Those of us who live in one day at a time recovery know that there can still be a bit of noise in our heads even after substantial time in recovery. Often this noise is what we call self-defeating thinking. We become trapped in the idea we are not worthy of love and belonging. Our thinking tells us that we don’t measure up. We catastrophize our humble purpose and put shame on ourselves by telling ourselves others master their fears and rise to the occasion by being heroes and fighters brimming with the courage, the confidence, and the strength of warriors. When we do this we are destroying any sense of inherent dignity that is ours to have. We are being unkind to ourselves. Today we know this, and we know we would not do this to another person. We give ourselves grace and love. We let go of guilt, shame, and remorse. And we do not let fear consume us. We reach out and we breathe. Sometimes we pray. Some of us need medication. We don’t have to be a warrior. We just let go and we know we are worthy of love and belonging so we treat ourselves with inherent dignity. It takes time but it gets better. Trust in the process.
Those of us who live in one day at a time recovery ask ourselves a question. The question is, “Can we captain our own ships?” We believe we can but what we really want to know is can we captain our own ships like a seasoned veteran. The first thing we need to know is we would need help. We need to know this because captains captain ships in all kinds of weather. By then we realize we need to pray. We know we would have trust others. One day at a time we would have to trust ourselves. We would even have to retire to our quarters and turn our ships over to those we trust. Again we pray. Then we would realize that we could captain our own ships, but would we want to. Not by ourselves so again we pray. We didn’t make the stars.
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear the songs that songbirds sing
You wouldn’t hear the whooshing wind or any other thing
You wouldn’t hear the joy of love or hear the children dance
You wouldn’t hear the buzzing bee or a raindrop’s second chance
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear the church bells as they chime
You wouldn’t hear the trumpets sound or poets when they rhyme
You wouldn’t hear the whistle blow to start the morning’s work
You wouldn’t hear the grass be cut or hear the coffee perk
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear the waves crash on the beach
You wouldn’t hear that every day puts love within our reach
You wouldn’t hear the doe and fawn or the beauty that they give
You wouldn’t hear the gift of joy in this world that we live
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear that peace is meant for you
You wouldn’t hear that people care or that the sky is blue
You wouldn’t hear when troubles come that they can go away
You wouldn’t hear that Heaven’s real and we don’t have to pay
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear that people live and die
You wouldn’t hear that people laugh and sometimes people cry
You wouldn’t hear that love is real but sometimes people fall
You wouldn’t hear that we have hope and hope comes for us all
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear the songs that songbirds sing
You wouldn’t hear the whooshing wind or any other thing
You wouldn’t hear the joy of love or hear the children dance
You wouldn’t hear the buzzing bee or a raindrops second chance
If silence stopped you wouldn’t hear that peace is meant for you
You wouldn’t hear that people care or that the sky is blue
You wouldn’t hear when troubles come that they can go away
You wouldn’t hear that Heaven’s real and we don’t have to pay
If silence stopped if silence stopped you simply wouldn’t hear
If silence stopped if silence stopped you simply wouldn’t hear
You wouldn’t hear that love is real but sometimes tears will fall
You wouldn’t hear that we have hope and hope comes for us all
Those of us who live in one day at a time recovery eventually are touched by humility. Sooner or later we realize we don’t have all the answers as to how to find and live in recovery. Some people living with concurrent disorders just sort of stop. That’s it. They just stop and recover. We can accept this and be happy for these people. Nonetheless humility also lets us know we can live in recovery one day at a time. It lets us know we can reach out and we don’t have to do it alone. We are also humble enough that we can ask a God of our own understanding if this God will help us when we feel like we really need it, or even when we least expect it. We have enough humility to remember when we reached out, lost, or kind of lost, and said “God help me”. And some of us have enough humility to say that we don’t comprehend the what, how, or why. All we know is that we believe in something. And we know this is okay. Touched by humility, we reach out and live our lives one day at a time.
