🔍 The Crux of the Problem: It Wasn’t the Bottle—It Was Me

“So we shall describe some of the mental states that precede a relapse into drinking, for obviously this is the crux of the problem.” AA Big Book, Chapter 3, pg. 34

For years, I blamed the alcohol. The pressure. The industry. The losses. The loneliness.

But the crux of the problem wasn’t external—it was internal.

It was my silence. My pride. My unwillingness to admit that I was hurting, and my inability to believe that healing was even possible. I used alcohol to numb the ache, to dodge the mirror, to keep playing the role of the high-achiever who had it all together.

What I’ve come to realize is this: addiction doesn’t start with the bottle—it starts with the brokenness. With unresolved pain. With grief we don’t name. With shame we bury and success we weaponize to prove we’re okay.

The real danger wasn’t my drinking—it was my denial.

And once I faced that, everything changed. I stopped treating the symptoms and started healing the source. I stopped asking how I got here and started asking why I stayed here so long.

That moment—of honesty, humility, and responsibility—was the beginning of my recovery. And now, it’s the foundation of my calling. Because until we name the crux of the problem, we’ll never reach the root of the solution.

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🥂 The Polished Mask: Functional Addiction in High-Net-Worth Lifestyles

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🎓 “Not Qualified”? Let Me Tell You What That Really Means.