
In this episode, Laura McKowen discusses embracing emotional sobriety and small choices for big healing from heartbreak and anxiety. Laura talks about her 11-year sobriety journey and her personal journal of navigating heartbreak. She delves into the daily choices that foster healing and emotional well-being. Laura also shares insights on the non-linear nature of recovery, the importance of small, consistent practices, and the role of relationships and self-compassion in emotional sobriety. Together, they explore how healing is an ongoing process, shaped by vulnerability, connection, and the willingness to embrace both pain and growth.

Exciting News!!! Coming in March, 2026, my new book, How a Little Becomes a Lot: The Art of Small Changes for a More Meaningful Life is now available for pre-orders!
Key Takeaways:
- Personal journey of sobriety and its challenges
- Managing anxiety and heartbreak after a significant relationship
- The non-linear nature of emotional healing and recovery
- The parable of the two wolves and its relevance to personal choices
- Importance of daily practices for mental health maintenance
- Concept of emotional sobriety and its distinction from mere survival
- The role of relationships in emotional well-being and healing
- Understanding attachment dynamics and their impact on relationships
- The interplay between trauma, addiction, and relational patterns
- Emphasizing self-forgiveness, compassion, and community support in healing processes
Laura McKowen is the founder and CEO of The Luckiest Club, a global sobriety support organization, and host of Tell Me Something True podcast. Laura has been published in The New York Times, and her work has been featured in The Atlantic, The Wall Street Journal, the TODAY show and more and is the bestselling author of We Are The Luckiest: The Surprising Magic of a Sober Life,
Laura McKowen: Website | Instagram
If you enjoyed this conversation with Laura McKowen, check out these other episodes:
Why Community and Courage Matter More Than Ever with Laura McKowen
A Journey to Self-Discovery and Sobriety with Matthew Quick
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Episode Transcript:
Eric Zimmer 00:00:00 You may have heard me mention my new book a few times, and I can assure you, you will certainly hear it a few more. But now we are offering some pre-order bonuses. One of them is the still Point method, which I believe is the only systematic way to interrupt negative thought patterns often enough for them to change. There’s a lot out there about what you should think and not think, but there’s very little that gives you a small and portable system to actually do it. You get the guide to the method, and three free months of a new app designed to help you implement it. There are other bonuses too. You can learn more and claim them at one. You feed your net.
Laura McKowen 00:00:42 As we go along further in life. The big thing for me, and maybe this is true for you, that I am learning that it all comes down to how much I can forgive and love and have compassion for myself.
Chris Forbes 00:01:04 Welcome to the one you feed. Throughout time, great thinkers have recognized the importance of the thoughts.
Chris Forbes 00:01:10 We have quotes like garbage in, garbage out or you are what you think ring true. And yet for many of us, our thoughts don’t strengthen or empower us. We tend toward negativity, self-pity, jealousy, or fear. We see what we don’t have instead of what we do. We think things that hold us back and dampen our spirit. But it’s not just about thinking our actions matter. It takes conscious, consistent, and creative effort to make a life worth living. This podcast is about how other people keep themselves moving in the right direction, how they feed their good wolf.
Eric Zimmer 00:01:49 There’s a version of healing that many of us secretly hope for. You do enough work, grow enough, learn enough, and eventually the same old pain stops knocking you over, but life doesn’t always seem to work that way. Often the same lesson comes back around again, but with the work. You can meet it with a little more awareness and a little more compassion. In this conversation, Laura McCowan and I talk about emotional sobriety, heartbreak, anxiety, and the realization that healing isn’t a straight line.
Eric Zimmer 00:02:23 It’s a circle. It deepens. We also explore the small practices that help us stay steady when things feel anything but steady. I’m Eric Zimmer and this is the one you feed. Hi Laura, welcome to the show or welcome back to the show, I should say.
Laura McKowen 00:02:40 Hey, Eric. Good to be here. Thank you.
Eric Zimmer 00:02:42 I’m always happy when I get a chance to talk to you. I’ve been sort of following along with your sobriety journey. It’s 11 years now, so congratulations. And you’ve got a great Substack also where I have been reading and keeping up with. So I’m excited to talk about a bunch of different things. But before we start, we’ll start like we always do with the parable. And in the parable, there’s a grandparent who’s talking with a grandchild, and they say, in life there are two wolves inside of us that are always at battle. One is a good wolf, which represents things like kindness and bravery and love, and the other is a bad wolf, which represents things like greed and hatred and fear.
