For 12 months, I’ve been sober, and until a recent doctor’s appointment, I’d completely forgotten.
No countdown. No recovery story. No before-and-after moment. Just life, without alcohol.
When my doctor asked, “None? Not even socially?” and looked at me like I’d just confessed a crime, something clicked. His disbelief wasn’t about alcohol — it was about the quiet pressure we all feel to play along. To do the thing that makes everyone else comfortable, even when it doesn’t feel good to us.
That moment made me realise: sobriety isn’t really about alcohol. It’s about truth. It’s about self-trust. It’s about noticing all the ways we abandon ourselves - in business, relationships, and life - just to belong.
If you’ve ever found yourself saying yes when you meant no, discounting your prices to avoid seeming greedy, or over-giving because you don’t want to disappoint, this episode will hit home.
This is a conversation about emotional and professional sobriety - and what happens when you stop performing belonging and start building it from integrity instead.
Here’s what I cover:
💡 3 Powerful Takeaways:
💻 Resources & Links
⭐ Subscribe, Rate & Review
If this episode helped you see your patterns differently or reminded you that you don’t need to perform to belong, please take a moment to subscribe, rate, and review Therapists Rising.
Your words help this message reach more therapists who need to hear:
You’re not too sensitive. You’re not too much. You’re just done performing safety at the expense of yourself.
Thanks for listening — and for choosing truth over performance.
You don’t need to earn belonging. You just need to stop performing it.