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    anniegrace

    Explore "anniegrace" with insightful episodes like "Reinventing Our Relationship With Alcohol with Annie Grace", "Episode 74: This Naked Mind with Annie Grace", "(un)Happy Mother's Day || Interview With Kelly Fitzgerald Junco, Author of the Adventures of a Sober Senorita, She Recovers Coach and This Naked Mind Marketing Gugu", "27 Tips for a Better Life Part 2 - Plus The Alcohol Experiment - Episode #87" and "#30: How to Grow Your Brain to Be A Better Marketer with Annie Grace" from podcasts like ""Champagne Problems", "Euphoric the Podcast", "Recovery Hour", "InfoQuench" and "Worth Every Penny Joycast"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Reinventing Our Relationship With Alcohol with Annie Grace

    Reinventing Our Relationship With Alcohol with Annie Grace

    Annie Grace‘s book, This Naked Mind, is the #1 seller on Amazon in the category of alcohol. Annie has created a new way of looking at our relationship to alcohol and her highly successful methodology and curriculum has swept the world and changed millions of lives. We are honored to have Annie on the show to discuss her journey and the creation of such an incredibly effective tool. Annie also works with Robbie on a personal issue he deals with in a short segment during the episode. Thank you Annie!

    Episode 74: This Naked Mind with Annie Grace

    Episode 74: This Naked Mind with Annie Grace

    In this week's episode of Euphoric The Podcast, Karolina is joined by author Annie Grace as they talk about the empowerment of living an alcohol-free life, discovering your authentic self, and the importance of slowing down in order to speed up.

    Annie Grace has revolutionized what it means to live alcohol-free. She wrote the book This Naked Mind, which later evolved into a company that has helped hundreds of thousands of people change their relationships with alcohol. With an approach of compassion and curiosity as catalysts for change, Annie also trains coaches in alcohol-free life coaching.

    This episode is filled with wisdom, possibility, and encouragement. Enjoy.

    This Naked Mind Institute

    This Naked Mind by Annie Grace

    Check out some of these book recommendations from Annie: Stress Less, Accomplish More, The Power of Now, Loving What Is, The Go Giver, The Great Work Of Your Life, and The War of Art.

    Become Euphoric 10 Week Group Coaching Program - now open for enrollment for a limited time! Program starts on July 26. 

    Follow Euphoric Alcohol-Free on Instagram

    And as always, rate, review, and subscribe so we can continue spreading our message far and wide.

    (un)Happy Mother's Day || Interview With Kelly Fitzgerald Junco, Author of the Adventures of a Sober Senorita, She Recovers Coach and This Naked Mind Marketing Gugu

    (un)Happy Mother's Day || Interview With Kelly Fitzgerald Junco,  Author of the Adventures of a Sober Senorita, She Recovers Coach and This Naked Mind Marketing Gugu

    Kelly Fitzgerald Junco is a sober writer, recovery coach, and new mom based in Southwest Florida who is best known for her personal blog The Adventures of a Sober Señorita. Her writing has been published across the web on sites like the Huffington Post and Elite Daily. She is currently writing a memoir.

    Commemorating her first Mother’s Day as a mother herself, Kelly and Lori dig deep on this episode of The Recovery Hour. 

    Topics include:

    • alcohol use disorder
    • recovery language
    • pregnancy loss
    • death of a parent
    • the many stages of grief
    • mental illness
      • depression
      • anxiety
      • post partum everything

    and well... the usually little bit of everything else. 

     

    FIND KELLY:

    kelly@sobersenorita.com

    Follow me on Facebook

    Instagram

    Twitter

    The Adventures of a Sober Señorita

     

    THE RECOVERY HOUR: 

    WEBSITE

    FACEBOOK

    INSTAGRAM

    CLUBHOUSE @THERECOVERYHOUR

    27 Tips for a Better Life Part 2 - Plus The Alcohol Experiment - Episode #87

    27 Tips for a Better Life Part 2 - Plus The Alcohol Experiment - Episode #87

    In this episode, Jeff and Amy finish covering 27 tips for a better life - highlights from a longer list from lesswrong.com.  Plus, they discuss dry January, 'The Alcohol Experiment', and the miraculous recovery of their Instagram account.  Be sure to listen for the literal mic drop (sigh).  Hope you laugh along with us in this one.  Thanks for listening! 

