they had to do in order to get to the point where they safely COULD tell their stories. 

Don’t get me wrong: trauma survivors are among the most courageous, resourceful people on the planet. If you do trauma work, you will witness courage (including courageous vulnerability) like you’ve never dreamt existed. 

But the real experience of trauma recovery is not like an action movie or a Hallmark special. 

As a culture, we need to check our expectations of trauma survivors— and our responses to them. 

When we are confronted, as a culture, with people who are experiencing the common, predictable aftereffects of trauma— such as addiction, anxiety, and dissociation— we do not tend to respond with sympathy. 

Rather, we tend to respond with annoyance and shame. 

We tell survivors to “get past it.” 

We tell survivors to “not let the past control them” (without telling them much about HOW to not let the past control them). 

And we invariably compare real world survivors to the “gritty,” “tough” survivors we see in popular entertainment— and wonder why they can’t be as courageous and resourceful as those characters. 

If you’re a trauma survivor and you’re reading this: you don’t have to compare yourself to anyone in the media or any character in popular entertainment. 

Those personalities and character have heavily cultivated, carefully managed public personas. 

Your journey is your journey. And it’s likely a lot messier, a lot more exhausting, a lot slower, and a lot less linear than anything you see on TV or in the movies. 

Easy does it. 

Recovery takes the time it takes. 

Take the time you need— and travel the path you need to. 

 

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Your addictions will not go quietly.

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Make no mistake: your addictions will not go quietly. 

They will fight for their right to ruin your life. 

They will fight for their right to lie to you about how much better they can make your world. 

They will fight for their right to steal your time, your money, your energy, and your future. 

I always find it kind of laughable when someone opines that overcoming an addiction is just a matter of “willpower.” 

That it’s just a matter of “saying no.” 

That if you just WANTED to overcome your addiction enough, you’d just DO it. 

I think about this whenever I hear anyone smugly proclaim that people’s behavior invariably reveals their priorities. 

Sometimes peoples’ behavior reveals their priorities…but often it’s more complicated than that. 

Often an addiction has its hooks in a person, and has hijacked their ability to make decisions and be honest with themselves. 

Do not underestimate your enemy when it comes to addiction. 

And do not fall into the trap of believing that people can only be addicted to drugs, alcohol, or behaviors like gambling. 

The internet has made it easier than ever to be addicted, in every sense of the term, to a lot of things that are perfectly legal, often free (at least, at first), and even quite popular. 

Never has it been easier to quickly develop an addiction to pornography. 

Never has it been easier to quickly develop an addiction to social media (which comes bundled with other, more complicated and insidious addictions, such as approval and people-pleasing). 

Never has it been easier to develop an addiction to spending, acquiring, and shopping. 

No one is immune to the potential of addiction. 

No one is inoculated simply because they are “smart” or “strong.” 

And, once hooked, no one— literally no one— has an “easy” time getting away from their “drug” or behavior of addiction. 

The good news is: once we see an addiction for what it is, we really can defeat it. 

It’s not easy, it’s not simple, and it’s usually not quick. But it is possible. 

Overcoming addiction requires a lot of honesty with ourselves. That’s hard. 

It requires us to voluntarily say “no” to experiences that, even if they are demonstrably destructive in the long run, often make us feel better in the moment. That’s really hard. 

And overcoming addiction usually requires us to identify things that are more important to us, in the big picture, than avoiding pain and feeling pleasure. That’s really, really hard…especially if we’ve lived lives that have tended to be short on pleasure and long on pain. 

But it’s possible. 

All of it is possible. 

Don’t get me wrong, it’s ugly and it’s tiring and it has a tendency to make you mad at God for creating a world in which our brains are so susceptible to getting hooked on things as stupid as porn or social media or online shopping. 

But it’s also very much worth it. 

I don’t know why we’re wired this way. 

But I know that it’s never too late to rewire ourselves. 

You’re never too old or too far gone to go from “addict” to “recovering addict.” 

No matter that that voice in your head is telling you. 

 

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Victims are not responsible for having been abused. Full stop.

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Vulnerability takes many forms. 

