Finding Peaks

Young and in Recovery


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Episode 43
Young and in Recovery
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https://youtu.be/09yMcEGU7Cc
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Description

We are joined again by special guest Madeline as we discuss the effects and challenges of being young and in recovery.

Talking Points
  1. The barriers our team experienced when overcoming getting sober in their 20s.
  2. The strategies they used to overcome the barriers.
  3. Was there a moment when you started to believe you could choose recovery at a young age?
  4. How did you build a community?
  5. Quotes
    “I didn’t feel young at all. I felt a million years old. And so tired, so tired. And my concern was not that it was going to kill me. My concern was, what if it goes on like this forever. That would be unimaginable.”
    Madelyn Padilla, UN Admissions Specialist

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    Episode Transcripts
    Episode 43 Transcripts

    [Music]
    hi everyone welcome to another episode
    of finding peeks uh
    i’m really excited today to have chris
    burns and madeline padilla join us again
    uh for a conversation and it’s gonna be
    lively i can already tell because we
    were talking right up until uh we
    started here so uh
    what we have what i have in mind for us
    to talk about today is
    um
    the process of getting young or sober
    when you are young
    peaks
    started out as a young adult well
    started out as a young adult men’s
    program actually and then expanded to
    women but we were with young adults for
    years
    and um and we faced a lot of questions
    and challenges and
    and a lot of obstacles in uh
    in the process of working with people
    getting sober when they’re young
    and
    um
    and now since we’ve expanded to all ages
    i thought it’d be fun to circle back
    around and just kind of have a
    conversation about what it’s like to get
    sober when you’re young and i believe
    both of you
    uh actually got sober while you’re in
    your 20s and um
    and so i just wanted to start there with
    uh maybe i’ll start with you chris
    what barriers do you think you had to
    overcome
    uh when you had when you decided to get
    sober when you were in your 20s great
    question and thank you for kicking this
    off yeah i am really excited about this
    topic there’s a tremendous amount of
    barriers to get sober young i think one
    of the biggest ones in my experience is
    community
    um community for me because there’s not
    a lot of people in your 22 year old
    community generally that’s when you know
    my friends are going off to college some
    of them are going to grad school i
    remember going through
    my facebook feed or whatever it was at
    the time myspace or facebook and i was
    watching as i was getting ready to go
    into treatment and joey was going off to
    med school and kyle was going to be an
    attorney and
    my other buddy darren was going off over
    here to be this uh sports agent all of
    this stuff and really what consumed me
    at that time was a lack of community and
    be shame
    and both kind of play an interesting
    role in that process and so my fear
    early on at 22 years old was that i was
    going to miss an opportunity to connect
    with my friends
    and that’s something we hear oftentimes
    a lot when young people come into
    treatment is this like i’m going to miss
    something i need to get back to my
    friends and i know we do things quite a
    bit different today but i remember one
    of the uh this guy named michael at the
    last treatment center i was at he said
    very something very candid to me that i
    don’t know that we would say today but
    it got me thinking about kind of what
    community actually is and what
    connection um has to do with and he sat
    down with me and i was about 30 days
    into cottonwood day tucson in 2008 and i
    said yeah michael you know i’m just
    looking forward to getting out of here i
    don’t need to do aftercare i’m going to
    be hanging out with my boys they’re
    doing great things and he looks at me
    and he goes you’ve been here 30 days i
    said yeah and he goes how many get well
    soon cards have you gotten from your
    boys and i was like whoa bud
    that’s kind of hurtful but at the same
    time what dawned on me is like i have an
    opportunity
    to create something that’s actually
    never been there
    um and i think the fear is and the
    barriers that i’m going to miss out on
    something when in fact
    i’m not there anyway and i’m not present
    for that process and so i think that’s a
    really big barrier especially for young
    people is this idea that i’m going to
    miss out on something and
    that i’m going to have a life sentence
    of sobriety i’m never going to be able
    to drink normally yeah you know to share
    a glass of wine in italy that was always
    my thing i’m going to be in italy and
    sharing a glass of wine you know um and
    so some of those concrete
    finite points that i heard early on
    really scared me and that’s why i love
    what we’re doing now in 2022 because
    this isn’t a life sentence to anything
    it’s really an opportunity to embrace
    and engage in a recovery 24 hours at a
    time and i believe today
    that each person’s recovery is as
    individual as the person that sits in
    front of us
    and that’s how i think it’s an easier
    bite-sized kind of snack for young
    people is kind of feeding that that
    energy and that positivity i think you i
    think you’re exactly right because i
    think
    i mean i remember i’ve had a lot of
    conversations with with young adults
    like hey you mean i can’t have a glass
    of champagne at my wedding
    or you know even some people are like
    wait i’m not even i’m 20.
