Social Media: Where is the realness, Where is the truth?

Social Media: Where is the realness, Where is the truth?

So, speaking of the truth, where is it these days? How do we find it? I can tell you exactly where you can’t find it is anywhere on social media. If that is what you are looking for, maybe try a face to face conversation and you might have more luck.

Something that I always say when I am getting ready to speak in a meeting is that I am going to share from the heart, to speak my truth and show my realness and that is what I choose to do in my life as a whole. Granted, I’m not going to be complaining to everyone about my life issues or annoyances, just like I wouldn’t shout in the middle of Wal-Mart, my gratitudes and everything I am thankful for, but I do believe when you are sitting down with your family, close friends, and especially sponsees and others you are wanting to be able to help, you KEEP IT REAL.

How did our society turn into this? Where everything is online and what we show online is nothing short of perfection. Do we feel like we have to post something every day? And how do we feel when enough people aren’t commenting and liking our photos and posts? Did we tell ourselves that we are posting to let friends know where we are at in life, but instead feel like we have something to prove? Do we want to show off all the cool things that are happening in our lives to make others feel envious? Do we feel like we have to be better than the next person, that the grass is greener on OUR side?

These thoughts have been rolling around in my head for awhile now, because honestly, I used to be one of these people in a way. I felt like I was important when I got to show off my “oh so wonderful life”. I felt a rush when I would look to see how many people liked the post, then check it an hour later to see how many MORE people liked the post. Because of my thought processes lately, I have chosen not to post like I used to on social media, not to keep checking it every 5 minutes to see what people are saying about it. Because here is the TRUTH of it, NOONE’S life is that perfect. It’s just not possible. Life happens, so let’s start being real about it.

One of the reasons I have been thinking about this lately, is because my husband and I just recently watched the Netflix documentary about the Watts family, saddest thing in the world. My point with this is seeing if you paid attention to the differences in the social media posts verses the texts in this show. The fake verses the realness. You will NEVER know what is truly going on in person’s life if you are just watching their social media accounts.

My question is, how can you respect, look up to, and idolize, anyone who behaves in that manner? Something that I have been taught from the very beginning of my recovery is that we find the “winners” and those are the ones we stick with. Today, I think I have a much better understanding of that. The “winners” doesn’t mean their life is perfect, or they make you believe their life is perfect, it’s the ones who stay real and aren’t afraid to tell you what is really going on in their lives. Isn’t that where the venerability comes from? Putting it all out there: the good, the bad, and the ugly. The way I look at it, is that’s what I want to share with those who are just getting started on this sober life journey and really anyone else. If I was to tell them that it’s all up from here, they would be sorely mistaken, and if they happened to glance at other sober people’s social media, then most likely they will think they are doing something wrong, especially when they have a bad day, because trust me those days will come.

I’m not saying that everything on social media is a lie, and that life isn’t wonderful and we don’t have amazing, magical things happen to us, but is flaunting it on Facebook what it’s all about? Or is there more to life than that? What if we talked about God on social media? What if we talked about our struggles? What if we talked about our blessings and offered for everyone to join in to include their blessings? What if we talked about what we stand for and what are passions are? Not in a condemning and argumentative way, just saying, hey this is how I feel and if someone feels differently then that’s cool too. What if we helped people on social media instead of hurting them, even if we THINK we aren’t hurting anyone? Maybe instead of posting all over social media, we should spend time with our family, take pictures, and put them in a scrapbook for us as a family to look at. Maybe we should start a book study and invite friends over to discuss it. Maybe we should reach out to others and ask how their day is? Maybe we should stop and smell the roses. Maybe we should get a dose of humility.

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t do any of this perfectly, but the more I grow in my recovery, the more awareness I receive, not only about myself, but the people I choose to surround myself with, and the actions I decide to partake in. I don’t want to be that person anymore. I don’t want people to look at my social media account and think, “wow, she must have a perfect life”. I want them to see the real me and my real life experiences and think if she can do it, then maybe I can do it too.

Just Because I Don’t Have Children, Doesn’t Mean I Don’t Understand

Just Because I Don’t Have Children, Doesn’t Mean I Don’t Understand

And I’m back. Life is busy…very busy. And a lot has happened on here since the last time I talked to you guys. I don’t have all the time in the world anymore. Not like I had all the time in the world before, but with life these days, my free time is truly pretty limited. So, let’s talk about that. I feel like as an alcoholic in recovery, life can be even more demanding and more hectic, than perhaps of a normal person. It’s not just the work and family..its work, family, and all things recovery.

