
This is my first time writing for this blog. I’m excited, and a bit nervous. I’m full of self-centered fear, wondering if you will like it. Fortunately, I have a program that helps me with that.
My name is Shane. I’m in recovery from alcoholism, from compulsive eating, and from my family’s alcoholism. I’m a miracle – and so are you! That’s what I know from the rooms, and my life.
I grew up in an alcoholic home, but I didn’t know that. I didn’t know our family was different from any other, so what I learned there I took out into the world. I learned that I couldn’t trust anyone to care for my feelings, that I wouldn’t be believed if I spoke my truth, that I could be shamed for showing weakness. I learned that I should make everyone proud, I should and could impress people, but that I would not be loved.
I was given room to develop my talents, but they weren’t a substitute for safety and love. As my rage built, I began looking for outlets and expressions of that rage. I found alcohol and drugs when I was 13, and I dove into the deep end. I went to all the places that the Big Book predicts – jail (juvenile detention), asylum (mental hospital), plus some that aren’t mentioned. By the time I turned 16 I had done these, I had gotten pregnant and miscarried in silence, I had tried to kill myself. I didn’t know that alcohol and drugs were helping me go to those places – I just thought I was crazy, and I didn’t care.
I got sober in 1985, when I was 28. Someone had me read the Promises at my third meeting. I cried because I couldn’t imagine ever experiencing any of them. It was like the universe inviting me to sing a song I didn’t know how to sing. But I kept coming. I wanted to feel better.
Since then, my life has been an adventure. I went back to school, got a Ph.D., taught for years. Then a new round of step work helped me leave and enter an Episcopal convent. After nine years, another round of work helped me leave there and serve a parish, and eventually found a new community with another woman. Now, eight years later, the community is flourishing and so am I.
When I got sober people told me to eat sugar if I wanted to drink. I did. I ate sugar long after I stopped craving alcohol, long after my weight became a problem. I didn’t get it. I’m an alcoholic, I’d say; food is not my issue. I just like to eat.
Finally, God sent some people into my life who helped me see that I was doing the same thing with food that I had with alcohol. I would try to control it, but it didn’t go so well. I didn’t diet, because that would be vain – and it would be hard. I thought, “I can use the Steps on this too,” but I never did.
Once I got that I had the same reaction to some foods that I have to alcohol, the path was clear. There was a place for me, another place. I could take all that I had gained in one and still learn more. Now I have the same freedom from compulsive eating that I had found from alcohol.
So, here’s the miracle: not that I entered the rooms, not that I stopped drinking and overeating. Those are indeed miracles, but the one I treasure is the hope, the reality of the Promises. If I will work, if you will work, the whole world opens up to us, to become the people God intended and dreamed of.
Whatever you have been through, whatever you’re struggling with, there are others who’ve been there. I’m one of them, waiting for you to reach out. Life is sometimes a struggle for me now, but only because I forget to use the tools offered by the programs. When I pick up the phone, the pen, the prayer book, I return to serenity. A new way opens up in the wilderness. One day at a time, miracles are happening.
Blessings on your journey, all year, every year.