It can look like physical frailty, lack of strength, or lack of size. 

It can look like lack of information or experience. 

It can look like physical or psychological disability. 

It can look like youth— or age. 

Factors that might not make one person particularly vulnerable, might be devastating to another person’s ability to make decisions and defend themselves. 

There is no one-size-fits-all approach to assessing vulnerability. Everybody’s capacities, including their relative strengths and weaknesses, are at least a little different. 

There is one thing we can say across the board when it comes to vulnerability, however: when someone is vulnerable, they are not responsible for what is done to them by a less vulnerable person. 

Children tend to be more vulnerable than adults, due to their youth, size, and lack of life experience. They are not responsible for what is imposed on them by adults. 

No child is ever responsible for having been abused by an adult. 

No child is ever “to blame” for not having reported abuse or not having asked for help. 

Children are not responsible for the trauma inflicted upon them, or for not being able or willing to reach out for help. 

Most of us might instinctively realize the truth of this. Even though many childhood abuse victims grow up blaming themselves either for being in an abusive situation in the first place, or for having “let it go on” by not reporting, most of us— at least when we step back from the situation— have a hard time holding a child responsible for having been abused by an adult. 

Many of us are not as charitable when it comes to adults, however. 

Many people, even if they are willing to be realistic bout the fact that children don’t “ask for” trauma or abuse, then turn right around and hold adults to a much different standard. 

When an adult is in an abusive situation, it’s often asked why that adult didn’t simply leave. 

When an adult is in an abusive situation, it’s often asked why they let it go on, instead of reaching out for help or reporting their abuser. 

It is very important to understand that many of the same factors that keep children from escaping or reporting abuse, are operational with adults…especially if those adults grew up having been abused. 

In order to escape, avoid, and prevent abusive situations, specific knowledge and skills are necessary. Emotional regulation skills, planning and organizational skills, and behavior management skills all come into play. 

If you can’t manage your fear, figure out how to escape, be able to plan where to go and how to avoid the potential danger presented by an abuser, you’re not going to get far. 

People aren’t born knowing how to do all of that. 

And if people grow up being abused themselves, it’s unlikely they’ve learned. 

In fact, it’s very likely they’ve not learned any of those skills, at least not in an applicable way. 

The variable at play here isn’t age. It’s vulnerability. 

The same standard simply does not apply to more vulnerable people and less vulnerable people. 

Assuming that everyone in an abusive situation had equal resources to escape it is like assuming that everyone has equal resources to pay for attorneys when they get into legal trouble. 

It just isn’t the case. 

The temptation to blame or shame adults who find themselves in abusive situations is strong. 

We like to blame and shame them, because it reinforces this delusion that WE’LL never be in that situation, because WE know how to prevent or escape it. 

Blame and shame don’t help anyone. 

That goes DOUBLE for blaming or shaming yourself. 

We need to get past it. 

We need to realize that abuse situations really do a number on our ability to cope and function. 

And above all, we need to get realistic and compassionate about what abuse victims need. 

 

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Remembering what we know.

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Most of the time, you don’t need a therapist or coach— let alone a “guru”— to tell you what to do. 

That’s not because therapists and coaches don’t know what they’re doing, or because therapy or coaching isn’t valuable. 

(The guidance of self-styled “gurus” may be a different matter.)

It’s because most of the time, we don’t need to be told what to do— we need to be reminded of what we know. 

You have wisdom, intelligence, and experience. 

That’s right. You, right there, reading this. 

If you’re reading this blog, you probably even have a fair amount of knowledge and experience specifically with recovery skills, therapy tools, and personal development programs. 

The value of therapy or coaching isn’t necessarily in all the profound wisdom or new philosophies and tools they make available to us.

We have tools, skills, and wisdom available to us right now. 

The problem is, we very often struggle to remember and use those things when we need to. 

This isn’t our fault. When we struggle to remember or use what we know, it’s not because we’re stupid, incompetent, or worthless— no matter what that little voice in our heads insistently says. 

No, when we struggle to remember or use what we know, it’s most often because we’re stressed, triggered, or exhausted. 

Those circumstances make it difficult for ANYONE to remember and use what they know. 

