
My little sister and I were commiserating on the phone last week about our shared propensity for people-pleasing. Well, actually, she was telling me how much she admires my ability to set boundaries around my time, space and energy. And listening to her, I was realizing how far Iโve come in recovery.
โSometimes, Iโm sitting in a meeting thatโs running overtime, and Iโve had to pee for an hour, but Iโm too scared to just leave because thatโs seen as rude,โ my sister said. โAnd then I think, โJen would have been gone 20 minutes agoโฆโโ
Damn straight, sis! We havenโt lived in the same state since the spring of 2000, when she was 12, but my rep in the family as an anxious-avoidant introvert whose signature move is the โIrish goodbyeโ has been firmly established over the past 20+ years. I was a black sheep long before I admitted to being an alcoholic.
โGrowing upโ for me has been a tug of war between a little kid who craves othersโ approval and an adult woman giving herself permission to do what sheโs gotta do. Being stone-cold sober in a booze-soaked world for nearly four full years has forced me to make peace with making waves.
Perhaps I took that to a bit of an extreme Wednesday night. Sitting in a plastic chair in a too-bright classroom with a splitting head/neck ache, having left the house for work that morning at 4:30AM to start seeing clients at 6, I was feeling so deliriously burned out that I used the 7PM break period in my grad school class to pack my shit, jump in the car, and hit the road โ with two hours left until official dismissal. ๐ณ

Was channeling Peter Gibbons the best way to handle my pain in that moment? โNO F*CKING WAY!โ screams the โgood girlโ guilt-tripping rule-follower that still lives inside my head. Even though the demands of my counseling job often drain me to the point of mental bankruptcy, and I see no point in trying to pour from an empty cup, my brain still fired off distress signals as I sped away from campus on Wednesday night.
๐ง : What are you doing, you psychotic freak? What are they all gonna think? Youโre gonna get a bad grade! Youโre gonna get in trouble! What will Mom say?!?
I know for sure that my old AA sponsor, who lived life strictly by the (Big) book, wouldโve chastised me for โacting outโ like โa dry drunk.โ Itโs true that, at present, my emotional sobriety is coasting on fumes. But I feel like anyone working as a drug and alcohol therapist in a community agency while earning their masters while trying to stay sober and be a decent spouse might also find themselves regularly questioning โ and occasionally losing โ their sanity.
Or maybe itโs just me. Since choosing this career path and starting this new chapter, I sometimes feel like a stranger in a strange land, speaking a strange language no one else understands. There are moments I feel as if I donโt fit in anywhere or with anyone โ not the grad school cohort, not the treatment center staff, not the extended familyโฆnot even among my fellow drunks and addicts, now that I am both help-er and help-ee.

For whatever reason, I always loved the song โIn The Meantime,โ which played daily on my local alternative radio station throughout my last few years of high school. I remember owning that whole Spacehog album on cassette tape. The song came on my running playlist the other morning, and I thought, โYep. Resident Alien. Thatโs how I feel, everywhere I go.โ Maybe there was something soothing about the fresh air, the runnerโs high, and the wave of 90s nostalgia, but acknowledging my experience of otherness in that moment made me feel better.
Feeling alienated was a large part of why I developed an addiction, and yet, alienation can be a difficult part of the recovering addictโs experience. Yes, I know thatโs why you go to meetings and โwork a programโ and reach out to others, and tend to your spiritual and mental health, but none of that changes the fundamental fact that living sober day after day โ sometimes under duress โ can feel very lonely.
I tell myself that my feelings are valid, even if I canโt always name them, and even if they come from โcharacter defectsโ or flow from an impure place that still holds on to unresolved grief and resentment.
My experience is real, even if my perception of events can be clouded by self-pity, pride, ego, or โpathological uniqueness,โ as Iโve sometimes heard it called. I tell myself itโs normal to feel alone and isolated when you donโt know anyone else whoโs in your exact same boat. Itโs normal to hurt, cry, lose your shit โ even flee the scene โ when youโre struggling to grow and change.