Since the last time I blogged, the biggest thing in my life is that my husband and I took over a company. Yes, that’s right, we OWN a company. Take that one in, Laura. I still can’t believe it myself. Finally and at last, we feel so much more financially stable now and so far, it looks like it will continue that way for the foreseeable future. There are so many pros about owning your own company. You get to make your own hours, hire your own employees, bring in as much or as little money as you want, take a vacation when you want, and actually have holidays. The downside about owning a business is, well, everything else.

My husband is the manual labor worker of our team, so he hires, trains, and works his butt off everyday providing for our family. Once he is done working for the day, then he goes on price quotes and makes phone calls well into the evening. He even works on Saturdays AND an occasional Sunday (the day of rest!). Me on the other hand, I have TWO jobs, actually let’s make that, 3 jobs. I work a full time job, I do all the back end work for the business, and I take care of our household. On a daily basis, I am working 8-5, coming home to cook, clean, do laundry, take care of the dogs, take care of household paperwork and bills, THEN do all the business paperwork. This includes and is not limited to, our marketing tactics, paying estimated taxes, paying employee taxes, paying unemployment, making deposits, conducting payroll, making sure everything organized and keeping up with our trusty business helpers with quarterly reports, liability, insurance, etc. and let’s not forget that I have gone out a handful of times in the field as well, on, you guessed it, Saturday and Sunday, making my work day a 7 day week.

But of course, we can’t forget the recovery part, as well. This includes for myself and my husband, going to meetings, saying “yes” when we are asked to do things in the program, AND having 4 sponsees, EACH. If nobody knows what that entails, let me tell you, it’s some hard damn work. First, I have to keep myself sane enough to actually be able to try to help these people, then I have to find time to meet with these girls every week, individually. And let’s not forget about the texts and phone calls I get from them throughout the day.

I say all that, to say this. My life is busy and it’s consisted of very hard work on a daily basis. Something I hear more often than I would like is the phrase, “only people with kids would understand how busy it gets”. I want to make something very clear, that just because I don’t have children, doesn’t mean I don’t understand, or that I’m not just as busy. My first thought to these comments are “well YOU don’t understand what it is like to own a home, have a couple of dogs, OWN a business, work multiple jobs, or have sponsees”, but I suppose that is not a very spiritual thing to say either. So, instead, I say nothing at all. But isn’t that the truth? How can we say something like that, when we really have no idea what the person next to us is going through, what their life is all about, or what their truth really is.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that parents aren’t hardworking individuals, but I truly don’t think its fair to compare that to anything else, like, just because I’m a parent means I’ve already done the hardest thing in the world. Maybe for you, but maybe for others something else was harder, like getting sober, buying a house, owning a company, getting married, going to prison. Maybe we should be saying, “hey this is what I’m going through and you know what, its hard”. Period. Why does everything have to have a judgement and a comparison?

Gratitude to the FULLEST

Gratitude to the FULLEST

Lately I have been feeling an overwhelming sense of peace, gratitude, and joy and my need to write it down has been even more overwhelming. I remember when I got sober, they said it would come, they said you would be living like nothing you have ever imagined, but at the time I had no idea what that meant. I think I do now.

So, it’s January 28th and Happy New Year! Goes to show how busy I have been already in 2020, or maybe it shows how much I have been participating in life. I have to be able to take myself back down memory lane to when I was in active addiction, when I was living a life of nothingness (even though I didn’t know it at the time), because that is the best way I can reflect on where I am now. Sure, we can talk about the material things that we have now that we didn’t have then: the husband, the 9-5 job, the good reliable vehicles that my husband drives me around in, the dogs, the house that we actually own, the clothes, the purses, shoes, and the jewelry, the dinners out, THE diamond ring, the events, the vacations, etc, versus the apartment, the moped, the restaurant job, the single life, but what I really want to focus on is what I have now on the inside, not just the outside.

I also appreciate being able to look at where I was physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually not that long ago. I have the privilege to be sponsoring 3 women right now and that helps bring it back for me, which is something I have found I have to do to be able to appreciate the present that much more. I remember a little over 5 years ago, sitting on my couch, drinking and crying, alone. I remember being so physically sick when I was or wasn’t drinking and needed a drink. That sickness was terrible, but I think my mind was even worse. I was manipulative, delusional, sad, depressed, and negative. And there was no spirituality to even speak of.