Eric Zimmer 00:03:19 And the grandchild stops and they think about it for a second. They look up at their grandparent and they say, well, which one wins? And their grandparents says, the one you feed. So I’d like to start off by asking you what that parable means to you in your life and in the work that you do.
Laura McKowen 00:03:33 Okay, so I’m not sure how I have answered this question in our prior conversations, but I know how I would answer it today. I have been writing about and dealing with a lot of acute anxiety in the past couple of years especially. I had a relationship and we were engaged together for four years and it ended about two years ago, almost two years ago, and I’ve always struggled with anxiety to some degree. But since then it has been really acute periods of anxiety. And so I’ve had to try to find new ways to look at that, work with it and think about it and relate to it. And if you have struggled with anxiety in this way, or anyone who’s listening has struggled in this way, it can really, really, really take over your life and take you down on the days that it’s bad, it feels otherworldly.
Laura McKowen 00:04:23 It feels impossible. And what it has forced me to do is go back to the most basic practices of, I would say, sobriety, that I really started in sobriety, where this comes into the good wolf, bad wolf thing. If I think of waking up in the morning with like an empty stomach or two empty stomachs, the good wolf stomach and the bad wolf stomach, the the good wolf being the path that I could go down. That is going to mean that I’m able to manage my day just like very baseline expectations. The bad wolf meaning I am going to feed the stories. The lack of discipline, which I’ll get into a second, the practices, the sort of rote habits that will lead to a really horrific anxiety day and therefore a non-functional, very depressive day.
Eric Zimmer 00:05:29 Right.
Laura McKowen 00:05:30 I have to the the good wolf versus bad wolf, in which one I’m going to feed dials down to the like, minute by minute choices I make when I wake up. And what I mean by that is I have to be extraordinarily focused and disciplined with the thoughts that I’m allowing myself to chase and nurture in my mind, and I have to sort of stack up very, very, very basic practices that help me get to a level of okay ness versus like sliding down a hill.
Laura McKowen 00:06:08 And what those are for me are no caffeine on those days. Unfortunately, writing these specific prompts and sort of practices that I’ve learned in my journal and it takes, you know, sometimes it takes 30 minutes. So it’s a chunk of time. It means moving my body. It means putting my phone away. It means praying for me, and it means meditating for like 10 to 15 minutes minimum. And I think sometimes the the good wolf bad wolf thing can seem a little bit esoteric and like, you know, am I looking over my right shoulder or my left shoulder or am I, you know, reading this book or that book, or am I giving into, you know, desires or am I, you know, going to spend my time in some fruitful way where I’m of service to others, it can seem like these very sort of big, grand, Big stroke things that we have to decide. And and I guess there’s a long way of saying, it’s the teeny tiny, tiny things right now.
Laura McKowen 00:07:15 The seemingly teeny, teeny daily rote habits that I that I have to choose that stack up to me being really okay versus not okay. I have no shot at, the good wolf winning. Let’s say if I’m not doing these teeny tiny little habits and they’re so easy to let go of and they’re so easy to forget, they’re so easy to let go of, you wake up in the morning, you’re like, man, I just want to have a cup of coffee and like, zone out and scroll Instagram for 15 minutes. But if I do that on these days and these weeks and months where I’m in a really acute anxiety place, I’m gone. And it’s like a snowball and I can’t. I can’t track it. So that’s the good wolf, bad wolf for me right now. And it’s it really feels when I’m in the bad place, it really feels absolutely untenable. And it’s amazing to me that these small things add up to such an extraordinary difference.
Eric Zimmer 00:08:14 There’s so many things you said in there that I would like to hit on, and one of the things that I’ve enjoyed, the way you approach it, not that you are going through it, but that it has been the way you are writing openly about how devastating the loss of that relationship was, how serious the anxiety has been.
Eric Zimmer 00:08:32 And I think there is a tendency in sobriety circles for us to paint a happy picture of what sobriety is, because it is a much better picture, right? I think we would all agree at any time, those of us who are sober would say like, it’s much, much better. And you know what? It still sucks sometimes. Sometimes it’s still really hard. And I think about that parable too. I was actually saying to somebody it was interviewing earlier today, and I said, I don’t know that a decade on, 11 years on that, I would pick that parable as the way I would orient the whole show today.
Laura McKowen 00:09:09 Totally. Yeah, I agree.
Eric Zimmer 00:09:11 But when I’m in times of trouble, that parable rings really, really strong, right? Because it points to there are things that I know can help, and there are things that I know don’t help, and I’ve got to make that choice. And so I think that that’s really for me when it becomes, like you said, less ethereal and a lot more pragmatic.
