#142: The Truth About Being A Functional Alcoholic
When your life still looks okay on the outside, it’s easy to convince yourself your drinking isn’t a real problem. You’re still working, paying bills, showing up, so it must be fine, right? In this episode, Tim unpacks the truth behind the “functional alcoholic” label and why it often hides more than it reveals.We talk about how easy it is to keep adjusting the definition of “functional” to avoid change, how this label is quietly supported by society and even loved ones, and why managing your drinking takes more energy than you think. Tim shares from his own story how holding it all together started to cost him peace, connection, and growth, even when nothing had technically fallen apart.If you’ve ever wondered, “Am I really okay with this being as good as it gets?”, this episode might be the starting point for something honest.Episode Highlights:1:00 – What “functional alcoholic” really means2:00 – Why this label feels safer than facing the truth3:03 – How society normalizes and even rewards overdrinking4:04 – What people actually want from drinking (and it’s not moderation)6:00 – How the meaning of “functional” slowly shifts7:08 – The mental exhaustion of managing your drinking9:20 – Why things can look fine outside but feel empty inside10:29 – The most important question: What is it really costing you?11:53 – Awareness comes before change, why noticing is enough for nowIf this episode resonated with you and you want more tools, reflections, and support for building a life you actually enjoy without alcohol, visit https://soberandhappy.com/home/ to explore the podcast, resources, and next steps.
#141: What Happens In Your 1st 30 Days Sober
When you stop drinking, it’s easy to expect a clean upward curve—sleep gets better, moods improve, life gets easier. But what really happens in those first 30 days often surprises people. It’s not about failure or doing it wrong. It’s about understanding what your body and mind are going through.In this episode, I walk through the first month of sobriety, week by week. We talk about the physical and emotional changes that can show up—from restless nights and sugar cravings to random anxiety and emotional fog—and why they’re all part of the process.I also explain why discomfort in early sobriety doesn’t mean it’s not working, how your brain starts seeing triggers more clearly, and how your body slowly begins to reset. Most of all, this episode is a reminder that every hard moment is not a setback—it’s your system healing.If you’re in your first 30 days, or supporting someone who is, this episode will help you feel more grounded, less confused, and more confident that you're not doing it wrong.Episode Highlights:0:00 – Why sobriety feels inconsistent day to day1:00 – What really happens in your first 30 days alcohol-free1:51 – Week 1: Physical symptoms, restless sleep, and intense cravings4:10 – What cravings really mean and how to ride them out6:12 – Week 2: The “now what?” phase, emotional overwhelm, and bargaining10:01 – Week 3: Feeling good one day and terrible the next12:19 – Week 4: Regaining trust, time, and small but real wins14:23 – The best questions to ask after 30 daysIf this episode resonated with you and you want more tools, reflections, and support for building a life you actually enjoy without alcohol, visit https://soberandhappy.com/home/ to explore the podcast, resources, and next steps.
#140: What MOST PEOPLE Get Wrong About Dry January
Dry January is often framed as a test of willpower or a thirty-one-day challenge to get through. But for a lot of people, the hardest part is not avoiding alcohol. It is sitting with what shows up when alcohol is no longer there to do its usual job.In this episode, I talk about a different way to approach Dry January, not as a detox, a countdown, or something to endure until February, but as a simple and honest experiment.We explore why focusing on when the month ends often prevents real insight, how alcohol quietly fills roles like stress relief, boredom management, and emotional regulation, and why the discomfort many people feel during Dry January is actually useful information rather than something to push through.I also share how to shift from judging individual hard days to noticing patterns, what questions to ask yourself without turning the month into a pressure-filled decision point, and how awareness creates clarity without forcing resolutions.If you are sober curious, questioning your relationship with alcohol, or feeling restless or unsure during Dry January, this episode will help you slow down, pay attention, and use the month to learn something meaningful about yourself instead of just counting down the days.Episode highlights:0:00 – Why Dry January is not about whether you drink in February 1:09 – Why most people struggle with how they think about Dry January 2:00 – Using Dry January as an experiment instead of a challenge 3:31 – How alcohol quietly fills emotional and mental roles 4:49 – Why discomfort is actually useful information 5:23 – Shifting from discipline to curiosity 6:48 – Noticing patterns instead of judging individual days 8:12 – Why you do not need to decide what comes next yet 8:45 – The one question to ask before thinking about February 9:03 – This week’s reflection challengeIf this episode resonated with you and you want more tools, reflections, and support for building a life you actually enjoy without alcohol, visit https://soberandhappy.com/home/ to explore the podcast, resources, and next steps.
#139: Reviewing Your Year in Sobriety: What Worked, What Didn’t, and What’s Next
As the year comes to a close, a lot of people in sobriety don’t know what to do with it.Part of you might feel proud of how far you’ve come. Another part might feel disappointed, stuck, or unsure if you’re doing this “right.” And for a lot of people, the easiest option is either to avoid looking back altogether or to beat yourself up for everything that didn’t go as planned.In this episode, I walk through a more honest and realistic way to review your year in sobriety.We talk about how to look at what actually changed — not just what you intended to do — how to spot patterns that helped you stay steady as well as patterns that made things harder, and how to use that clarity to think about what comes next without falling into pressure-filled resolutions.If this year felt messy, slower than expected, or unfinished, this episode will help you make sense of it — and move into the next year with clarity instead of shame.
#138: Starting Over in Sobriety (Without Starting From Zero)
Relapsing can make it feel like everything you worked for just disappeared. The progress, the confidence, the belief that this time was different — all of it can feel gone in an instant.But starting over doesn’t actually mean starting from zero.In this episode, I talk about what’s really going on when someone relapses, why it feels so discouraging, and how to move forward without repeating the same cycle again. We look at relapse not as a personal failure, but as information — something that can actually help you rebuild in a smarter, more sustainable way.If you’ve ever thought, “I thought I was past this,” or “I don’t know how to start again,” this episode is for you. We talk about the emotional side of relapse, how to spot the patterns that lead up to it, and what actually makes the next attempt feel different — not just hopeful, but believable.You’re not starting over from nothing. You’re starting from experience. And that changes everything.