I got an email last week from HuffPost Live wanting to interview me (and Lucy) as they saw my article, "How my Dog saved my Life" on xoJane recently. http://huff.lv/1O7NYQn.
Needless to say I was very flattered but more so glad that someone, especially HuffPost thought that it was an important enough story to highlight for their show. It may sound dramatic that Lucy "saved my life" but if you read the article, you'll get the gist.
That being said, I wanted to share the segment that was broadcasted this week on HuffPostLIVE. Its actually horrible quality TV with as the camera was moving around too much as I was trying to get Lucy in the broadcast. The segment was done via Skype - and to make it even more ghetto looking, I was sitting on my bedroom floor as that was the only place I could get Lucy to sit for more than a few minutes. I'm the third story - so its about 15 minutes into the segment (if you want to FF) So, needless to say, Lucy is my heart and I'm so grateful she's in my life and that others can get hope and love from our story.
Happy Viewing and most importantly, Happy Thanksgiving to all!
http://huff.lv/1O7NYQn
PSST....I have a new and improved website: Check it out! http://lastcallblog.me/ Thanks for your support!
Thursday, November 26, 2015
Friday, November 20, 2015
Re-posting - "We are not a glum lot"
I awoke last Saturday morning at 6.30, after really wanting to
sleep in but not being able to, because my need to write was stronger than my
need to sleep. In pondering
what to write about, I was thinking I should write about the 70,000 attendees I just
shared space with at the Int’l AA Convention last week. That’s what I should write about – but naw, my first thought
was, we are not a
glum lot. So that’s what I’ll write about. No need to get down and dirty about
the convention. Other
writers have written about it this week and I couldn’t have said it any better. What I do need to recognize is how
full and amazing my life is because I am sober and because I say YES to life. I said Yes over 11 years ago to “check
out that meeting” and for that I’m grateful as I know I’ll never be able to
fully pay back what has been so freely given to me; but I can try to, little by
little, smile by smile, and maybe be a tad nicer to others that walk the earth
with me. What’s that bumper
sticker? “Practice random acts of kindness” – Sure I’ll try that. I see this lasting about five days or
so. I’ll let you know how that turns out.
In getting back to work this week I
think I had some post partum depression from my last two weeks of gallivanting
to San Diego and Atlanta. I worked three days in between these two trips
(someone needs to get paid), and my mantra walking away from these trips is that we are not a glum lot.
My first trip away was a five day
visit to my homeland of San Diego – Encinitas to be more accurate. I call
it my homeland because that’s where I got sober, and that’s where I feel most
at home, that’s where my peeps are. My posse, my tribe, whichever you
wanna call them. One of my girls got married and we were all able to be
in attendance at her wedding and we were all sober and it was a drama free
trip. Imagine that - drama free! It took about six years of being sober
before my life started moving into the drama free zone. That shit didn’t
happen overnight. My husband and I stayed with friends during our
visit and in years past I normally got us a hotel so it could feel like more of
a vacation - but this time around we decided to bunk, rub elbows, and share
bathrooms with children, pets and the like. And ya know what? Its way
better doing it this way. I can have those special moments of going through her
closet or sitting outside in their backyard while she smoked or watching that
lame ass show on HGTV with her; these were the moments I relished. My
friends are awesome and they get me and they want me to stay with them (or so I
think they do). Lucky me gets to go back in four weeks for another
friend’s wedding. After this trip I don’t know what else I’ll be going
back for since we’ll all be married by then. I guess they’ll have to be trips
to just visit.
Trip two was the International AA
Convention to Atlanta. This trip was so overwhelming I’m not even to go
into the details and logistics – but I will sum it up with a couple of
sentences. If I only went to the Big Meetings on Friday and Saturday
evening, that would have been enough. If waiting in line was an Olympic
sport, I could have received the Gold or Silver; Saying the serenity
prayer with 70,000 other drunks could was pretty spiritually profound – it was
definitely in the Top 5. The Top Five is what I call the five most
amazing things that have ever happened to me in my life. Ever.
Now I feel compelled to share that
list;
1. Getting sober.
2. Meeting Bob Weir (and smoking pot
with him-not very AAish of me, but this was pre 2004).
3. Getting married to my husband (and
still being married!).
4. Rescuing Lucy.
5. Having a god in my life that shows
up, keeps me sober and gives me amazing gifts: Saying the serenity prayer
at the IAAC, publishing my Memoir, giving me a career and amazing family and
friends that love me.
So
theoretically, its really the Top 9. I can work with that.
Thursday, November 12, 2015
20 Best Recovery Blogs - and Last Call has been named one of them!
AfterParty Rehab magazine is the cutting edge and dynamic on line magazine for those of us in recovery - and probably for a lot of others that aren't in recovery, yet. Its really just the hip and cool online reading vehicle that hosts a lot of topics; news, rehab center reviews, personal opinion and narratives and a really freaking awesome podcast that Editor in Chief Anna David hosts each week. I love the crap outta this mag and I'm sure you will to when you check it out....Here is a snippet of the post for 20 Best Recovery Blogs, including mine.
Read on friends...
After the book Alcoholics Anonymous hit the shelves, more people became aware of 12-step and started to accept it as a viable alternative for dealing with addiction that didn’t involve a medical team and a straight jacket. Since then, various other methods of quitting drinking and drugging have come to fruition, one of them being Internet recovery. There is no formal or organized structure behind it; Internet recovery simply consists of reaching out for support via the web. This could be in a forum, an online rehab program or through a blog. Here is our list of the 20 best recovery blogs out there (in no particular order): (go to article to see the other 19!)
10) Since 2010, Nancy Carr has been blogging about her day-to-day life in sobriety, which has included turning points like getting married and losing her mother. I enjoy Nancy’s accessible writing style; like a friend telling you about her day. Going to meetings is how alcoholics and addicts get a tangible understanding that they are not alone but we don’t often get to see how our peers struggle and prevail on a daily basis. Last Call is a look into the human existence of a recovering alcoholic and provides a feeling of being “normal” in sobriety. She also recently released Last Call: A Memoir, which is available on Amazon. Follow Nancy as she does her best to “Carpe the hell out of diem.” (Learn more about all that in Nancy’s Reader Spotlight.)
https://rehabreviews.com/20-best-recovery-blogs/
Read on friends...
After the book Alcoholics Anonymous hit the shelves, more people became aware of 12-step and started to accept it as a viable alternative for dealing with addiction that didn’t involve a medical team and a straight jacket. Since then, various other methods of quitting drinking and drugging have come to fruition, one of them being Internet recovery. There is no formal or organized structure behind it; Internet recovery simply consists of reaching out for support via the web. This could be in a forum, an online rehab program or through a blog. Here is our list of the 20 best recovery blogs out there (in no particular order): (go to article to see the other 19!)
10) Since 2010, Nancy Carr has been blogging about her day-to-day life in sobriety, which has included turning points like getting married and losing her mother. I enjoy Nancy’s accessible writing style; like a friend telling you about her day. Going to meetings is how alcoholics and addicts get a tangible understanding that they are not alone but we don’t often get to see how our peers struggle and prevail on a daily basis. Last Call is a look into the human existence of a recovering alcoholic and provides a feeling of being “normal” in sobriety. She also recently released Last Call: A Memoir, which is available on Amazon. Follow Nancy as she does her best to “Carpe the hell out of diem.” (Learn more about all that in Nancy’s Reader Spotlight.)
https://rehabreviews.com/20-best-recovery-blogs/
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