Eric Zimmer 00:09:38 Now, I think part of emotional sobriety for me is realizing and learning how to do those kind of practices consistently, even when I’m not in trouble. Right. Yeah. Like that’s that’s kind of that’s kind of the trick is, you know, how do we stay motivated to do the things that are good for us when we’re not in so much pain?
Laura McKowen 00:10:00 Yeah, we’re saying the same thing. You said it in a different in a different way, a little bit more succinctly. I don’t know I don’t know the secret to that yet. I haven’t figured that out yet because they tend to get a looser with with things once I feel good. and I don’t know that that I don’t know that there’s anything actually wrong with that. I think that’s sort of a natural ebb and flow of life.
Eric Zimmer 00:10:23 Right, right.
Laura McKowen 00:10:24 I think we bounce back faster. We go back to our practices faster. We have built a stronger baseline of remembrance in our body and in our, nervous system and in our, in our, neural pathways, so that it’s like getting on the track is not that big of a deal.
Laura McKowen 00:10:46 Yeah.
Eric Zimmer 00:10:46 Right. Yeah. So there’s something you wrote recently that made me laugh out loud. You’re talking about anxiety. I always want to find it here for a second. You said, I know my back is against the wall when I’m really reading Pema Chodron. Not like have her on in the background because it’s a nice voice, but like, I’m really reading it and that just made me laugh because that is so true. And she’s exactly the author. I would say that when I’m like, really freaked out, really having like an existentially bad time, she’s where I go back to and I don’t find her as compelling to me most of the time because I’m like, well, yeah, I know everything is groundless and but, you know, like, but when I am in trouble. And that just made me laugh. Like, I know I’m in trouble when that’s what I’m reading.
Laura McKowen 00:11:35 I think she’s that for a lot of people.
Eric Zimmer 00:11:38 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Laura McKowen 00:11:39 And God, I’m grateful for her.
Laura McKowen 00:11:42 When you’re really in the shit, she is my go to and she has been for like 15 years.
Eric Zimmer 00:12:17 So a couple years ago, I had, I went through a pretty difficult time, where there was a lot of grief. There was a lot of anxiety, there was a lot of surprise. I was just sort of completely taken aback by what was happening. And I remember having these moments where I felt like I thought I had done all this work. Like, you know, I’ve done inner child work, I’ve done I, you know, I thought I was through all of this. What is this. And having certain moments of feeling very discouraged. I had a therapist help me reframe that and we may get into that. But I’d love to know like was that your experience and how have you been able to put that in a context that’s useful?
Laura McKowen 00:13:06 Yes, it has been my experience throughout sobriety, and I think of things that have helped me reframe it, I think. Do you know about Spiral Dynamics and kind of that we heal? You don’t even need to know.
Laura McKowen 00:13:20 You know anyone who’s listening about the whole thing of Spiral Dynamics. But I think we heal in a spiral. Yep. Trending up. But we go around and around and around and.
Eric Zimmer 00:13:29 We see the same things again.
Laura McKowen 00:13:31 Feels like we are revisiting the same lessons. And we are. And I think we may be revisiting them in just a different context. We may feel we often feel like you said like, oh, I’m just here again. It’s the exact same thing. I don’t think that’s true, though. I love the quote. Nothing ever goes away until it teaches us what we need to know. And I think each time I say we circle, I’ll just pick an example. I have a pattern of relationships that I’ve had since it was imprinted in my childhood. Comes from my dad. I chase, or am attracted to, or in relationship with, or in some kind of situation with an unavailable, emotionally unavailable person. And I could look at the entire history of all my relationships, starting from very young and until this last one, and say, God, I’d never learned anything.
Laura McKowen 00:14:34 I just kept repeating the same thing over and over again. But if I look closer, that’s not true at all. Each time, certainly since sobriety, it’s gone up like that. My healing has gone up and up and up. It’s not a once and done, and it’s never going to be a once and done. I don’t think there will be a time, while I will ever not be triggered into that type of reaction, whether I’m in a relationship with a healthy person or not. Yeah, the difference is we get out of said situation more quickly, we recover more quickly, and sometimes I do think too. This is my theory right now, and I don’t have anything really to base this on, other than all the sort of spiritual reading that I’ve done over the course of my life, meaning there’s nothing scientific that I know about it. It’s just my feeling and what I’ve learned. Things get really intense before we sort of jump a level of healing. So this last relationship for me was like, you have got to be kidding me that I’m in this much pain.
