Recovery Burnout Rule 62
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About this listen
1. Recovery Burnout: The "Tired of Being Better" Phase
Recovery burnout occurs when the mental and emotional effort required to maintain sobriety becomes a source of chronic stress rather than a source of healing. It’s not about wanting to use again; it’s about being exhausted by the process of staying clean.
- The "To-Do" List Overload: Attending constant meetings, working the steps, therapy, and helping others can eventually feel like a second full-time job.
- The Perfectionism Trap: Many in recovery swap an addiction to substances for an addiction to "doing recovery perfectly," leading to high anxiety and self-judgment.
- Signs to Watch For: Irritability toward your support group, feeling "bored" with sobriety, or a cynical attitude toward spiritual principles you used to value.
2. Rule 62: "Don't Take Yourself Too Seriously"
Rule 62 is a legendary piece of wisdom from Alcoholics Anonymous lore. It originated from a story about a group that tried to build an overly complex, multimillion-dollar recovery center with a massive list of rules, only to realize they had lost the plot.
Why it Matters
- Perspective Shift: It’s a reminder that while recovery is a serious matter of life and death, you are still a fallible, occasionally ridiculous human being.
- The Ego Eraser: Burnout is often fueled by the ego's need to control every outcome. Rule 62 tells the ego to sit down and relax.
- The Power of Humor: If you can laugh at your own mistakes, those mistakes lose their power to drive you back to a drink or a drug.
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