Katie MacBride survived 0.4 BAC to become a successful sober writer. Discover how removing substances unlocks authentic creativity and sustainable success.
Thanks for this summary, Josh. It is nice to have succinct notes to refer back to after your conversations. I enjoyed Katie’s take on the necessity of finding the right path for yourself in recovery. I, too, was very active in AA circles for 7 years and then spottily thereafter. I’ve found other means to feed my spirit and work on recovery and keep myself honest—therapy, my training and work as a chaplain for 30 years, my church community. I recently went back to meetings in April to celebrate 31 years and have been enjoying the option of Zoom meetings. I’ll continue as they feed me. However, Katie’s approach of alternative ways of connecting and the sober folks I’ve discovered on Substack also feed me.
Thank you for joining us Kathi and your question, support. I agree with Katie and you in that we make our sobriety “our own.” It’s unique to us because we are unique to ourselves. So important. 💛
Thanks for this summary, Josh. It is nice to have succinct notes to refer back to after your conversations. I enjoyed Katie’s take on the necessity of finding the right path for yourself in recovery. I, too, was very active in AA circles for 7 years and then spottily thereafter. I’ve found other means to feed my spirit and work on recovery and keep myself honest—therapy, my training and work as a chaplain for 30 years, my church community. I recently went back to meetings in April to celebrate 31 years and have been enjoying the option of Zoom meetings. I’ll continue as they feed me. However, Katie’s approach of alternative ways of connecting and the sober folks I’ve discovered on Substack also feed me.
Thank you for joining us Kathi and your question, support. I agree with Katie and you in that we make our sobriety “our own.” It’s unique to us because we are unique to ourselves. So important. 💛