Laura McKowen 00:15:48 Learning this particular thing again at ten years sober, and it was the most excruciating pain that I had ever experienced.
Eric Zimmer 00:15:59 Right.
Laura McKowen 00:15:59 And I did, in moments feel like that was a failure. Like, God, I haven’t learned anything or I’m hopeless. It’s just going to keep happening. But I know what’s truer is one, because of all the prior work that I had done, I was able to actually metabolize more of the hurt and the pain and therefore absorb more of the healing and the lessons. So I think it’s this strange inverse where it’s almost like the more capacity we have built, the more the deeper our sorrow and our pain. It’s like it carves more out of us. But then in that, you know, the Kahlil Gibran, the deeper our sorrow, the more joy we can contain. I think the deeper the sorrow, the more healing and the more joy and the more capacity we then have for the next thing. So there’s that. I also think that as we go along further in life, the big thing for me, and maybe this is true for you, that I am learning that it all comes down to how much I can forgive and love and have compassion for myself.
Laura McKowen 00:17:11 And that has really only come online in the past few years. Yeah, I still was what I would call healing or growing or, you know, my resilience was really based on some kind of pressure to just push forward and a little bit of self-hatred or a lot, a little bit of just, I’m going to exile that part of me. I’m still pissed. I just don’t want those parts of me anymore. And so I think the, the part where nothing ever leaves us alone until it teaches us what we need to know. I think the end point of what we really need to know, and what we really need to learn is that until we accept all the parts of ourselves and really learn to integrate those parts and love them and bring them along, we’re going to get that same lesson. So it almost hurts worse the longer we go along, because there’s more accumulated pain and exiling of those parts. So this part of me that chased that unavailable person, which is really just me trying to complete some story from my childhood with my dad, with just a new person.
Laura McKowen 00:18:19 Right. I now, instead of having done it ten times, I’ve done it 400 times. And I feel that and that part has been exiled 400 times, and the pain is deeper. And I’m also 11 years sober. I don’t have other coping mechanisms now, so I’m feeling it more. But the opportunity to integrate that part and to bring that part along and to have more self-compassion for that part and to actually say, okay, I’m not going to hate you anymore. I’m not going to punish you. I’m not going to say you’re stupid or you’re wrong or whatever. That opportunity is there. And with that becomes, it comes a another level of healing. It just hurts worse. So there’s a few things there. I think, like overall, I think we do keep circling the same lessons. I think we get better at recovering. I think we get better at acknowledging, I think our awareness increases, but I don’t think the pain gets easier. I think it actually gets harder the further we go along until we’ve really, really integrated the lesson.
Laura McKowen 00:19:28 And I think it always takes so much longer than we think. The ultimate acceptance is that we just don’t ever get to finally arrive at the healing place.
Eric Zimmer 00:19:39 Yeah, I don’t think there is one. And I think the tricky part with all this is like you lose a relationship to someone you’re engaged to, that you’ve been in this relationship that you’ve built all these ideas and around. What’s the healthy, healed response to that? It’s still an enormous amount of pain.
Laura McKowen 00:19:59 Yeah. The healthy, healed response is to be in pain.
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Eric Zimmer 00:20:41 Join us at one UFI Net newsletter. That’s one you feed your Net newsletter and start receiving your next bite of wisdom. All right, back to the show. I thought a relationship that was really important to me was ending, and my therapist just kept bringing up my childhood and I was like, well, of course, yes, but if I came to you and said that my partner had just died, would you be telling me right now that the thing we need to be doing is finding out what’s broken about me from my childhood?
Laura McKowen 00:21:16 Oh my God, yes.
Eric Zimmer 00:21:17 Like, no, we would not be doing that now if my grief went on and devastated me and I couldn’t climb out of it. And of course. But there’s also a natural humanness that none of us get out of. And I think that the self-improvement world subtly tells us there is a way out of it. When I don’t think there is.
Laura McKowen 00:21:40 No, I think you’re so right. I was actually very grateful for the amount of pain that I felt and could feel.
