All Speakers › Alcoholic Thinking

Alcoholic Thinking

Alcoholic Thinking represents the psychological architecture of addiction, characterized by a persistent disconnect between an individual's external facade and their internal reality. In the context of these recovery tapes, this topic is significant because it addresses the maladaptive mental patterns and obsessions that precede and sustain the drive to drink. The core principles explored in these narratives center on the concept of performance—the compulsive need to appear successful, competent, or desirable to mask deep-seated feelings of inadequacy, loneliness, and self-loathing. This distorted thinking manifests as a hunger for external validation and a reliance on secrecy to maintain a curated image, creating a cycle of isolation and emotional wreckage. Recovery, therefore, is framed not just as abstinence, but as the dismantling of this ego-driven machinery. Listeners can expect raw, first-hand accounts of the transition from a life of performance to a life of authenticity. The tapes detail the grueling process of surrendering the self-will that fuels the illusion of control and confronting the shame of one's perceived inadequacies. Through these stories, speakers illustrate that true sobriety requires a fundamental shift in consciousness. By trading the pursuit of material success and social approval for the shared, messy work of the fellowship and a reliance on a Higher Power, the speakers demonstrate how to replace alcoholic thinking with a foundation of radical honesty, acceptance, and genuine human connection.

465 tapes

All Tapes

Jim M.
Jim M. on the Blackstone Retreat, the Big Book, and Simple Sobriety
★★★★★No ratings
Lyle P.
The Airline Pilot Who Found Recovery in a 28-Day Treatment Center – Lyle P.
★★★★★No ratings
John K.
Step 4 and the Depressive Type Who Felt He Got a Raw Deal – John K.
★★★★★No ratings
Stevie B.
Stevie B. at the Illinois State Conference of Young People in Alcoholics Anonymous – 2026
★★★★★No ratings
Tom W.
Step 5 Took an Hour and a Few Embarrassing Things – Tom W.
★★★★★No ratings
Paul O.
Financial Sobriety and the V-Graph of His Life – Paul O.
★★★★★No ratings
John S.
Acting Your Way Into a New Way of Thinking – John S.
★★★★★No ratings
Herb
The Harmony of Emotional Sobriety – Herb
★★★★★No ratings
Clancy
The Only Inspired Piece of Literature He Ever Held – Clancy
★★★★★No ratings
Ben H.
Why Alcohol Stopped Working for Him – Ben H.
★★★★★No ratings
Clancy I.
He Spent Thousands in Psychoanalysis to Redress His Feelings – Clancy I,Johnny H
★★★★★No ratings
Harry H.
Staying Down to Earth After the Pink Cloud – 1960 – Harry H.
★★★★★No ratings
Russell S.
Living a Life of Faith Rather Than Fear – Russell S.
★★★★★No ratings
Russell S.
The Chicken Sh*t Atheist and the Punchline of Higher Power – Russell S.
★★★★★No ratings
Jim W.
The Way He Did Everything One Day at a Time – Jim W.
★★★★★No ratings
Tom B.
The Danger of Selective Forgetting – Tom B.
★★★★★No ratings
Scott R.
The Fatal Illness That You Can Decide You Don’t Have and Die From – Scott R.
★★★★★No ratings
Paul M.
The Priest Who Thought the Role Made the Man – Paul M.
★★★★★No ratings
Charlie P.
Why Stinking Thinking Leads to Drinking – Charlie P.
★★★★★No ratings
Wayne B.
What Dr. S. Got Right About the Abnormal Drinker – Wayne B.
★★★★★No ratings
Paul O.
The Bondage of Self and the Man Who Found Himself Fascinating – Paul O.
★★★★★No ratings
Bobby C.
He Can’t Claim the Success of Others Because He’d Have to Accept the Failure – Bobby C.
★★★★★No ratings
Charlie C.
Step 4 and the Mask He Carried Around for Years – Charlie C.
★★★★★No ratings
Howard E.
Step 7 and the Willingness to Convert Defects into Assets – Howard E.
★★★★★No ratings
Steve L.
The Existential Loneliness of Being Unable to Imagine Life Either Way – Steve L.
★★★★★No ratings
1 2 3 4 5 6 19