I tell myself I am not โwrongโ to feel some type of way during class discussions on โhow do we treat alcoholics?โ when โweโ are an alcoholic, or lectures on addiction developed by non-addicts for non-addicts, when those people with those problems are your people with your problems.
This is a real thing for me, whether itโs rational or not. Itโs a thing I have to face and work through, but that doesnโt make it any less hard. And right now, as I near the end of a very long school year, the six-month mark of my counseling career, and my four-year sober anniversary, itโs OK if my survival strategy looks like a flaming hot, socially unacceptable mess.
A coworker whoโs about to enroll in grad school said something that really hit me. Sheโs like, โAddicts donโt usually go on to become therapists because we show up late to life, and it takes so much time and energy to get the degree and the license and do recovery at the same timeโฆโ Hearing that felt like a warm hug. This is a road less traveled, and as Iโm finding out, it gets pretty f*cking rough! I might not be doing it gracefully, but I AM DOING IT.
I just have to keep going. (And let myself go when I gotta go! ๐๐จ)




You know what helps? Self-care. Yes, I said it. I donโt care if you think itโs a cliche buzzword associated with spoiled rich chicks taking bubble baths. I donโt care if itโs something they have to preach in the mental health field, all the while knowing that working conditions donโt really support its practice. In recovery, itโs everything.
To me, itโs essential.
Itโs therapy, spilling my guts to someone who gets it โ or at least wants to. My therapist stopped taking our insurance (gulp), but sheโs been with me since my first month of sobriety, and I need her listening ear and tough love now more than ever before. She started a support group for women in helping professions, which, like my entrรฉe into the 12-step world, has opened me up to new possibilities. Itโs helped me start dreaming about what I want to do when I graduate and (hopefully) come up for air.
Itโs exercise, moving my body and communing with nature. I run about as fast as I can walk these days, but seeing the sunrise at Tyler State Park while 90s rock pumps through (and sweat rolls into) my ear buds is such a glorious mood booster that I donโt even care if Iโm not actually getting in shape.
Itโs music, books and podcasts. Itโs HBO, Showtime and Netflix shows, both old and new. Itโs art, that which you admire and that which you make yourself, and the magic of creativity. Itโs forcing myself to sit down and write this post because I know how cathartic it is to tell my story, and if I continue to let this blog slip down my priority list, itโll go dark forever.
Itโs sleep, glorious sleep, at โweirdโ times of day when everyone else is out and about, and sometimes, when theyโre still sitting in class. ๐คท๐ผโโ๏ธ
Itโs setting boundaries around my time, space and energy, saying โnoโ to expanding my work schedule or adding more clients into my caseload, even though saying โyesโ would please an authority figure โ not to mention that little kid inside who feels comforted by other peopleโs approval. Itโs turning in class assignments that arenโt my best work, even though the little kid made grades her currency, and finally acknowledging reality: my clients DGAF about my GPA.
And itโs love, sharing the time and energy I do have left after work and school with the one person in the world who does really โgetโ me โ or, even when he doesnโt, he accepts โ in the one place where I can really let my freak flag fly. Iโve been joking with my husband lately that I feel like Oscar the Grouch. And that makes him Slimey the Worm, whether he likes it or not. (Seriously, though; who wouldnโt like this? ๐โฌ๏ธ)

Thereโs something in my eye, so Iโll finish by saying: Anyone out there who feels like an alien โ or an angry Muppet โ struggling to blaze your own recovery trail with no roadmap, dwindling inner resources, and what seems like a scarce support system, your experience is real. Youโre not alone. Your feelings are valid.
Theyโre also only temporary. Things will get better, if you just keep going.
Whatever you have to do to push through this โmad seasonโ with your sobriety intact, even if it gets you a โbad grade,โ God speed. See you on the other side!

Thanks Jen. I hope you get a breather soon. That’s an incredible pace. There was a time when I worked as a bookkeeper, a school bus driver, a cab driver and a certified massage therapist, all at the same time. And, of course, I still needed to make meetings on a regular basis. The schedule was dizzying. It felt like, wake up, run for your life for 18 hours, go to bed and wake up and do it again. If I tried to look beyond my schedule for any given day I was afraid it would overwhelm me and I would either collapse or cut ties and run. I’m glad I had help learning to focus just on that next task, and then just on the next one. The motivation for me at that time, as a single dad, was my children. They were little and they needed me to be able to do it in support of them. Fortunately, that stage of life was temporary. I bought enough time, and my schedule eventually lightened up. Thankfully, I too had one or two people who knew what my life was like then, and they acted as receptacles for my anxiety ridden rants and fears. They were reassuring and they were a part of my self care plan. They shared tickets to ball games, concerts and museums with me and we exchanged miseries, to and from. One guy even used to run with me. Tyler Park was one of our routes.
I hope your relief comes soon. It’s an amazing job you’re doing. I appreciate you sharing it with us here.
Peace.
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This paragraph, mi amiga, is poetry. If I am ever on a committee convened to create a new bible I am going to propose this passage. “Please turn to Weilgus chapter seven verse four.”
“I tell myself that my feelings are valid, even if I canโt always name them, and even if they come from โcharacter defectsโ or flow from an impure place that still holds on to unresolved grief and resentment.”
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