Laura McKowen 00:21:49 My marriage ended. 13 years ago, I didn’t feel much of anything except relief. I was because I was still drinking. I was deep into my addiction. I just wanted to be alone with that, and I wanted to stop feeling like I was ruining his life and his dreams. And I wanted to stop lying. And I wanted to stop cheating and not being married removed a lot of that, and I couldn’t feel the pain because I couldn’t access it. I was so distanced from my own heart because of the drinking and all kinds of unprocessed shit. So I was actually so grateful that I felt it so acutely. This time I felt more real, I felt more alive, I felt more present, and I felt way more sober because, like, emotionally sober, because there’s this quote that I saw maybe six months after the breakup, when I was in this place of like, I just want this to go away. Why is this sticking around so long? You know, you don’t want to be in pain when you’re in pain.
Laura McKowen 00:22:54 It’s terrible. Yeah. And you mentioned the self-help world. A lot of the self-help world. And you said not so subtly. Subtly, I would say not so subtly in some cases. You know, we pathologies, all kinds of forms of dependence, like codependency is like this big thing now, like, oh, if you are somehow emotionally tied to another person’s being and process in their heart and you know, you’re you’re codependent. Yeah. And I think that’s bullshit. I think codependence is real. There is a certain level of pathology that belongs to that. But I think by and large, we have tried so hard not to need each other, not to depend on each other, that we’ve mythologized any emotional regulation that exists in a relationship that should exist. That’s very natural as the kind of animals and the beings that we are. And I saw this quote that said, this is a brutalization of it, but it basically was like we are undone by each other, and if we aren’t undone by each other, there’s something wrong.
Laura McKowen 00:23:59 We’re missing something. Yeah, we are undone by each other.
Eric Zimmer 00:24:03 Yeah. That’s beautiful. I actually think it’s getting better. And I would say in the last several years I feel like this is lessened. But there’s a psychology version and there’s a spiritual version of it which basically said we should be these, like you said, we should be these creatures that all our happiness is inside of us. I should just be happy and be able to generate all that just inside myself. And that’s what a healthy person is. And I think that the more that I’ve learned about what it means to be a human, the way we are wired up, the type of creatures that we are is that that is profoundly false. Yes.
Laura McKowen 00:24:59 Profoundly false.
Eric Zimmer 00:25:00 We should be undone by each other. And like you said, there are ways in which we should be perhaps less undone by each other. Right. And there are people that it’s worth letting undo us. And there’s people that we probably shouldn’t let in to undo us.
Eric Zimmer 00:25:14 And there’s a whole lot of nuance and subtlety in that. But to think that that wouldn’t be the case is to miss. I think a lot of understanding of what we are as creatures, and just a lot of the beauty of being alive.
Laura McKowen 00:25:27 A lot of the beauty of being alive, and a lot of the beauty of being in relationship, which is it’s kind of all we have. Yeah, it’s it’s the number one predictor of happiness is if you have healthy relationships or not. And also of health. Overall health and well-being. So I do agree. I think there’s some ways we are getting more of the nuance in there and getting it a little bit more right. Especially as we’ve understood the the reality of trauma and the impact of trauma. So meaning this sort of hyper individualism and this hyper sort of self-reliance, we’ve started to break that down a bit and understand that, like it’s not just a matter of if you want to be happy, you will. And if you want to have self-esteem, you will.
Laura McKowen 00:26:17 And if you want to have self-worth, you will. You just generate it yourself. That’s all you need is this relationship with yourself. Some of that has dialed down a bit with the understanding of how trauma actually works and, you know, other psychological factors, but I totally agree. And I think that’s a lot about what I’ve written about in this next book, just from a memoir perspective, not a teaching perspective is just sort of this coming around to the fact that we are undone by each other. And that’s not a bug, right? That’s not a problem. It’s a reality of being emotional beings, being biologically connected to each other. I mean, some of this stuff is just science. We we attune and attach to each other nervous systems. We do co regulate each other. When you’re with another person that you love and that cares for you, you co regulate each other. We need each other. We need community, we need relationship. So for me, because this is my, you know, sort of my ground zero lesson, this is what has been the hardest for me to sort of accept about myself that I can be impacted and that there’s nothing wrong with the way I am impacted, that my feelings aren’t a problem, that my quote unquote weaknesses are not actually a problem.
Laura McKowen 00:27:40 They’re beautiful. And part of what makes me just normal human. That that I don’t need to have shame about that. That’s what I’ve written about in my latest book, is just coming around to the fact that, like, emotional sobriety and so much like physical sobriety is learning to how to see the humanity and the behaviors that you have and that they are only always, ever a way to connect and feel okay and safe in the world.
Eric Zimmer 00:28:05 Yeah, that’s a beautiful description of it. Because the more I have reflected on my addiction, the more I see that’s what it was all about.
Laura McKowen 00:28:14 That’s all it ever was.