    yeah i’ve never even had a legal drink
    in my life and you’re telling me i can
    never have one
    um
    and to your point chris like i think
    it’s interesting to have
    those conversations
    and not be that rigid about it and just
    be like hey this is
    your own journey and be honest with
    yourself rather than
    digging in and being rigid about that
    seems to be really impactful but but i
    do i
    this is so funny you’re like at my
    wedding right or in italy right
    why don’t we assess that when you’re
    getting married and you’re going to
    italy
    right
    sit down then and decide if if you want
    to have that because when you when you
    get to where you want to go and you
    dream these scenarios would be
    the desire is not there
    anymore i think we we focus way too
    heavily on
    the substances the lack of substances
    are they there are they not that’s just
    the least of somebody’s problems and and
    i get why it feels so big and so heavy
    coming in um because it’s like a friend
    it’s like losing a close friend at first
    i get that um
    but that’s just not it’s not about that
    glass of wine it’s not normal in melon i
    know based on our conversation earlier
    too i know
    for you
    you have a d you have a different take
    on this question i have yeah i hated
    this question i hate this question i was
    thinking about it even more actually
    he’s digging into it
    i’m on the right over here and i’m like
    uh you know
    getting young and it’s hard to get young
    sober and like
    peer pressure and like all this like
    educational stuff from back in the day
    was coming back and i was like i didn’t
    feel young at all i felt a million years
    old
    i felt a million years old
    and so tired and so tired and and my
    concern was not
    if it was going to kill me i my concern
    was like what if it goes on like this
    forever
    forever that would be um
    unimaginable so i i feel younger today
    than i ever felt
    using so i yeah i just
    can’t relate but
    i love that
    because
    if you really zoom out and i think
    that’s what you’re talking about is this
    like ability to zoom out some people
    call it playing the tape through
    whatever it might be it’s like
    i’m not well
    i am not well i am dying and when i’m
    being honest with myself and maybe
    that’s a big barrier um is being young
    getting sober is being honest with
    myself
    i just couldn’t find the truth in there
    i was living in this narrative and i
    think i needed to be in that narrative
    because the other side of it to pop out
    of it meant to just bludgeon myself with
    the shame hammer right you know so i
    think you bring up a really good point
    it’s like if we can afford ourselves the
    opportunity if we can get good great
    people around us that afford us the
    opportunity to zoom out and really
    conceptualize what this is and i wasn’t
    always honest about everything i mean
    there were there were things that i
    thought i could do i thought i could
    face it alone
    i thought because i i felt so empowered
    by i had it hadn’t killed me i was like
    i can face anything alone and i can
    survive anything alone and i i could do
    this independently
    yes and no
    yeah i had to find my own way we’ve
    talked about that before it was an
    unconventional
    path
    yeah but but you know there were people
    all around there were people all around
    um
    if i needed them you know so yes and no
    not always honest but
    when i think what i thought of when you
    were saying all that madeleine is i’ve
    definitely
    had people be like well i’m gonna miss
    out on all the partying or whatever and
    then i’m like okay walk me through what
    a party looks like for you
    and really it’s it’s
    it’s actually really pretty lonely yeah
    it’s like
    actually i would just sit in a parking
    lot at king supers and then yeah for
    three hours and then
    go and use a loan
    oh yeah that wasn’t a party oh yeah and
    i hear i hear that on the phone too you
    know people are like well what if i um
    what about my friend i’ve you know i’ve
    heard that and it’s like let’s let’s be
    honest if you’re making this phone call
    this is a solo sport i always say this
    addiction is a solo sport
    it is and it’s it can start with friends
    you know or start socially or whatever
    but i remember thinking thank god i’m
    using a loan i don’t have to share this
    with anybody
    i need it you know it’s for me and if
    someone comes along then i might have to
    like
    i’m going to be in scarcity and that’s
    scarier than being alone you know so i
    can’t yeah
    that’s it’s it’s a solo deal it’s a
    phenomenal this is a phenomenal point
