“Sometimes recover turns into relapse…”

I heard that song lyric today, and it hit me right in the gut. I didn’t pay much attention to the rest of the song… but oh boy, that lyric.

I am in recovery. Not from any addiction, thankfully. At least not of substance. I’m in recovery from myself and have been for quite some time. I’ve done the work. I’ve seen the therapist, I’ve taken the medication, I’ve read the books recommended to me. I’ve really and truly come a long way from the person I was a couple of years ago. I started on this journey because of someone else…and I was an added bonus. Now, I do this journey because of me… and someone else was an added bonus. Notice, that I use the word “was.” Somewhere along the way, I relapsed. Not entirely, not completely. But, I backslid. I got comfortable and fell into some old ways.. old habits. I let my guard down. I let my guard from me down. I lost my humility and found that my ass was right back on my shoulders. It’s not that who I “became” was a facade. It wasn’t. I let my guard down. And that’s the thing about recovery. Just when you think you have it beat,(whatever “it” is, to you.) It slaps you in the face. Sometimes relapse is part of recovery. You hold yourself accountable. You figure out why you did what you did. You do it over. You do it better. Was I unfaithful? NO. Don’t read that into this. Was I unsteady? Yes. I’ll be ok. I’ll get past this. Relapse.. can be.. part of .. recovery. The hardest part…

2 responses to ““Sometimes recover turns into relapse…””

  1. britnicole1005 Avatar
    britnicole1005

    For me it was drugs. I did them to numb me to distract me until they became the thing that made feelings even worse even more intense. So I started recovery. I felt better I got use to a “normal” life. But with a normal life also comes problems and pain of which I’m use to running away from and when I could no longer run I relapsed yet again to numb and distract but that only reminded me and gave me clarity and confirmation of why I stopped the first time. That it wasn’t numbing or distracting but only contributing and making things worse. It convinced me there was no other way but to stop running and just push through. Being in recovery will last a lifetime. A choice I make everyday but because I’ve relapsed and gotten that second wake up call, I know the outcome and the consequences and have no desire to fall back again.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You got a story to tell. You should tell it. I’m super proud of the person you e become. I’m Fortunate to know you before… during… and after. Go You!!!!

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