TL;DR
I got 3 miles on the treadmill in the morning before my first meeting. Today is the last day for the other guy at the Villa. It’s exciting for him, but very sad for the rest of us; but we pan to keep in touch and meet up once I’m in PHP. That brings it down to just 3 of us in the house. We watched the documentary called The Anonymous People ∫and played card game called Horrible Therapist – it is similar to cards against humanity. My case manager has a tour setup for tomorrow with one PHP/SLE and was still working on getting a second tour setup with another facility. She is also working on insurance side with the programs.
Start of the Morning
5:00 AM
I slept great again and did 3 miles on the treadmill this morning.
Morning Reflections
8:00 AM
This morning we chipped out the guy that has finished the residential program.
Health & Wellness
9:00 AM
Today we watched the The Anonymous People (2013), directed by Greg Williams,. It is a landmark feature documentary that shifts the conversation about addiction from “the problem” to “the solution.”
The documentary serves as a rallying cry for a burgeoning grassroots movement known as the New Recovery Advocacy Movement.
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The Problem of Silence: For decades, the public has only seen the “dysfunctional” side of addiction through sensationalized media.
This film argues that because people in recovery stay anonymous, the public never sees the success stories, which perpetuates stigma. -
Anonymity vs. Secrecy: The film explores the 12th Tradition of Alcoholics Anonymous (anonymity).
It argues that while anonymity is vital for protecting newcomers at the meeting level, it has been misinterpreted as a mandate for public silence, preventing advocates from lobbying for better policy and funding. -
Health Issue, Not a Moral Failing: By comparing addiction to other social health movements (like breast cancer or HIV/AIDS), the film advocates for treating addiction as a chronic, treatable medical condition rather than a criminal justice issue.
The documentary tracks the history of the recovery movement, highlighting:
- Operation Understanding (1976): A groundbreaking event where 52 prominent citizens (including Dick Van Dyke) stood up and announced they were in recovery.
- Policy Impacts: It discusses how public advocacy led to the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008, which reduced insurance discrimination against those seeking treatment.
Recovery Principles
11:00 AM
We played Horrible Therapist with a few of the counselor. It was hilarious.
Lunch Time
12:00 PM
For lunch we had chicken torilla soup. It was amazing and the broth was made from the chicken carcasses from a previous chicken dish and the chef simmered the stock over night.
Creative Expressions
1:00 PM
We finished the documentary and had a group discussion.
Life Skills in Recovery
4:00 PM
We had a new counselor today and this was a lecture/discussion on Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.
Dinner
5:30 PM
Today is the last night for the other guy at the Villa and he requested street tacos for dinner.
Reflection / Recovery Meeting
7:30 PM
We wanted to do a Zoom AA meeting today so we could have more free time to spend with the guy that is leaving. Every night there is a San Diego AA zoom meeting called Easy Does It. It’s mostly old people trying to figure out how to mute and unmute on zoom or people that are there because of a court order mandate to attend so many AA meetings. One guy starting doing the nazi salute, praising Hilter and screaming to kill all the jews. The host booted him from the meeting.
Evening Time
8:00 PM
We all spent some time haning out together.





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