    too because i can remember when i showed
    up at 22 i hadn’t been to a party for
    three years
    not a [ __ ] excuse
    not a freaking party to speak of yeah
    but my brain
    fantasized like i i remem and i was in
    the bathroom by myself yeah nobody was
    there i was disconnected but my brain
    was like no i’m at the kegger right and
    i showed up to treatment and i’m like no
    there was people there and they’re like
    chris nobody was there man it’s just you
    and i’m like
    oh
    now that’s an interesting reality when
    you actually realize that there’s nobody
    there the whole time
    when i think you hit it on the head that
    that you you build this entire fantasy
    in your head and the reality is like if
    there’s i like to tell i like to ask
    people like if there was a gopro
    attached to your head what would it
    actually show
    because really like you said it doesn’t
    show a kegger and keg stands it shows
    alone in a bathroom
    it’s a tough spot
    yeah and it’s so interesting and you see
    that a lot with young people and when
    you’re able to kind of zoom out and kind
    of walk with them a little bit on that
    journey it’s very clear
    that they had gotten to this point in a
    solo endeavor i do i have to say you
    know there’s an element of denial that
    has its place and it’s totally
    appropriate if you’re going to lift the
    veil you better have support
    you really want to know what it was like
    you better have people around you to
    back that up and i do think there’s an
    appropriate time to do that and so
    again i’m going back to being on the
    phone with people they’re like do i have
    to tell you everything right now and i’m
    like no way
    please don’t right please don’t because
    you’re not supported enough to face that
    i wouldn’t have been if i had really
    gotten honest about what my life is
    really looking like before making it in
    the door
    i’m out that’s that’s a wrap so
    and dude you probably won’t take me so
    you’re like actually decline yeah yes
    yeah yeah i can completely relate to
    that too and that’s a lot of
    and i see it with mature adults do the
    same thing oftentimes now it’s a bit
    more polished um to a degree but you
    have to
    i love how you said lifting the veil
    like if i lift that all the way up
    i don’t even know what’s inside of there
    right you know and that can be a really
    scary thing and
    you got to have appropriate people
    around you kind of to do that dance so
    hopefully you understand it too yeah
    so
    shifting
    a little bit i would like to ask i
    always like to ask these questions but
    like was there was there a moment where
    you’re like okay i think i can do this i
    think
    i think i can live a life in recovery
    and i really can commit to this change
    process
    even though i’m young
    let me rephrase the question what was
    the moment
    yeah so the moment for me and and i grew
    up in this uh recovery world and 12-step
    way of life
    and after my
    third inpatient program you know i was
    really intent on taking every suggestion
    and so one of the suggestions that they
    gave me they said chris if you’re
    willing to do anything and you want
    connection and want a fellowship to grow
    up around you have to get a service
    position
    i was like service position man what
    does that pay
    you know how does that work do you get
    cigarettes like i don’t know how this
    goes
    i’ve never done anything for nothing
    it’s an interesting concept you all have
    for a 12-step land he’s like chris just
    do it i had great people around me thank
    god they were like the bumpers
    and so i go in i do my um 90 days sober
    i go in to do my coffee position and
    it’s a 90-day commitment and i’m at the
    largest group in all of prescott arizona
    crazy birds group of alcoholics
    anonymous 6 a.m meeting and i go in
    there and i’m pissed off
    and this guy steve’s in there and he’s
    he’s sweeping the floors i’m like
    what are you doing here man and he’s
    like oh great question man i got here 35
    years ago on a wednesday my sponsor told
    me the same thing he probably told you
    just to get a service position watch
    your fellowship grow up around you don’t
    have any friends but you’re about to
    have some and i’m like whoa steve that’s
    crazy and he’s like you know what it’s
    worked so well i’ve been doing it for 35
    years every wednesday and i was like
    wow
    and then he said what we’d like to do is
    me and my two buddies that were here 35
    years ago we’d love to sit down with you
    we’ll call it the meeting before the
    meeting
    because we believe in you and i’m like
    and that was the second
    the second man that ever told me he
    believed in me and i was like if you
