Self-Care

Taking care of my spiritual, physical, social, and emotional needs has also been a huge part of recovery and enduring to the end for me.  I must study the scriptures and pray and do other things that nourish and strengthen my spirit to be able to turn away from temptation more effectively.  I must also take care of my body by getting enough sleep and healthy food at regular mealtimes.  I must also stay connected with others and stop isolating.  These needs are critical for me to fulfill the right way, so I don’t end up trying to fulfill them in the wrong ways.  Spencer W. Kimball once spoke about the result of unmet needs:

“Jesus saw sin as wrong but also was able to see sin as springing from deep and unmet needs on the part of the sinner. This permitted him to condemn the sin without condemning the individual.” – Jesus: The Perfect Leader – Ensign Aug. 1979

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Step 2

Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

One of the things I was missing to be able to recover was faith. I had learned that faith comes from hearing testimony of those who have faith and also from righteousness. In the addiction, I had neither. I was isolated, so I never heard anyone testify who had any success in recovery and I really didn’t have any righteousness with my addictions.

I needed to connect with others who were in the same boat as men and see them making progress. Another form of faith that I desperately needed was faith that God loved me, warts and all and that He wanted to help me.

Working step 0 (being a part of a group) gave me all of these things and more. I got to connect with and hear the testimony of their pains and struggles that we’re just like mine. Then, over time, I heard them testify of the progress they were making. I also watched them nodding with deep understanding as I told my story. Then I saw them not turn away from me. They loved and respected me, warts and all. That gave me the faith that God could love and respect and help me too. Then I started to have faith that I could love and respect and help myself too.

This faith is the core of step 2 and it prepares me to start holding onto God instead of my addictions, one incident at a time.

Step 1

We admitted we were powerless over our addiction – that our lives had become unmanageable.

As I spend time in meetings and connecting with other addicts (step 0), I find myself beginning to open up. This is because others are opening up, and nobody is judging them or hating them. They’re just understanding them and loving and respecting them. So I begin to develop a growing trust in the group. I open up about the truth of my situation. I’m not sharing graphic details of my addiction, just being vulnerable. Continue reading “Step 1”

Goals

My whole life, I had been setting goals that had to do with the addiction – like “I will remain sober for 14 days” or “I will be sober long enough to make it to the temple”, or even worse “I’ll never do that again.” Since I had no control over the addiction (step 1), I was making goals that dealt with outcomes that I had no control over. Not too surprisingly, this would usually end up in depressing failure after depressing failure.  It was similar to me making goals for someone else to complete – if I have no control over it, I can’t commit to it.  And when my goals are tied to external, shifting things, then when I reach the goal (like going to the temple or taking the sacrament again) I end up either self-sabotaging the goal during the stressful last weeks leading up to it, or I end up reaching the goal and then fall afterward because the crutch is immediately gone.  Sometimes those crutches can be motivating, but I’ve had to be very careful and focus on working recovery one day at a time instead.

I didn’t realize it at the time, but when I first came into the program, I started changing the types of goals that I made for myself.  I started making goals about recovery: completing certain steps, getting to a certain number of meetings per week, and reading scriptures and praying daily, etc. These are different than the old goals I used to make because I have control over the outcomes of these goals. I can work on the steps five minutes per day or complete Step 4 by the end of next month or attend at least two meetings each week. I had control over these things; and therefore, I had a say in whether I achieved these goals.  What a concept!

Because of this change in the types of goals I was making, I started seeing success in meeting these goals and started seeing a correlation between my efforts and my successes – something I rarely saw when working on goals that dealt with my uncontrollable addiction.  The old addiction-related goals didn’t work. The new recovery-related goals work.

Denial and Gaslighting

In my addiction and in recovery, I had a lot of shame and isolation around what I was thinking and doing.  This shame caused me to hide the truth about my thoughts and actions from others (wife, God, etc.) and, more importantly, from myself.  I couldn’t stand the fact that I was engaging in my addictions, and so I started subtly lying to myself.  This is where denial came in.  Before we go any further, let’s define some terms:

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Self-Respect and Love

For this topic, I offer an analogy that played out in my heart that had a profound effect on me.

Before I got into recovery, I met Christ at the door of my house. I told Him that He didn’t need to come in – I made the mess, I would clean it up, and someday my house would be clean enough for Him to come in without judging me and thinking I was stupid, slothful, and filthy. I sent Him away empty-handed.

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Drama Triangle

One of the relationship dynamics that I learned about in counseling is the drama triangle.  I get into the drama triangle when I start playing one of three roles in my relationships with others or myself: the persecutor, the victim, or the rescuer.  I use these roles to manipulate and coerce myself or others to get what I want.

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Step 3

Step 3 – Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.

The verb in step 3 is not “surrender,” even though that’s what people talk about when they talk about step 3.  The verb is “Made a decision.”  A decision to do what?  To turn my will and life over to the care of God.  When I first got into addiction recovery, I found that there were a few things I could turn over to the care of God.  So I did that.  People often call this “surrender.”  It seems that turning things over to the care of God, letting things go, and surrendering are similar, if not identical.  It’s strange to come into a program where they tell me to surrender when I’ve been fighting for decades.

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Sponsors

A sponsor (some groups call them a “support person”) is someone else in my 12-step recovery group who is more experienced in recovery, further along in the steps and sobriety, who I choose to help me in my recovery.  Sponsors have more experience in recovery than I do and so this helps me to make quicker progress and not have to learn everything on my own by trial and error.

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Dailies

Dailies are things I do each day to strengthen myself like prayer, scripture study, recovery work (the steps), connecting with my sponsor, etc.

Dailies take care of my needs through self-care. Physical, emotional, mental, social, and spiritual needs. Taking care of these needs is like eating good food. If I eat good food, I don’t think about dumpster diving for food. If I’m starving, the dumpsters start looking good.

When I relapse, one of the things I look at is how my dailies have been recently. If they’ve been lacking, I recommit to them.