Eric Zimmer 00:28:15 Recently, you told a man you didn’t want to keep seeing him because he didn’t feel safe. And you described this beautiful scene. It really moved me where you’re you’re sort of you’ve told the guy this and you’re crying, but you’re not crying because the relationship, you’re crying because you you did it for yourself. You stood up and you went, okay, I’m not going to go down that path.
Eric Zimmer 00:28:37 And that’s a really big moment.
Laura McKowen 00:28:40 It was wild. And it’s really goes back to what I was talking about earlier about, you know, I have done that same dance 400 plus times in my life. It’s the thing I know best. It’s where I have actually tried to find safety. It is something I have hated and shamed myself for so many times. It has caused me such excruciating pain over the course of my life. And specifically, what I’m talking about is, is abandoning my self to try and be what someone else. To try to get some form of scrap of love, attention, affection. Because better than nothing, you know, to have that pathological sort of hope that, oh, maybe this will, this will turn into something different. Maybe this will rewrite that original story. Finally, this time, I’ll get the person who can’t see me to see me. Yeah, and what I meant by this guy isn’t safe. This person isn’t safe. As I knew I could feel it.
Laura McKowen 00:29:56 And he had said as much in not not that specific way, but he’d said he was looking for something different than what I wanted. He. He said it. And it was like this sliding door moment where I could go into that old dance. I could go into that old thing, and man, did I want to. It’s kind of like substance addiction, actually. It’s a lot alike. It like it where you really actually want to keep doing the thing. There is some kind of comfort and relief and deep familiarity with what is going to happen and your biology. And there’s a chase element and there’s a reward element. And, you know, it’s that equation that we have that’s in the background when we have a substance addiction, where I remember someone in in the rooms of AA when I first started and I was going to those meetings, say if there was even 5% relief left for me in drinking, I would still do it.
Eric Zimmer 00:31:03 Yeah.
Laura McKowen 00:31:03 And I remember thinking, oh, there’s still a lot of relief left there for me.
Laura McKowen 00:31:08 I still get a payoff. I still like it for the first couple hours, maybe even the whole night. Maybe I don’t hate it until the next day. But eventually and very quickly, once I, you know, my back was sort of up against wall, and I knew I shouldn’t be dreaming. I knew this thing had me. The relief window got really, really, really small to where it was almost nothing. And the relief window for this type of a relationship. For me, the payoff window has started to get smaller and smaller, but it’s still there. And man, it’s harder to break because it’s not a substance. Emotions love. People are not a binary. It’s not either you’re doing it or you’re not. We’re all sort of doing it or testing doing it right. And so sometimes you don’t know til it’s a little too late and you’re already attached to this person and you’ve already got some history and you’re attached to them, and your biology is firing to like, go towards this person.
Laura McKowen 00:32:09 I think it’s way stronger than substances, the biology, the biological urge to reenact the trauma.
Eric Zimmer 00:32:16 Yeah. And also substances you can eliminate.
Laura McKowen 00:32:18 You can eliminate. That’s what I mean. It’s not a binary.
Eric Zimmer 00:32:21 Yeah. I mean it’s one of the great things about if you have a substance addiction is you can just truly starve it out of existence. Yeah. I’m not saying it’s easy, but you will hit a point where, at least for most people, it ceases to be a problem. But relationships. You never get out of that dance.
Laura McKowen 00:32:40 You can’t. No you can’t. And like alcohol, I can remove it from my home. I can stop going places where there’s drinking. I can limit the access I have, you know, the places that I go with my friends. You know, all those things I could. Like you said, I can slowly choke it out and starve it out of my life. And truly, I haven’t had a drink in 11 years. I haven’t touched alcohol and I don’t have to.
Laura McKowen 00:33:01 I have to and want to be around people, and I want to be in relationship and I want love, I need it. Not only do you want it, you need it. You can’t. You literally can’t starve yourself out of relationship. So it’s messier that way. So back to this story. All of the work that I had done in the past had sort of brought me, bubbled up into this moment, and I first was able to verbalize to him that, and that’s something I’d never been able to do before. I would have been too embarrassed to say, you’re just not safe for me. And it wasn’t physically safe. It’s like you’re not safe for me to invest my heart into this will not just cause me pain, it certainly will, but it will cause me. It’s very costly for me. It’s not just like, oh, I might have a little heartache. Like, now this is this is going to equal a lot of anxiety. It’s going to equal pain that I will have trouble tolerating.