    believe in me i can believe in myself
    and i showed up with those guys they
    were like all you got to do is keep our
    coffees full just these old timers down
    they’re all 70 and i was like just
    taking notes taking notes and then
    another suggestion i got right on the
    back end of that was to get coffee with
    this guy named james and i went and had
    coffee with this guy named james and i
    don’t even know what we talked about but
    i left that experience both of those
    experience combined and i felt like god
    tapped me on the shoulder that day and
    said if you do this and you do this well
    i’ll take care of you the rest of your
    life and it was on that day
    if i had great people around me i could
    do this and i had a family of choice
    grow up around me and after that coffee
    position i had 50 friends
    and that was really the inflection point
    for me where i was like
    i can’t do this but we sure can
    well in the recovery moments chris
    they’re not just like
    again it’s not as sober not sober it had
    nothing to do those god tap moments that
    you’re talking about that you’re
    re-recovering constantly with answering
    that call or like
    even acknowledging that that is the
    recovery like i can think of two
    instances and kind of go back to your
    question jason
    okay so i was in target and i’m doing
    some grocery shopping at target this was
    i was in the alumni house i spent quite
    a bit of money but i had a loofah on the
    bottom of the grocery cart
    you know yeah it’s a dollar fifty yeah
    and i spent a hundred dollars right and
    i i go out there and i’m alone i’m
    shopping by myself across the street
    from the old center and i saw it in the
    cart and i was like
    um
    and i and i took it back they looked at
    me like i was nuts right i said i i
    do with this what you will take take it
    to the back you know um
    i just i didn’t pay for it and then i
    got out of there no one arrested me
    first of all that was cool really cool
    yeah and in fact they almost looked at
    me with like some respect like that was
    a good thing to do and i walked out of
    the target feeling kind of high
    like on life like feeling good about
    myself
    feeling like a person like a responsible
    person and then i was like i could
    commit to this because that wasn’t so
    hard and the payoff was worth it it’s
    something small and then on a bigger
    scale fast forward
    i was in a job where my ego was getting
    fed
    and my character defects were
    getting me through it you know and it
    was really
    um i wasn’t using but spiritually i was
    dying is what was happening and
    i just didn’t i didn’t want to do
    anything about it didn’t want to do
    anything about it and i finally answered
    that call and i was like i can’t do this
    i can’t do this and i’m going to take a
    leap of faith for like what the fifth
    sixth time since
    i’m just in a repeat cycle of that but
    it gets better every level it gets
    better every time so why wouldn’t i
    trust that you know that
    that’s hard to say
    that luffa i actually just got a new
    phone and i got a red one i paid for it
    it was 99
    and i got a red one and my youngest
    son’s favorite color is red he’s like
    that’s my loofah so i want to got a blue
    one yeah and my oldest son that’s his
    favorite color that’s my loofah so now i
    got a black nice yeah that’s all you
    yeah yeah
    so how i mean chris i i really
    appreciate your story too
    um that a.a did provide that message to
    you and then it turns out a a isn’t
    necessarily for everybody
    how how do you think people can build
    communities especially young people
    um when they don’t have that room with
    at 5 30 in the morning yeah which is
    very intentional yeah
    you know it’s it’s a great question
    jason and i was actually talking to my
    therapist on monday about this i said
    polly i bet she in 20 years a.a has half
    of its members she’s like really
    and i was like yeah news just in poly
    we’re not sending people the way that we
    used to because oftentimes some things
    that they’ll see in there aren’t
    necessarily trauma informed in the
    individual that’s going in there you got
    to make sure that that’s a good fit for
    them and so
    yeah i have kind of two stories of
    recovery um you know
    i think the best way and what paulie
    really shared with me that stuck with me
    is that
    we have to do it together
    we just can’t do this alone right so i
    was checking in with someone in iop last
    night a female client who actually had a
    relapse in primary care she’s doing
    phenomenal she has a community in yoga
    she’s going every night to yoga and she
    does iop three nights a week she feels