    #30: How to Grow Your Brain to Be A Better Marketer with Annie Grace

    #30: How to Grow Your Brain to Be A Better Marketer with Annie Grace
    Author, researcher, mom, wife, inventor, coach, CEO…these are just a few of the roles my friend, Annie Grace, plays each day. You may have seen Annie on Good Morning America or in People Magazine because what she does is really revolutionary.
    And that’s why I asked her to speak at my 2 day event for boutique photographers, Go Boutique Live, last February. I wasn’t surprised when her program was one of the highest-rated, so I asked Annie if I could share some of the highlights on the podcast today for those of you who weren’t there with us in Texas. Of course she said yes!
    Annie’s best-known for teaching people how to have freedom in their relationship with alcohol.
    And her techniques will work to free yourself from ANY limiting belief and head trash you’ve built up.
    She actually learned to rewire her brain after she hit a serious bump in her otherwise fantastic life. She had a great career traveling first-class around the globe. A great marriage. Wonderful kids. She had IT ALL. But she had become a serious alcoholic. Like, a “screwdrivers at 6 a.m.” type of alcoholic. And she didn’t know WHY. So she spent a year diving into the SCIENCE behind WHY she was drinking and she uncovered a lot more along the way that can help YOU in your photography business.
    So press play if you want to learn how to grow your brain to be a better marketer using the same techniques she’s taught hundreds of thousands of people around the world. This stuff really works!

    CANDID CONVO: The Guy At The Gas Station || Is His Recovery My Responsibility?

    CANDID CONVO: The Guy At The Gas Station || Is His Recovery My Responsibility?

    BONUS EPISO... rant

    Host Lori Windfeldt takes a new approach at connecting with her listeners. Recorded "live" in her car, Lori questions her responsibility as a coach and recovering alcoholic, to have stopped someone from her 12 step home group (which she hasn't attended in a long time) making a personal purchase. After listening, please bounce on facebook page and search for "guy at the gas station" and comment your thoughts. 

    SONGS MENTIONED w/ link:

    OK NOT TO BE OK - Demi Levato & Marshmello 

    Lyrics:

    Feeling like a drop in the ocean that don’t nobody notice

    Maybe it’s all just in your head

    Feeling like you’re trapped in your own skin, and now your body’s frozen

    Broken down, you’ve got nothing left

    When you’re high on emotion and you’re losing your focus and you feel too exhausted to pray

    Don’t get lost in the moment or give up when you’re closest, all you need is somebody to say

    It’s okay not to be okay

    It’s okay not to be okay

    When you’re down and you feel ashamed

    It’s okay not to be okay

    Feeling like your life’s an illusion and lately you’re secluded

    Thinking you’ll never get your chance

    Feeling like you got no solution, it’s only ‘cause you’re human

    No control its out of your hands

    When you’re high on emotion and you’re losing your focus and you feel too exhausted to pray

    Don’t get lost in the moment or give up when you’re closest, all you need is somebody to say

    It’s okay not to be okay

    It’s okay not to be okay

    When you’re down and you feel ashamed

    It’s okay not to be okay

    When you’re high on emotion and you’re losing your focus and you feel too exhausted to pray

    Don’t get lost in the moment or give up when you’re closest, all you need is somebody to say

    It’s okay not to be okay

    It’s okay not to be okay

    When you’re down and you feel ashamed

    It’s okay not to be okay

    It’s okay not to be okay

    COME AND GO -Juice WRLD & Marshmello

    I try to be everything that I can

    But sometimes I come out as bein' nothin'

    I try to be everything that I can

    But sometimes I come out as bein' nothin'

    I pray to God that he make me a better man, uh

    Maybe one day I'ma stand for somethin'

    I'm thankin' God that he made you part of the plan

    I guess I ain't go through all that Hell for nothin'

