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Courageous Overcomers

Breaking Free: 30 Years Sober and Healing

Send us a text Freedom is possible—I'm living proof of it. After three decades of sobriety, I've discovered that the journey isn't simply about putting down the bottle. It's about confronting the pain we've been desperately trying to numb. My relationship with alcohol began as an escape route. I drank because I couldn't sit with my reality and pain. I drank because I didn't feel safe or seen. I drank because, deep down, I believed I had no worth. What looked like a drinking problem on the su...
Broadcast on:
02 Apr 2025

Send us a text

Freedom is possible—I'm living proof of it. After three decades of sobriety, I've discovered that the journey isn't simply about putting down the bottle. It's about confronting the pain we've been desperately trying to numb.

My relationship with alcohol began as an escape route. I drank because I couldn't sit with my reality and pain. I drank because I didn't feel safe or seen. I drank because, deep down, I believed I had no worth. What looked like a drinking problem on the surface was actually a symptom of deeper wounds that I hadn't faced. This is the harsh truth about addiction—it doesn't care about your status or background. It comes for you one drink at a time, one lie at a time.

The turning point in my recovery wasn't stopping drinking; it was starting to face everything I'd been running from. Through treatment, twelve-step programs, church community, and painfully honest self-inventory, I began dismantling what I call "the Great Wall of Tonya"—a fortress built of fear, control, and isolation that I thought protected me but actually imprisoned me. True sobriety required more than just abstinence. It demanded that I stop hiding, start connecting, lean into faith, and transform my self-perception from victim to overcomer. 

Are you using alcohol to avoid facing your pain? Do you recognize the warning signs—blackouts, hidden bottles, reckless behavior, broken promises? If any of this resonates, please hear this: you're not a bad person. You're not weak. You're in pain, and that pain will always come out sideways if not addressed directly. You don't have to stay trapped in this cycle. You don't need to figure out how to stay sober for 30 years—just focus on today. Reach out to someone you trust. Take one small step toward healing. Remember that your story, even the painful chapters, can become purpose when used to help others on their own journey to freedom.

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Send us a text Freedom is possible—I'm living proof of it. After three decades of sobriety, I've discovered that the journey isn't simply about putting down the bottle. It's about confronting the pain we've been desperately trying to numb. My relationship with alcohol began as an escape route. I drank because I couldn't sit with my reality and pain. I drank because I didn't feel safe or seen. I drank because, deep down, I believed I had no worth. What looked like a drinking problem on the su...