From there, I go to where I am now and my heart has never been so full of joy, contentment, peace and gratitude. No, it hasn’t been constant over the years and sometimes even in sobriety I do still get sad and down, but what I have realized is that gradually and at last it has gotten better and now at about 5 ½ years sober, I can tell you that I am 110% happy and living a life I could have never in a million years dreamed of for myself. I’m not flying on private jets, getting to travel every day of the year, or am rich enough that I don’t have to work, but what I do have is a loving husband where every time I think of him a huge smile comes to my face. I have hopes, dreams, and goals today, I have a life that I am creating with my husband, I have two crazy and amazingly lovable fur babies that want to cuddle and give kisses all the time. I get to spend time with sponsees, giving back what was so freely given to me. I get to laugh and smile, give someone a hug, I get to sit down and be in my own skin in a peace and comfort like I have never experienced.

So, I’m not on top of the world every second of every single day and that’s okay, we can have our off days, not so great days, “bad days”, but why not? Why can’t we be on the top of the world every day? If we wake up and say this is going to be the best day ever, will it? Will it be better than when we were out there drinking and using? I can almost guarantee it. Will it be better than the day we had before? I don’t know. But what I do know, only based off my own experience, is when I channel that gratitude, keeping it green and remembering my past, being able to compare it to what I have going on in my life today, every day is glorious, magic, wonderful, and out of this world. Sound a little extreme? Think about it. If we can change our perspectives and not be bogged down by “life”; then our gratitude, peace and joy can shine through us, for us and more importantly to all those around us.

If I can laugh at work today, instead of complain, then maybe that’s a good day. If I can answer the phone when a sponsee calls me and listen to what they have going on in their life, then it’s probably a good day. If I can tell my family that I love them, instead of looking at their faults and annoyances, then it’s most likely a really nice day. If I can give kisses and snuggles to my fur babies, then it’s a wonderful day. If I can hug and kiss my husband and tell him I love him, then it’s quite a perfect day.

Life is Unfair

Life is Unfair

My husband and I heard an interesting church sermon about a week ago. The pastor was talking about how life is unfair, yet we walk around thinking that it should be fair. He was referring to how we act when bad things happen in our life. The first thing we do when something bad happens is ask “why did this happen to me”, like the world is out to get us. What the pastor explained is that life is unfair because of sin, but there is a just and loving God personally involved that will work things out in His way and His time. God does not punish us, but He will see us through whatever comes our way.

I guess the reason I bring this up today, is one, its something I have been thinking about, and two, of what happened today. Our water at our house has been acting strangely for the past couple of weeks, not getting as hot as it usually is on some days, then fine on other days. We didn’t think too much of it, until my husband finally went under the house this morning to find the entire crawl space soaking wet, pipes busted, water heater busted, insulation coming down, possible floor damage, top to bottom wet, the whole nine. I woke up to this and the very first thought I had was “life is unfair” and even chuckled a little. I don’t know why that was my first thought, but maybe it was God.

Normally it would be “why us?”. We have had so many other problems, another pipe has busted in the past, we had to change thermostats on our water heater because we had no hot water, our cars have broken down I don’t know how many times, the dogs have run away multiple times, we have gotten in several car accidents, my husband has had 3 leg surgeries, we have had work done on our heating and air system because its old and needs a lot of help, both my husband and I have had doctor appointments after doctor appointments, lots of medical tests done, the list could go on and on about the “problems” we have had, all the while trying to stay sober one day at a time. Trying to be responsible adults and take care of things when they arise, instead of completely ignoring them like we did in the past.

Life is hard. When I was still drinking, that is how I thought it was supposed to be. Then when I got sober, I thought that magically all life problems would go away because I was trying to do the next right thing and I didn’t deserve karma anymore. When we still had problems sober, I got mad, because I didn’t think that was how it was supposed to be. What I am beginning to realize now, is that is life. Life is unfair, so let’s stop walking around thinking that it is supposed to be fair and that everything is supposed to go our way.

What do we do with the “unfair?” We take it by the horns, ask God for help to see us through and guide us in the right direction, and take what we need to do one day, one step at a time. So, what if we have to replace all the piping in our house, we have to replace all the insulation in the crawl space, etc. are we going to complain about it? First things first, we call a plumber and figure out the whole extent of the damage: we see what can be fixed, who we need to call next, talk to our insurance company and see what is and isn’t covered. That’s all we can do, right? That and believe that God will see us through this. Do we wallow in self-pity (which is what I normally do), or do we have gratitude that we actually have tools to deal with these kinds of things? What good will it do to wallow? None, I am slowly but surely realizing. As much as I want to say poor me, that could turn into poor me, poor me, pour me another drink and that will never make anything better. Weirdly enough, I don’t want to drink today, I don’t want to scream and shout, I actually seem to have a little bit of a smile on my face. That’s life!

