I’m a sarcastic, funny nerd who works in the Corp food industry. I love my Nintendo switch and watching history stuff on YouTube lol. Much love! Belle❤️
@_Savvy_Savage_@HunterBiden Smh… Sadly I can see clearer than you as my feelings aren’t rooted in and misguided loyalty to any one party. I see what Trump has done his whole life and he’s a SCUMBAG lol but you keep trying lol bless your heart 🤪🤪
@Hyfrodol1@HunterBiden So my question to you is AngryLiver..: is he a horrible person because he dad held a govt position and still had an addiction ? Then what about all the other people in the world who struggle????? Ya exactly that’s what I thought, think before you become a keyboard warrior.
@_Savvy_Savage_@HunterBiden Oddly enough you’ve got this completely twisted. He is completely sane and together unlike the orange loon bird.🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻hey have a great day to you!!
Things the recovery industry will not tell you:
1. The drug worked. That is why people use it. Not weakness. Not moral failure.
A neurological event so complete and persuasive that any honest account of addiction has to start there.
The problem is not that the drug fails. The problem is that what it does is unrepeatable, and you will burn your entire life to the ground trying to get back to a place that no longer exists.
2. Shame is not guilt. Guilt says I did something bad. Shame says I am something bad. Guilt is appropriate. Shame is a cell with no windows. Most people use the words interchangeably. That mistake is lethal.
3. You cannot shame someone who has already named the thing you are holding over them. Say it first. Say it in plain light. The weapon drops.
4. Guilt can coexist with self-respect. Shame cannot. You can hold the damage and the dignity at the same time. I know because I live there.
5. Radical honesty does not give you back who you were. It hands you the clean slate of who you always wanted to be. The mask comes off. The cartoon other people drew of you stays on the page.
6. Nobody gets clean on a winning streak.
7. You have to be almost self-delusional in your forgiveness of yourself. (Go watch Chase Hughes)
8. The greatest sin was not the chaos. It was the absence. Being unavailable to the people who needed you.
9. Sustainable recovery starts with one thing: honesty with yourself. If you love an addict and want to help, that is the only door in.
10. I am only an expert on my recovery. Nobody is an expert on anyone else’s.
@HunterBiden Everything you said is spot on. I have had very lengthy conversations with people who have addiction issues… reposting on all my platforms.