
Sober Disclosure
Cohosts Breezy and Jimmy interview someone in recovery every week to discuss what that first year of sobriety is REALLY like! Whether it be the hilarious stories of sexual firsts sober or not taking sponsor direction and seeing how that affects us, they tell it like it really is! But they always show the newcomer that you can stay sober NO MATTER WHAT!
Sober Disclosure
Episode 27: The Fight to Feel Again — Taylor’s Story
In Episode 27 of Sober Disclosure, Breezy and Jimmy welcome a powerful new voice to the mic—Taylor, who is 18 months sober and walking proof that even the darkest chapters can lead to unimaginable transformation. Her journey is harrowing, heartfelt, and ultimately, hopeful.
Taylor takes us back to the beginning, where the seeds of addiction were planted not in rebellion, but in her own home. She watched her mother, once prescribed pills by a doctor, slowly fall into dependence—an unraveling that was obvious to Taylor’s friends, and eventually undeniable to her. What started as confusion and pain soon twisted into a dangerous kind of closeness, and Taylor found herself pulled into the same patterns. The same escape. The same devastation.
Taylor’s addiction to heroin brought her to the brink—not just emotionally and spiritually, but physically. At her lowest point, she nearly lost function in her arms. Yet in the ashes of near-destruction, something began to shift. This time, sobriety stuck. And everything began to change.
She opens up about the deep loneliness of being the only two in her family—she and her mother—who struggled with substance use, and how that bond was both a burden and a strange comfort. She shares the painful attempts to get sober before this time, and what made this recovery journey different.
At six months sober, Taylor met her now-boyfriend—someone also walking the path of recovery. Their relationship has become a space of mutual accountability, honesty, and support. Together, they’ve discovered what it means to grow—individually and as a team—through healing and through hard truths.
This conversation is raw, courageous, and full of the wisdom that only comes from having survived what many do not. Taylor’s story is not just about getting clean—it’s about getting free. About learning to feel again, trust again, and love herself again.
From trauma to truth. From numbness to connection. From heroin to hope.
New mantra: Healing is possible—especially when we don’t have to do it alone.
Listen now.