Counting the Happy

Counting the Happy

What I seem to be paying more attention to lately in life is all its many annoyances. I am naturally a little bit of a “Negative Nancy”, so it’s safe to say that I easily see all the annoyances out there. If I let myself, I can be annoyed with absolutely everything.

Just to name a few, I can be annoyed with how people drive on the road, how slow our food takes at a restaurant, how a job on the house isn’t being done fast enough, how I wish my husband was at home more, how I wish I didn’t have so much to do, when all my dogs want to do are go in and out every 5 minutes, how I wish people would stop texting me about silly things, how I wish the doctors could actually figure out what is wrong with me, how long I have to wait at the doctor’s office, how I have too much laundry and dishes to do, how quickly our house gets dirty, how my husband likes to leave clothes all over the house, when people ask me to do things that I just don’t have time or necessarily want to do, when people expect me to have all the time in the world, when certain people share in meetings, when things get complicated at work, when we have too much family stuff going on, when people I need to follow up with wont respond, when there are too many people in Wal-Mart (or should I say “Hell-Mart” as my husband likes to refer to it as), when the things I want/need are too expensive, when I’m running out of money, the list could go on and on. Like I said, if I let myself, I could be annoyed with literally everything.

But this isn’t how I want to live anymore. I don’t think anyone does if they really think about it. I don’t want to be miserable, not at peace, and unhappy, so what do I do to combat this. Well, I ask myself the question “what makes me happy?” and “what puts a smile on my face?’

So much: Christmas music, Christmas movies, funny TV shows, good movies that make you cry (but in a good way!), being able to give my dogs a million kisses, smell their still puppy scent on their ears, and be able to cuddle with them on the couch, being able to see a beautiful sunset, Christmas lights, old pictures, watching the PMO Christmas Show that I participated in when I was a kid, dancing, weddings, watching a good dance, singing, painting, writing, getting a nice card in the mail, doing anything and everything with my husband, including going out to dinner, shopping together, going to events together, cooking together, cuddling on the couch together, sitting around the fire together, watching a good movie together, or having a really good conversation, hanging out with friends and being able to feel the trust and warmth I receive from them, having a lot of laughs with my dad and his family (which I never thought was possible), eating lunch at Cracker Barrel with my mom, getting sweet texts from all of my family, seeing my mom’s dog so excited to see me, feeling good about myself, taking a trip, being able to experience something new, doing service work including bringing meetings into Detox and the Jail, having people actually want me to do things and want me to participate in events (even if I really don’t feel like it, you know how we can get), having a good conversation with my sponsor, decorating for Christmas, having a relationship with God, watching a family out shopping or out to dinner with their kids (if they are being good kids, haha), relaxing, good food (when I can actually eat it), thinking of things that put a smile on my face….honestly I could go on all day, which is really pretty cool.

Who would have thought that what makes me happy, far outweighs those little daily annoyances. When I was drinking I couldn’t see the happy. Who could when we believed that we lived in a dark, hard, world full of angst, bad luck, and turmoil? But the reality, which I know today, is that I have so many good things, happy things, loving things, amazing things that surround me on a daily basis, that I just don’t even know what to do with it all. My gratitude and blessings are endless. Maybe this time of year, it’s easier to see all that because of the reason for the season, or maybe it’s not, because this time of year also tends to bring more annoyances than ever. Either way, I know that God has given me such an amazing life, one that I never thought I could ever hope, dream for, or deserve. So why not give all the glory to Him and bask in that goodness? Do you think God would want you to stay in your misery, sadness, loneliness, frustrations, and annoyances, or get to the other side, open your eyes and see all the amazing wonders of the world that He has put before us?

Writing this has truly brought me such joy, and I have determined that I have to get better about keeping these feelings at the forefront of my mind on a daily basis. I remember when I first got sober, it was recommended to us to write a gratitude list every morning. A few 24 hours later, and I’m just not so good at that anymore. Life is too busy, I can’t wake up early enough, I’ll just do them in my head, but then by the time I get to work in the morning, I have done nothing of the sort and the first annoyance that happens, rocks my world. Maybe because I have given myself no defense against that first annoyance! I watch (well, I hear about it because I’m technically not awake yet) my husband get up every morning and do his morning routine, which includes a gratitude list. He didn’t stop on day 30 of sobriety; he has been religiously making it apart of his life for 3 years and continues to do that every single day. As much as I don’t want to admit it, he might be right about that one. Just for today, I will remember everything that makes me happy, I will pay attention to everything that puts a smile on my face, and I will bask in the goodness that God has surrounded me with. Today, I am blessed, and oh so happy.