    anchored into that it’s a strong anchor
    point that’s community there’s another
    person in there who’s getting people
    together to go to a show at red rocks
    that’s community i just think whatever
    it looks like it has to be a we
    proposition because that’s the
    impenetrable force that’s when we’re
    having a tough day that’s when adversity
    smacks us in the face head-on and then
    i’m able to counterbalance that with
    madeline and jason here and if madeline
    and jason are walking with me into the
    world i’ll never drink again
    um the problem is is we don’t always
    have madeline or jason but they’re just
    a phone call away
    and so i like a lot of those community
    events whether it’s church whether it’s
    smart recovery whether it’s refuge
    recovery whether it’s getting a few guys
    so they’re going a game getting a
    barbecue going it’s just community and
    the community is so important that i
    remember when i was in prescott arizona
    for six months
    all i did was fellowship i didn’t work a
    step i didn’t go to a counseling
    appointment i didn’t do any of that and
    i felt pretty happy joyous and free just
    being connected with people that were
    doing great things yeah
    so
    i don’t know if you remember this chris
    but i’m gonna let’s do it go back here
    for a second i don’t know if you
    remember this but we we had a
    conversation on the phone and this was a
    while back where i said i feel really
    lost i we’re not going to the details of
    that conversation but i said
    i like i feel really lost i feel
    paralyzed like i don’t know what to do
    and you you said you don’t have to even
    if you don’t know what the right thing
    to do you said get with the people that
    love you
    get with the people that love you have a
    conversation with them sit on it then
    make the decision not get with the
    people that know more or can
    beat you in the submission the right way
    get with the people that love you and
    and you’ll get in touch with what you
    need to do
    that’s very accurate it’s good advice so
    true because they’re going to be a great
    sounding board and then once we have
    those great people in our lives and
    we’re connected man that’s when i
    believe in the blue book and what it
    says then i can go anywhere i can do
    anything and that’s been my experience
    in the back half of my recovery really
    for the last seven years is
    i don’t have thoughts of using i don’t
    have thoughts of engaging in that stuff
    and for whatever reason
    when i was doing it the other way i
    often had thoughts of those types of
    things so i’m really grateful to have
    that 12-step experience because some
    people prefer 12 steps and i can speak
    to that
    and i really appreciate the authentic
    recovery that i’m living today which is
    much more balanced i believe that
    my therapist says this all the time i
    just believe once once you gain a
    certain amount of recovery it really
    turns into this great space and this
    really functional recovery instead of so
    much rigidity but to her point i
    absolutely needed some rigidity some
    external boundaries for myself early on
    of which i’ve been able to kind of move
    um and wade more freely in those waters
    as of the last couple of years i like
    that
    water cuts through rock you know
    it just takes a while it just takes a
    little bit of time
    [Laughter]
    well i think
    this is all the time we have for today
    this is uh
    i think it’s been a great discussion and
    and really
    i think it speaks uh to hope
    and um
    and that people can get well uh at any
    age truthfully and
    and
    i can’t imagine either of you sitting
    here now are like looking back like oh
    my god if only i could have used a few
    more times and my life would have been
    so much more enriched or full or
    whatever like i don’t think there’s any
    regrets around
    uh getting sober if you can just find
    those kind of inflection points they
    both kind of talked about along the way
    so uh with that we will go ahead and
    sign off i do encourage you all to
    follow us on
    instagram
    chris burns does a tick tock thing which
    is teachers
    they are funny and interesting and uh we
    follow all the trends here i don’t
    understand them but i
    squatted in the middle of the meeting
    last week and that was weird and i don’t
    know why but uh
    i dropped it like from rihanna or
    beyonce or something i don’t know and
    then anyway
    or follow us on facebook youtube uh and
    i personally like this as a podcast so
    uh that’s also available so thank you
    guys for this time and uh
    peace
    [Music]

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