The keys to successful recovery or personal development are probably not going to be uncovered by paying thousands of dollars to a self help guru for the latest and greatest course in “Mental Mastery and Power.” 

Rather, the keys to recovery and personal development are figuring out ways that work for you— you, specifically— to remind yourself of what you know, when you need to be reminded (and, yes, sometimes a therapist or coach can play an important role in figuring that out). 

How can we remember what we know, when we need to know it? 

First thing’s first: make a list. 

Make a list of every single thing your therapy, your reading, and your experiences have taught you about recovery and personal development. 

No insight is too small. 

Everything that is true– but, more importantly, useful– makes the list. 

You’ve learned ways to reality test your thoughts. 

You’ve learned ways to distract yourself long enough to let a craving pass. 

You’ve learned ways to tolerate pain and discomfort. 

You’ve learned ways to energize and motivate yourself (even temporarily). 

Write them all down. Keep a running list. Add to that list throughout the day as things occur to you. 

Keep your list handy. 

Keep it on your phone, or in your planner, or in a notebook you carry with you most of the time. 

You’re going to need to keep it handy because you’re going to be reviewing it— a lot. 

The not-so-secret secret about all of this is: we have an easier time remembering what we see, hear, read, and think repeatedly. 

I want you reviewing your list of skills and tools— very often. 

I want you reviewing it during down times in your day. 

Review it while you’re on hold on the phone. During commercials while you’re watching TV. While you’re waiting for the microwave to ding. 

Review that list until the tools, skills, and insights on that list become as second nature as your Social Security number or the lyrics to your favorite song. 

Understand: compiling your list and imprinting it on your brain is just a start. 

But it makes everything else enormously, exponentially, unequivocally easier. 

 

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Work hard. Work smart. Stay sharp.

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There’s no guarantee that the things you put work into, will work out. 

I wish there was such a guarantee. 

It’d be amazing if hard work was the only factor that went into whether a project was successful or not. 

Unfortunately, however, we all know the truth: hard work does not guarantee a successful outcome. 

There’s luck. There’s timing. There are the actions and intentions of other people. And there are dozens of other variables— some known, some unknown— that come into play. 

No. Hard work is not sufficient to ensure a successful outcome. 

It sure tends to be necessary, however. 

The trick for many of us is not to fall into the trap of thinking that just because hard work doesn’t guarantee an outcome, that we can somehow get away with NOT working hard. 

While it’s true that hard work will not guarantee an outcome, it’s also very true that the projects that we do put hard work into, tend to be more successful than those projects that we let cruise along on autopilot. 

It’s not enough that our work be hard, or effortful. 

Our work needs to be smart. 

We need to apply our resources intelligently. 

We need to pay attention to the data generated by our efforts, and be willing to adjust our approach in response to that data. 

Above all: we need to avoid going on autopilot. 

We need to avoid getting complacent. 

We need to avoid buying into assumptions about what does work and what doesn’t work— and, instead, be constantly experimenting, trying things out, adjusting our strategy and tactics. 

We need to stay sharp, in other words. 

That’s sometimes easier than it sounds. 

It’s tough to stay sharp when we’re tired. 

It’s tough to stay sharp when we’re frustrated. 

It’s tough to stay sharp when we’ve had setbacks. 

It’s tough to stay sharp when our hard work in the past hasn’t panned out, for whatever reason. 

The thing about recovery and personal development is, no one’s asking you to be superhuman. 

Nobody’s expecting you to do things that are beyond the scope of your abilities. 

Nobody’s expecting you to leap tall buildings in a single bound. 

This whole project is not about “becoming superhuman,” despite what some personal growth gurus claim. (I regularly see posts from at least one who claims his techniques will help you achieve “superhuman performance”— as if that’s actually a thing.) 

This whole project is about figuring out ways to stay sharp in the real world. 

It’s about organizing and using the skills and tools you have— not the skills and tools you wish you had. 

It’s about figuring out what works for you in sustainable, realistic, ways. 

You can do it. 

People do it all the time. 

If, that is, you work hard, work smart, and stay sharp. 

 

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