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Whatâs a tagline, slogan, or mantra that guides your sobriety journey?
I recently asked this question on Substack Notes, and the responses were beautiful, thoughtful, and deeply resonant. Youâll find them below, along with links to each writerâs profile and publication in case youâre looking for more sober writing and community.
Weâd love to hear from you too! What words or phrases have supported your choice to get and stay sober?
Maybe itâs a classic like âOne day at a time,â or wisdom from voices like:
- Holly Whitaker: âWe need to create a life we donât need to escape.â (Quit Like a Woman)
- Laura McKowen: âThe real question underneath it all is, Am I free?â (We Are the Luckiest)
Or maybe your words come from a spiritual teacher, a meme, or your own brilliant mind.
Whatever it isâprofound, playful, wise, or downright irreverentâwe want to hear the words that serve as your reminder or compass. (And let us know the source, if itâs not your own.)
âFrom Mary Oliverâs poem The Summer Day: âwhat is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?ââ â Ellie Nova, A Little Fantastic Sober Life
âAt the beginning, âJust for today Louise, just for today.â Nowadays I say âslowly, gentlyâ so much that people will hear me saying it in their heads. Listen to all of them, take the ones that call to you. đâ â Louise Atthey, Pearls of Wisdom
âOn surviving through the early days: My mantra was, âMy sons will recover from eating McDonaldâs Happy Meals and watching Toy Story 1-4, but they will never recover if their mom dies of alcoholism.â
Now: everything is happening exactly as it is meant to be happeningâlook for the lesson. (Also: more will be revealed. AndâŚDo the next right thing)â â Kristen Crocker, Recoverettes
âWaking up on a Saturday morning has never felt better.â â JFT Beach đŹđ§ đ đ§ââď¸, Just Beach Happy
ââSecrets keep us sickâ is a powerful reminder of another favorite: âto thine own self be true.â For me itâs all about honesty. We are either relentlessly honest with ourselves and othersâor weâre headed back to enslavement.â â Dee Rambeau, Of a Sober Mind
ââOnly when we are brave enough to explore the darkness will we discover the infinite power of our light.â (Brene Brown)
I ran and I hid for so long behind the veil of alcohol, terrified of what I might find if I stopped and looked into the darkness. I always wanted to be accepted and to belong. Now, Iâm finally existing without that debilitating fear of judgment that kept me stuck for so many years, and itâs so lovely and bright.â â Kimberly Kearns, Unshattered Sobriety
âSomething I come back to again and againâincluding in the next layers of sobriety, after more than five years alcohol-freeâis a question I got from senior Buddhist teacher Gil Fronsdal. He asked (in a different context, but it still applies):Â Is it connecting or disconnecting?
Meaning, is somethingâwhether a substance or a behaviorâconnecting me to my deepest, truest, most essential self? Or is it numbing and distancing? Is it connecting me to others in the truest sense? Or is it simply bonding over a shared drug of choice?
These days, as much as I can, I choose whatâs connecting.â â Dana Leigh Lyons, PERFECT HUNGER
âDo or do not, there is no try. âYoda Itâs been helpful to me when I catch myself saying âIâll try to âŚâ
âIâll try toâ is an escape hatch. I know Iâm not committed when I say those words. So Yoda reminds me if something needs doing then it must be done, irrespective of how I feel about it.â â Adam PT, RehabitusÂŽ
âMy mantra that keeps me tethered to sobriety comes from Rumi:Â âThe breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you. Donât go back to sleep.â
When I was a drinker, I essentially sleepwalked through my life, dipping in and out. Numbing when moods were up or down. Every morning now feels intimate. I wish I woke up sooner.â â Allison Deraney, DARE TO BE
âLauraâs âAm I free?â For sure. Also, a check/reminder for me if the drinking parts ever pop up: âis it lifegiving?â Sure it was an escape, but it was never lifegiving, for me at least.â â Josh Luton, Gone Dry
âI just remind myself thereâs nothing for me thereâI know whatever it is about the drink that might appear to be enticing is a lieâthe devil has been unmasked.â â Julie Fontes, Like a Normal Person
âMine is more so a question I would ask myself or reflect on, in hard moments when I thought of âgoing backâ or âgiving upâ I would pause and reflect on what life looked like before, and would âgoing backâ solve anything? How would I feel if I âwent backâ? I would feel worse than I did in that moment. I would always end up realizing I had changed and grown so much I couldnât go back even if I wanted to. There was nothing to go back to in the best and most beautiful way possible.â â Jamie Marie, Life with Jamie Marie
âI have to keep doing the next right thing.â â Shannon Whistler, SoulSearching with Shannon
ââDiscipline equals freedom.â âJocko Willink, retired U.S. Navy SEAL and leadership author.â â Josh Woll, The Sober Creative
âSobriety without transformation is just white-knuckling. You werenât made to survive, you were made to be free.â â Mac Dohm, Porn Free Millennial
