The Only Way Out is Through

I was always quick to claim a coincidence. I’d tell my sponsor about each instance, which happened often during early recovery. I’d roll my eyes dramatically at the overused expression, “Everything happens for a reason” especially when it meant going through pain.

It was the weirdest thing; I hadn’t written anything for over 3 years and out of no where, my sister sent me a notebook in the mail.

She nodded along, smiling in her lovable-all-knowing-but-never-smug way. She would say nothing and she waited, for as long as it took. I wanted so badly to skip to the easy part. Bypass all the hard stuff, the darkness that comes with addiction.

The only way out is through.

I know now that things don’t happen by chance, but rather these are “God Shots”—something that is inexplicably profound in timing and occurrence. Smaller than miracles, but too weighty to be ignored. A God Shot can be a single thing, or it can be multiple pieces that all need to discovered, understood, and then pieced together like a puzzle. The story of this God Shot, is the latter.

It was not an accident, in January of 2020, I made a sweeping declaration that this would be the year, I’d declare myself a “writer”. While I was unsure of what exactly this would entail, I knew it was what I wanted and so I would go after it, with my whole heart, like I do for all things that matter. This meant laying out vulnerabilities and sharing pieces of myself as a way of connecting with the outside world. Being a Highly Sensitive Person (also called an “Empath”) in 2020, is like being dropped into a sea of human suffering, while we powerlessly serve as an emotional sponge. Soaking up sorrow, stopping only to absorb more feelings along the way.

Being an Empath is relentless. The only way I found to turn it off, was with alcohol. I would drink at a situation, at an uncomfortable feeling, or almost always, at a person who caused me pain. I needed a numbness to quiet the storm in my head. But this wasn’t the solution; because even the good stuff was muted and everything bleed together--like what happens when I leave my daughters alone with an entire 24-pack of Play-Doh.

Brené Brown says, “The only unique contribution we will make in this world, will be born of our creativity.”

For so long, I had nothing to contribute; alcohol molded all the colors together to create an unimaginative gray blob. I romanticized Poe, Raymond Carver, and Elizabeth Bishop, tortured writers who found inspiration within a bottle. But drinking stifled my creativity.

Seeking inspiration during the pandemic, I purchase a painting from an artist I admire. We met in the hallways of our daughters’ preschool last year when she said, “Oh hey, you are Wit and Spit Up”, likely the closest I will ever come to feeling like a celebrity. I did some light internet stalking and discovered she was, Emily Dilbeck, an undeniably gifted abstract artist. We spoke online and I even interviewed her for reference when I decided a main character in my first fiction novel will be an artist.

After careful consideration, I purchased one of her paintings titled “Encompass”. It has an ethereal quality, that’s both whimsical, yet profound. I chose this particular painting despite a dark speck in the center, that has spent its existence on my wall, mocking me. There are several other spots, but I remained focused on this one. I almost messaged Emily a dozen times to ask about it, but that wouldn’t have helped me.  

In sobriety, I don’t have the luxury of harmless thoughts. My survival hangs in the balance and these past five months, I’ve had to limit my access to the toxic turmoil, as much as I possibly can. So much of it cuts so deeply, my exposure makes me no good to anyone.

But my anguish over other people’s anguish, doesn’t actually help anyone.

Worry and sorrow feel purposeful, but don’t accomplish anything.

Upon recognizing this, I finally understood that piece of the painting and why it haunted me; something I couldn’t understand until it was earned. I saw the speck as the way out, the main escape, and it was all I could see. While that speck holds value, all of the loveliness and depth of the painting surrounds it. I was so distracted by the exit, when I am meant to appreciate the beauty inside.

The only way out is through.

All of this led me to where I needed to end up. My God Shot. I am recording this year, documenting, and finding ways to create words from all these feelings that help to explain the inexplicable parts of ourselves; the inexplicable pain of this time. Something that can only occur because I chose sobriety. Maybe someone finds a connection to something I’ve written, a link that helps us relate, or better yet, helps us heal. Now more than ever, we are meant to encompass each other in creativity, with writing as my contribution, and my only way out of the dark.

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A Mom’s Survival Guide to Island Living

Remember back in April when I said Moms in the United States were not OK? Well, that was just a signal flare and now the island is burning.

What most men are starting to piece together at this point, the secret to success, lies at the hands of women. Over the past 145 days, Moms have had time to filter through what is helpful and what is harmful, as we navigate both the physical and mental battles. We are still here, mothering adrift from our village and it’s: lonely, triggering, and enormously difficult. But we are adaptive and here is what we’ve learned. Like everything in motherhood, take what serves you and leave the rest.

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Step Away from the Internet

The only thing worse than the comment section on a political post, is witnessing other people seemingly living their best quarantine life on social media. It’s critical to take extended breaks from both the news and social media. It’s not just because of all the divisiveness, hate, and conspiracy theory insanity—it is also because whatever is viewed and read on a screen is not always an accurate portrayal of reality.