Those of us who live in one day at a time recovery know one thing. That one thing that we do know is that we do suffer. The Buddha said it is a part of life. We who have been alone, captured in the despair of our addictions and the pains of mental illness know that life is suffering. The sad thing about it is we will even suffer while in recovery. Another sad thing is suffering puts a strain on relationships. Life isn’t always about me. We need learn this. Another reality though is we do need support in organizing our agendas. We people in one day at a time recovery know we need to reach out. No-one should have to organize an agenda on living with life’s suffering by themselves. Even Christ needed friends. That was part of his message. Please reach out. One day at a time.
Those of us who have been living in one day at a time recovery, think of other people with gratitude. Those who we learn to trust are simply gifts for us. They can take us out of our problems, or at the very least, be a sounding board. And when we see their faults and flaws, we see that they too, just like us, are human. Should we criticize them, we are probably seeing our own shortcomings. We need remember that faults, flaws, and shortcomings are not failings. They are a part of being a human being. Human beings who are living beings. Beings who are as important to us as the air we breathe. Often when in panic, they calm us, and help us find our breath. And they want nothing in return. These beautiful caring imperfect people do this because they care. We are learning, one day at a time, the gift of other people.
Many people who live in one day at a time recovery know that recovery is a marathon. We know that we do not sprint from day to day to day to day. The days go by fast enough even when we are pacing them. Sprinting causes us to burn out. We need strength for when we need to go uphill, and we need strength for when we need to go downhill. Both can be difficult. When we learn this, we learn that recovery is not a race. We are simply travelling a distance of recovery that we hope will be the length of a marathon. We might even walk a while, and as we meet others we enjoy it. This is the joy of the marathon. As we walk we will see sprinters running by. As we continue we will meet sprinters who have gone lame. We will help them and they too shall walk with us. These sprinters were lucky enough to have the opportunity to continue the marathon. Some sprinters simply faded away much too fast. So day to day we travel the marathon. Most of us walk enjoying our recovery. It’s not a race. Enjoy it!
When we are living in one day at a time recovery we learn our own ways of shutting off panic. Some of us take a few minutes alone to ourselves. We do this by retreating into a comfortable resting place with something comfortable to either lie, or sit down on. Many of us are not masters of meditation, but we do know how to breathe deeply, hold for a second or so, and then exhale. Some of us listen to guided vocal relaxation recordings. These recordings can be a great help. Some of us simply lie on a bed, breathe deeply, relax, and sometimes even nap. Calmness can be refreshing, relaxing, and healing. We need to tune out the world and shut off the panic. Panic is our minds way of telling our bodies to retreat and find safety. In reality panic feels as if we are being threatened. We leave panic behind when we retreat, breathe deeply, settle in, and relax in a safe comfortable setting. We don’t have to be a meditative guru to stop panic. Retreat, breathe deeply, settle in, and relax. Don’t give up. It takes practice. We are worth it.
Those of us who live in one day at a time recovery know that gratitude is an invitation to belonging. And when we know this, we know belonging is the gift of being loved. And in so, this gift of belonging reveals to us that we are grateful to be alive. We have learned to love ourselves and our commitment to being, and staying healthy, one day at a time. We find ourselves on an imperfect journey of acceptance and wellness. Sometimes we grow in leaps and bounds. Sometimes we stumble, stutter, and fall. Nonetheless we stand again, belonging in the mystery of our journey, hoping our eyes will be open to the joys we shall find and the lessons we can learn. Grace will no longer be a mystery and we shall gratefully acknowledge being aware we are as valuable to life as the gift of the rising sun. We can smile, or we can weep, because we now know no matter what, we belong.
Many of us who are living in recovery know that we are not always working our recovery. We are living a life-style of being healthy one day at a time in which we do not use. Usually we don’t even have to think twice about this. If we do think of it, it is a reaffirmation that we shouldn’t do as such. Why is it this way? It is this way because when we became healthy we became responsible and we started enjoying our lives. It is inviting to be reasonable and reasonably happy. This leads us to being happy, joyous, and free. We can become considerate loving people in real relationships with other people. We can have, or question, our relationship with God – a Creator – the Universe- or whatsoever we choose to. Most of us know that we are not he, she, or they but we know they are. At least we have some belief. We live this live-style and we know it doesn’t have a cheat day like some diets do. We choose this, we trust our faith (though it might change or grow), we reach out, and we try to give back because we really want to.