Laura McKowen 00:34:04 I will not function. I will, you know, it’s it’s it’s real deep for me. So I said you’re not safe for me and decided to stop pursuing this thing. And I had never done that before. Never. I had done the exact opposite. I’d run towards it. Well, maybe putting up some like, you know, saying, oh, I’m not going to do her. This is bad for me or what? Saying I trying to be the cool girl. I would do all kinds of gymnastics to try to make it okay and it could never be okay. And I cried for all the times that I hadn’t done that before. And I cried because it was fucking hard. And there was sadness there. I didn’t want to do that.
Eric Zimmer 00:34:42 Yeah, but you did. It’s just amazing to me. Like, I just love a story like that. And again, it’s not to say that you may not in two weeks do the exact same thing again, but those moments, I think, and I can recognize them in my journey to sobriety.
Eric Zimmer 00:34:59 I can recognize the moments where even if it was for a day or a week or one night where I was able to, like, go, oh, no, yeah, I’d be like, oh, look at that. Holy mackerel.
Laura McKowen 00:35:12 It’s a possibility that you now have it’s a little twitch of muscle memory that you now have that you didn’t have before. And people who haven’t been through something like this, it’s really hard to explain the knife’s edge you’re on in those moments, what it costs you to go in either direction.
Eric Zimmer 00:35:32 That’s a great way of saying it. What it costs you to go in either direction. One of them just costs a little bit more. One of them probably a little bit, actually. Maybe. Maybe a lot more in the long term. But yeah. And I love the way you describe it. So in AA we used to use the phrase cunning, baffling and powerful. Yeah. Right. And that’s what this sort of thing you’re talking about is I’ve got my own version.
Eric Zimmer 00:35:56 I’ve been in a relationship for ten years. I’ve got my own version of it, which is more or less, you know, like I have to really work because I think there’s a certain degree of distance that I like. And if you come too close, I want to back up. But if you start to pull away.
Laura McKowen 00:36:16 You five alarm fire in your body, right?
Eric Zimmer 00:36:19 Yeah. And and what I’m astounded by is I only know it now with a ton of awareness because it changes my entire perception of the other person. It’s bizarre to me the way like, oh, if you’re moving away from me, I suddenly it’s just crazy, like it’s, you’re the most beautiful person in the entire world. But if you’re coming at me, it’s different. And and to recognize that like to say it’s emotional. It is. But it’s it changes my entire perception. It’s biology. Really deep. Yeah.
Laura McKowen 00:36:57 Yeah. It’s truly biology. Yeah I think there’s there’s an emotional thing going on. There’s probably a spiritual thing going on.
Laura McKowen 00:37:03 But I think it’s truly biology. I think the attachment system goes nuts. And all of a sudden this you are in a, it’s a threat to your whole body that this person is moving away from you. And so of course they become more attractive. Of course they become more powerful. Of course they become. Yeah, there’s a fantasy about them now. There’s they have magical powers. They have all these things.
Eric Zimmer 00:37:29 Yeah. It’s amazing because I can look back at previous relationships and see like how wildly different I saw the same person, right? How wildly different? I saw the same person. And with years of remove now I’m like, well, maybe I see them as accurate as we ever see anything, which I think is questionable, but I can look back at like my wife of, you know, my son’s 28. So 26 years ago, I feel like I can see her with some degree of I’m not hooked up. Yeah. I’m not hooked up. Right. And I’m like, oh, okay.
Eric Zimmer 00:38:04 That’s interesting. She’s neither as amazing as I thought when she was moving away. And I think biology is a great way to say it because it changes perception in a really deep way.
Laura McKowen 00:38:17 That’s the only way I’ve been able to really understand it and explain it into the depth in which it animates you is biology. Yeah. And I’m not making that up. This is like I have have the fortune of being connected to the foremost sort of leaders in this space, the space being, you know, psychology, attachment theory, biology, complex trauma. I’m assuming you have some complex trauma in your past. And this plays into it because when you feel safe, I’m just going to guess because of what you just said, when you feel safe in a relationship. There’s a discomfort to that almost. It’s like that’s the sort of moving away thing. It’s like, it’s safer.
Eric Zimmer 00:39:06 Or it manifests bored. It manifests like.
Laura McKowen 00:39:10 Yeah, the person’s not that interesting or sometimes not that interesting. Like, there’s no spark.
Laura McKowen 00:39:18 There’s no electricity. Yep. And when someone’s moving away from you, it is familiar. It sparks that Disorganized attachment thing.
