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  <title>419 Sobriety, Service &amp;amp; Success: Rebuilding Life After Addiction</title>
  <description>The Best Worst Thing That Ever Happened A conversation on sobriety, entrepreneurship, and rebuilding a life that actually works There’s a certain kind of person who can build something from nothing. They’re driven. Intense. Creative. Restless. They work hard. They push. They win. And sometimes… they self-destruct. In this conversation, Tim shares what it looked like to be both a high-achieving entrepreneur and a blackout drinker—and how recovery didn’t just save his life, it reshaped his ambition, identity, and purpose. This isn’t a story about “before and after.” It’s a story about learning how to live differently. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; The drive started early Tim began drinking in middle school after his parents divorced and he moved to a new town. Trying to fit in quickly became the gateway to alcohol and drugs. At the same time, he was already wired for achievement. In college, he launched a painting business, hired teams, ran sales and marketing, and made real money—while partying just as hard. That “work hard, play hard” rhythm followed him into adulthood. Success grew. So did the consequences. A devastating drunk-driving crash left him with a traumatic brain injury and months of recovery. Even then, he didn’t stop drinking—he just learned how to drink harder and longer. If anything, achievement became another way to avoid looking at what was really happening. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; High performance can hide a lot Tim went on to build businesses, lead teams, and outperform expectations. But behind the scenes:   drugs escalated   relationships deteriorated   burnout intensified   drinking became non-negotiable   He describes always being “the most messed up person at every event,” even while breaking performance records. That’s the part people don’t talk about. Addiction doesn’t always look like collapse. Sometimes it looks like productivity. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; The moment everything broke The turning point came after a blackout weekend that ended his marriage. It wasn’t just one mistake—it was the undeniable accumulation of years of denial. Within days, he attended his first AA meeting. He hadn’t planned a recovery journey. He just knew his life couldn’t keep going like that. He started going to meetings every day. Sometimes two a day. He got a sponsor, worked the steps, and immersed himself in service. That structure became his lifeline. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Recovery didn’t shrink his life—it expanded it One of the biggest myths about sobriety is that it takes things away. For Tim, it gave him:   community   purpose   emotional connection   clarity   direction   He learned to build intimacy with other people without substances. He learned to cry, share honestly, and ask for help. He learned that vulnerability wasn’t weakness—it was relief. And slowly, ambition changed shape. Instead of chasing validation, he started building a life rooted in service and meaning. Today, he works in recovery, supports others, and still channels his drive—but with balance and intention. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; The routines that keep him grounded Recovery isn’t a single decision. It’s a daily structure. Tim’s core practices include:   morning prayer and meditation   gratitude lists   exercise and physical health   journaling and learning   service and community   time with people who support his growth   He describes gratitude as essential: “If I’m grateful, then I’m not a victim.”&amp;amp;nbsp; Exercise, too, became foundational—not just for fitness, but for mental and emotional stability. He calls it part of his “solution,” not just a habit. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; The entrepreneurial paradox There’s a pattern many high performers recognize:   intense focus   extreme discipline   relentless drive   These traits build companies. But without awareness, they also:   fuel burnout   mask emotional pain   replace one addiction with another   Recovery didn’t remove Tim’s intensity. It taught him how to channel it without destroying himself. Balance became the new metric—not output. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Action Steps: What you can take from this conversation You don’t need to be in addiction to benefit from recovery principles. These are life principles. 1) Build a grounding morning routine Start simple:   gratitude   stillness   reflection   Consistency matters more than complexity. 2) Replace extremes with consistency You don’t need heroic bursts of effort. You need steady, repeatable actions. 3) Notice where achievement becomes avoidance Ask yourself:   Am I building… or escaping?   Am I creating… or distracting?   4) Find your people Recovery happens in connection. Whether it’s:   12-step meetings   coaching groups   fitness communities   spiritual spaces   Isolation keeps people stuck. 5) Anchor your life in service Helping others stabilizes your own growth. It creates meaning that performance alone never will. &amp;amp;nbsp;  &amp;amp;nbsp; Resources Mentioned Books   The Four Agreements — Don Miguel Ruiz   Living Untethered — Michael Singer   Practices   AA / 12-step community   meditation + gratitude routines   exercise for mental regulation   yoga and breathwork   cold exposure / recovery practices   Recovery &amp;amp;amp; Treatment Work   Camelback Recovery   TMS (Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation) as a non-invasive mental health support approach     Guest Contact Info: https://www.camelbackrecovery.com/ 👊🏼Need help applying this information to your own life? Here are 3 ways to get started: 🎁Free Guide: 30 Tips for Your First 30 Days - With a printable PDF checklist Grab your copy here: https://www.soberlifeschool.com ☎️Private Coaching: Make Sobriety Stick https://www.makesobrietystick.com Subscribe So You Don’t Miss New Episodes! &amp;amp;nbsp; Listen to the episode on  Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Amazon Music, or you can stream it from my website HERE. You can also watch the interview on YouTube.  https://www.youtube.com/@theonedayatatimepodcast?sub_confirmation=1   &amp;amp;nbsp;   &amp;amp;nbsp; Apple:  https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast/id1212504521 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4I23r7DBTpT8XwUUwHRNpB Amazon Music:  https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/a8eb438c-5af1-493b-99c1-f218e5553aff/the-one-day-at-a-time-recovery-podcast &amp;amp;nbsp; </description>
  <author_name>Sobriety: The One Day At A Time Recovery Podcast</author_name>
  <author_url>http://odaatchat.com</author_url>
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