We miss seeing another Mom in Target, standing next to a toddler, fully sprawled on the floor, tears the size of the crocodile musical toy she is refusing them. We need this proof of life because not only does it serve as a reminder of humanity, but because it’s honest and entirely relatable. Front porch photo shoots and dreamy homeschooling setups are a struggling Mom’s metaphorical salt in a festering, oozing wound.

When you go to reach for social media, try a meditation app or listen to a therapeutic podcast instead. The social media highlight reel, is anything but real.

Lean on and Learn from Others

Locate a supportive network of Moms who aren’t afraid to tell the truth. Ones that invite you for a socially distant walk to talk, instead of encouraging you to pick up a second glass of wine.

Find someone who says, I see you’re struggling and I am too.

We have been Schooled

In order for learning to take place, adults need to act like adults. I too want to throw an enormous temper tantrum over virtual schooling again—but neither that, nor using children as experimental guinea pigs will end the spread of COVID-19.

Thank you to the all the brave teachers on the front lines, attempting to safely educate students in person.

We should stop assuming kids will benefit from a virtual world that hasn’t been able to emotionally benefit adults. Online learning, like in-person schooling, isn’t a one-size-fits-all model. It will work for some, but not for all.

When online schooling or homeschooling isn’t the right fit—look into an in-person, cooperative learning pod. Find a family to add to your circle, hire a teacher, or take turns with the curriculum. Children are social creatures and learning, especially from a young age, has more to do with human interaction, than it does words or numbers on a screen.

We’ve Gotten Creative AF

We will do whatever it takes to be social, safely. It’s clear other people are hellbent on killing themselves and others--but policing them requires more bandwidth than we have to spare and we need every drop of energy for our own families. Their stupidity only ignites our creativity.

We’ve done: coffee meet-ups from the trunks of minivans, socially distant walks and runs, 6-ft apart playdates, Zoom book clubs and happy hours, restaurant dining in parking spaces, and kid’s birthday drive-by parades.

Mental Health is the Key to Everything

While we are doing everything in our power to keep our family safe from COVID-19, Mothers also tend to set the tempo of the family’s mental health. Everyone looks to us to be the metronome. When we are off beat, the whole house falls apart.

Prioritize mental health, as if it is our only source of oxygen. Seeking help should be as socially acceptable as washing our hands at this point. Resources are available online--is it ideal, no. Is it essential, yes.

It is OK to say, I’m not OK.

If you look closely, you’ll see me, waving over here on my island, putting out little fires everywhere, disconnected but determined. Mothers may be marooned, but we will always find a way to move us all closer together.

As if it Was All Just that Simple

I am sitting inside my car with my sponsor, several minutes early to our favorite Wednesday night meeting. She’s a woman in her early 60s, full of wit and wisdom, in her final days of life. 

I know it, and she knows it. 

Several years before, ‘M’, I’ll call her to preserve her anonymity, had been diagnosed with a rare, terminal lung disease, and her timeline is running out. 

I start to cry as I take her fragile hand and tell her how selfish I feel, that I am angry. Here she is the model of acceptance of life on life’s terms, and I am a blubbering mess, terrified that my partner on this path of recovery is going to leave me to face sobriety all alone. 

“I’m scared I can’t do this without you,” I admit. 

“Of course, you can. All of the work you’ve done and the strength you’ve found comes from within you. Besides, when you need me, I’ll come back and visit you as a hummingbird,” M says and smiles as if it was all just that simple. 

M died 7 days later.

And so it is decided; I will look for the hummingbirds. 

But more than that, my commitment to recovery was ignited. Here was a woman in undeniable pain, days from the end, determined to provide guidance. Even as she had to stop every few minutes to take in oxygen from the tank at her feet. Surely if my sponsor could muster the determination to pass on to me her insights into sobriety as she was dying, I need to believe I can get through anything.  

And then came Covid-19—a force, determined to test my resolve. I’ve experienced months and months of deeply uncomfortable feelings of powerlessness, reminiscent of my bleakest days in early sobriety.

Every Mom out there has been pushed so far past our previous threshold of what we once considered difficult. Our reality is made worse still by the narrative that says, “Mommy needs wine” to cope—implying we are not strong enough and therefore we must numb away any dark feelings. This is a dangerous falsehood, one I refuse to believe, promote, or live by—as if it was all just that simple.

During the peak of the pandemic, I received M’s 7-year chip. Something she left for me, believing and trusting that I would earn it. I woke up early one morning at dawn, my only opportunity to take time for myself.

I sat outside looking at the hummingbird feeder my thoughtful husband bought after I told him what M had told me. I held our chip in the palm of my hand and did something I’ve done many times before.

I asked for help.

Sobriety during lockdown felt bigger than me. I knew I was meant to survive this sober, but needed a nudge of strength, as if it were all just that simple. Sure enough, M appeared as she said she would, a beautiful reminder of the courage we are all capable of, if we only have the grace to accept it. 

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🎙

I never imagined I’d be asked to speak on a podcast about being a sober parent during a pandemic and the dangerous notion currently circulating, that Mom’s need alcohol to cope with the challenges motherhood.

But here I am.

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