·

I was not always the man I am today.

I was 305 pounds, drowning in alcohol, pills, weed, and excuses. I was lying to myself, hurting the people I loved, and destroying my life one choice at a time. I had given up on who I could be, and I was getting close to not making it out at all.

Then 2:33 a.m. happened.

On August 2, 2015, I made a decision. Not a wish. Not a promise. A decision. I put it all down. Cold turkey. No more alcohol. No more pills. No more marijuana. No more hiding. No more numbing. No more excuses.

That was the moment I started fighting my way back.

It was ugly. It was brutal. It was slow. There was nothing glamorous about it. It was just pain, truth, and the choice to keep going anyway.

That is where discipline stepped in.

Discipline got me out of bed.
Discipline taught me how to suffer without running.
Discipline helped me rebuild my body, my mind, and my life.
Discipline gave me freedom because it taught me how to stop being ruled by every urge, every excuse, and every weak moment.

Now I use what saved me to help other people fight their way out too.

So if you are lost, hurting, or trapped in the dark right now, hear me clearly.

I know that place.
I came out of that place.
And there is a way out.

It starts when you stop waiting to be rescued and decide to move.

·

People think feeling better means they are ready for more.

That is where they get in trouble.

They add freedom, pressure, and responsibility faster than their structure can hold it. Then when things wobble, they call it failure. Most of the time, it is not failure. It is overload.

Read the full piece here: https://jimlunsford.com/recovery-standard-responsibility-expands-slowly/

·

Discipline saved my life.

It pulled me out of addiction. It carried me through trauma. It taught me how to live without excuses, without chaos, and without running from myself.

Discipline is not punishment. It is not a cage. It is freedom.

In the beginning, it feels hard. It feels like sacrifice. It feels like you are fighting every part of yourself that wants comfort, ease, and escape. But once you live it, once you make it part of who you are, you start to see the truth. Discipline does not take from you. It gives your life back.

You do not have to start big. Start small. Make your bed. Take the walk. Say no to the thing that keeps pulling you backward. One choice at a time. One step at a time. One day at a time.

This is not about perfection. It is about showing up, especially when it is hard.

·

The system loves recovery it can monitor.

That is the problem.

Courts, doctors, and treatment centers keep pushing people toward the same default because it is cheap, familiar, and easy to track. That does not make it the best path. It makes it the most convenient one for the system.

Read the full piece here: https://jimlunsford.com/recovery-beyond-aa-the-systems-grip/

·

The work is not going to do itself. Healing does not happen because you want it to. The life you say you want is sitting on the other side of hard conversations, disciplined choices, and the discomfort you keep trying to avoid. Show up. Stay grounded. Keep moving. You do not need permission. You need discipline.

·

Your life will keep reflecting what you keep feeding it.

Weak inputs create weak patterns.

If you spend your days consuming noise, comfort, distraction, and easy stimulation, do not act surprised when your focus is shot, your discipline is weak, and your life feels stuck. Change starts when you stop letting garbage shape you.

Read the full piece here: https://jimlunsford.com/discipline-dispatch-change-your-inputs/

·

Alright, when Chuck Norris dies, you know things have gone sideways.

Rest in peace.

·

You grab a shopping cart with a busted wheel. It wobbles. It jerks to the side. It fights every step. You push harder. Annoyed. But you don’t stop. You still get what you need. That cart didn’t ruin your day. It just made things harder, like life. Or maybe it’s just a cart. Either way, keep pushing.