âNo more devastation â ď¸. Isn.t that powerful?! It is based on legendary Allen Carrâs âEasy way to control alcoholâ one of my favourite AF tools.â â A Horseman in Shangri-La, The Exhilarated Tribe
ââThis feeling is temporary.â Similarly to âone day at a time,â this mantra helps me stay grounded in the present by reminding me that emotions, moods, and cravings come and go. Itâs easy to spiral when youâre in the thick of it, but these words always bring me back to the present, to my breath, and to the understanding that being human means riding out the ups and downs of life. It helps me realize that the last thing I want to do is numb the experience.â â Lindsey Goodrow, Sober Gemini
âItâs definitely one day at a time, but on top of that is âpeace above me, peace below me, peace all around me.ââ â Grant Currie đ¨đŚ
âMine is the opening line from Mary Oliverâs Wild Geese:
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.It reminds me to drop down into the wisdom of my body, away from noisy, sometimes treacherous thoughts, and trust that an unclouded mind will always find its best path. The body knows that the non-drinking life is best, and long before the mind does. The trick was to learn how to listen to it! â Dr. Paul Chadwick, Control Issues
âFive years in, the mantras I still turn to over and over are: 1) âbe where my feet areâ this is probably the most grounding one as it helps me stay in the present moment, as opposed to future tripping into anxiety or past tripping into guilt or regret
2) âStayâ (I wanted to get this one tattooed on my wrist) also keeps me present, but also keeps me from running: running from feeling feelings that are uncomfortable and that would in the past send me running toward a drink or toward an unhealthy connection to a man
3) âlet it beâ helps me remember that very little is mine to fix or control; that I am only in charge of me
4) âGODâ or âGrace Over Dramaâ has saved me from acting out due to anger or resentment over anotherâs words or actions
5) âItâs not about meâ It really isnât, right? This mantra helps me remember to not take someone elseâs words or actions personally, even and especially when it feels like it IS about me.â â Rosemary Writes & Recovers đš, Rosemary Writes and Recovers
âIâve been trudging this road of happy destiny for 39 years, nine months, and a couple of weeks or so. Now, having gotten this part of the road, I get why I always thought the long-timers were weird and goofy. Itâs real simple: itâs because we are weird and goofy.
Another reason is that until one has been here itâs hard to know how to perceive it. What I can definitely report in the realm of reassurance for those who havenât quite logged as many 24 hour periods as I is that itâs worth it, it gets better, and the program always works if I make an earnest attempt to practice what Iâve learned here.
Now, for the mantra that I use for myself, and for me, it works in the gloomiest and also the most joyous of times: âNo matter what this present moment looks like, God is still everything!ââ â Johnny H is PoweredBySpirit
âThree standbys for me: 1) âThe end of all things is at hand; therefore be self-controlled and sober-minded for the sake of your prayers.â â1 Peter 4:7
This whole passage (1 Peter 4:1-11) reminds me that I left that debauched, intoxicated life behind for a reason. I have gifts, talents, and sacred obligations to people Iâm called to serve and be in relationship with, that I canât abandon for the cheap, temporary thrill of a buzz. Loving & serving others is way more fulfilling.
2) âBe sober-minded, be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.â Also from 1 Peter (5:8), a reminder that spiritual darkness is real, and sobriety is armor against that darkness.
3) âHow is crappy sleep & having a headache going to help me deal with [stressful situation]?!â âMeâ â Sabrina Joy Stevens, Leaving Groupthink, Inc.
âWhen I look at life through the bottle itâs hazy with no clarity. When the bottle is gone I see the light and the beauty around me.â â Brian Lamacraft, Towards a Better Tomorrow
âTurn to the light. âď¸đťâ â Kelly Thompson TNWWY, Thereâs Nothing Wrong With You (And There Never Was) â˘
â1. âItâs none of your business what others think of you. And honestly? Itâs not even your business what you think of you.â I used to perform for approval like it was my job. Codependent, people-pleasing, always chasing the nod. Iâd shape-shift to fit the crowd, dying to be liked and dying a little inside when I wasnât.
Letting go of that was the start of becoming who I actually am. When I stopped living for applause, the imposter syndrome left the building. Now I just try to show up real. Not perfect. Not polished. Just real.
2. The 3 Câs of Al-Anon: âYou didnât cause it. You canât control it. You canât cure it.â These arenât just words. Theyâre a lifeline. They taught me that love doesnât mean fixing someone. That boundaries arenât betrayal. That peace comes from releasing what was never mine to hold in the first place. Recovery gave me back my center. It taught me to stop carrying whatâs not mine and to show up fully for what is.
For me, thatâs the sweet spot where the grace lives.â â Author Jeremy Evans, BETWEEN WORLDS
Whatâs a tagline, slogan, or mantra that guides your sobriety journey? Please share in the comments!
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