Eric Zimmer 00:39:31 Which I am, which I think is such a great term. Yeah.
Laura McKowen 00:39:36 It’s it’s and it’s and your body like you don’t sit there and this is not rational. No. All of a sudden your system just lighting up and you’re like, oh, and I can’t control that anymore than I could control my drinking at the end that this is deeper. This was underneath the drinking. This is a lot of the reason I did drink.
Eric Zimmer 00:39:56 Yes.
Laura McKowen 00:39:58 Was to try to soothe this sort of it causes this extraordinary existential pain.
Eric Zimmer 00:40:03 It’s been interesting to remain in relationship with somebody for ten years and and do this dance. Yeah. And a lot of it is me. I’m a lot more conscious of it now. So I can sort of just I can’t really make it go away. Exactly. But I can try and relax around it. So I sort of think about a lot of times I use being sick as a really useful analogy for a lot of things, because when I’m sick, I just know my brain isn’t working and I just do my very best to be like, okay, I hear everything you’re saying, but the world isn’t that black, that bleak, that like, just settle down.
Eric Zimmer 00:40:43 And that’s what I think I’ve learned to do. The other thing I’ve learned to do is name it a little bit and sometimes even not, not a lot, but sometimes even with my partner. And the minute I do, it’s gone. It’s so strange. It’s so strange. The minute I say I’m feeling this and I say it to her, it vanishes. Yeah, but I don’t want to be saying that all the time, right?
Laura McKowen 00:41:04 No, because that’s hard as a partner, but.
Eric Zimmer 00:41:06 As another person.
Laura McKowen 00:41:07 Yeah, yeah. But I think this speaks to the fact that we heal relationally. Yeah. That what you’re talking about is, like, really healing with someone in real time. And that person can’t be that for you all the time. We would destroy each other if we if we did that.
Eric Zimmer 00:41:23 If we vocalized every weird emotional fluctuation that went through us. Yeah. Of course.
Laura McKowen 00:41:29 But being with someone where it’s safe enough to speak that sometimes, and to put words to that and to have them stay and I mean, that is how we actually heal is relationally.
Laura McKowen 00:41:41 So this is all this stuff that is really deeply present for me now and at 11 years and that I’ve written about in this last book, and I’m still walking through and understanding, but I understand a lot more than I did before. Wow. It’s a wild ride.
Eric Zimmer 00:41:57 Yeah. Before you check out, pick one insight from today and ask, how will I practice this before bedtime? Need help turning ideas into action? My free weekly Bites of Wisdom email lands every Wednesday with simple practices, reflection, and links to former guests who can guide you even on the tough stuff like anxiety, purpose and habit change. Feed your good wolf at one you feed dot net newsletter again one you feed dot net. newsletter. Well, I think that’s a beautiful place to wrap up. I, as always, am inspired by you. Your writing, it’s outstanding and just the bravery that you show in this, I think, is such a beautiful thing. And you said something in relation to this that I just want to end us with.
Eric Zimmer 00:42:44 If I can find it. You say I’m sharing this mostly because if it’s your experience too, it might be helpful to know you’re not alone or somehow uniquely fucked up, especially in sobriety. It seems like we shouldn’t struggle in this way, but almost everyone I know does. We drank for good reason. It would be completely unmanageable if I was drinking. It’s still tough, not unmanageable, but tough. And I just love that because you’re normalizing this thing that everybody has and people in sobriety, you know, there’s the performative aspect of going to meetings and I’m sober and how wonderful it is. There’s a performative aspect to it is wonderful to see people write about honestly. So thank you for all that.
Laura McKowen 00:43:25 Oh, you’re so welcome. No. Thank you. It’s I’m it’s I’m grateful to have this conversation. You’re catching me when I’m, like, doing these things in real time. So I don’t have packaged sort of ways to talk about it. So I appreciate your patience as I fumble my way through my words.
Eric Zimmer 00:43:46 no real fumbling that I noticed.
Laura McKowen 00:43:48 Okay. Thanks, Eric. It was really nice to see you again.
Eric Zimmer 00:43:51 Thank you so much for listening to the show. If you found this conversation helpful, inspiring, or thought provoking, I’d love for you to share it with a friend. Share it from one person to another is the lifeblood of what we do. We don’t have a big budget, and I’m certainly not a celebrity, but we have something even better. And that’s you just hit the share button on your podcast app, or send a quick text with the episode link to someone who might enjoy it. Your support means the world, and together we can spread wisdom one episode at a time. Thank you for being part of the One You Feed community.