    I'm always fuckin' up and wreckin' shit, it seems like I perfected it

    I offer you my love, I hope you take it like some medicine

    You tell me, ain't nobody better than me, I think that there's better than me

    Hope you see the better in me, always end up betterin' me

    I don't wanna ruin this one

    This type of love don't always come and go

    I don't wanna ruin this one

    This type of love don't always come and go

    We take drugs, then you hold me close

    Then I tell you how you make me whole

    Sometimes I feel you like bein' alone

    Then you tell me that I should've stayed in the room

    Guess I got it all wrong, all along, my fault

    My mistakes probably wipe all the rights I've done

    Sayin' goodbye to bygones, those are bye, gones

    Head up, baby, stay strong, we gon' live long

    This type of love don't always come and go

    I don't wanna ruin this one

    This type of love don't always come and go

    DEMI LEVATO: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demi_Lovato

    Lovato had suffered from bipolar disorderAnorexia nervosa (binge type), self-harm, and being bullied before she went into rehab at age 18.[256][257] On November 1, 2010, Lovato withdrew from the Jonas Brothers: Live in Concert tour, entering a treatment facility for "physical and emotional issues".[258] It was reported[259] that she decided to enter treatment after punching female dancer Alex Welch; her management and family convinced her she needed help. Lovato said she took "100 percent, full responsibility" for the incident.[256] On January 28, 2011, Lovato completed inpatient treatment at Timberline Knolls and returned home. She acknowledged that she had bulimia, had cut herself, and had been "self-medicating" with drugs and alcohol "like a lot of teens do to numb their pain".[260] She added that she "basically had a nervous breakdown" and was diagnosed with bipolar disorder during her treatment. Lovato later said that she had used cocaine several times a day and smuggled cocaine onto airplanes.

    In April 2011, Lovato became a contributing editor for Seventeen magazine, writing an article that described her struggles.[263] In March 2012, MTV aired a documentary, Demi Lovato: Stay Strong, about her rehab and recovery.[264] She began work on her fourth studio album the following month.[265] In January 2013, it was reported that Lovato had been living in a sober-living facility in Los Angeles for over a year because she felt it was the best way to avoid returning to her addictions and eating disorder.[266] Lovato celebrated the six-year anniversary of her sobriety on March 15, 2018.[267]

    In her 2017 YouTube documentary Demi Lovato: Simply Complicated, Lovato revealed publicly that her treatment at Timberline Knolls was not entirely successful, stating that she still struggled with alcoholism and a cocaine addiction in the year following her stint in the treatment centre and further revealing that she was in fact under the influence of cocaine while being interviewed about her sobriety for Demi Lovato: Stay Strong.[268][269][270][271] She stated: "I wasn't working my program. I wasn't ready to get sober. I was sneaking it on planes, sneaking it in bathrooms, sneaking it throughout the night. Nobody knew."[269]

    Lovato also stated that her drug and alcohol addictions caused her to not only nearly overdose several times, but later began to impact her ability to perform and promote her third studio album Unbroken, referencing a 2012 performance on the eleventh season of American Idol where she was severely hungover.[268][270][271] After her management team had expressed their intentions to leave her, Lovato agreed to resume treatment and counseling for her addictions, leading to her move to a sober-living facility in Los Angeles with roommates and responsibilities to help her overcome her drug and alcohol problems.[268][271]

    On June 21, 2018, Lovato released the single "Sober" in which she revealed she had relapsed following six years of sobriety.[272] On July 24, 2018, she was rushed to the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after emergency services were called to her home due to an opioid overdose.[273][274] She was reported to be stable and recovering later in the day.[273] Lovato was reported to have overdosed on oxycodone laced with fentanyl[275] and was revived with naloxone.[276] She was hospitalized for two weeks and subsequently entered an in-patient rehab facility.[277] In December 2018, Lovato took to Twitter to dismiss rumors regarding her overdose and went on to thank her fans, writing: "If I feel like the world needs to know something, I will tell them MYSELF. All my fans need to know is I'm working hard on myself, I'm happy and clean and I'm SO grateful for their support." She went on to add that some day she would "tell the world what exactly happened, why it happened and what my life is like today.. but until I'm ready to share that with people please stop prying and making up shit that you know nothing about. I still need space and time to heal."

    Lovato later revealed in a 2020 interview on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that her worsened struggles with bulimia in 2018 contributed to her eventual drug overdose, as she relapsed three months prior to the incident due to being extremely unhappy.[279] She attributed these struggles to the extreme measures that her then-manager, Phil McIntyre, took to control what she ate.[280] Lovato further explained that, along with the controlling nature of her management team, they did not provide her with the help she needed, commenting: "People checking what my orders at Starbucks were on my bank statements... just little things like that... it led me to being really unhappy and my bulimia got really bad and I asked for help and I didn't receive the help that I needed."[280] Moreover, she recalled that her thought process the night she relapsed following six years of sobriety was as follows: "I'm six years sober and I'm miserable. I'm even more miserable than I was when I was drinking. Why am I sober?"[280] When Lovato confronted her management team about her thoughts, they responded with, "You're being very selfish, this would ruin things for not just you but for us as well," which she says made her feel "completely abandoned" due to triggering her underlying abandonment issues with her birth father, and so she "drank that night".

    Juice Wrld: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juice_Wrld

    Death

    On December 8, 2019, Higgins was aboard a private Gulfstream jet flying from Van Nuys Airport in Los Angeles to Midway International Airport in Chicago. Law enforcement officers were waiting for the jet to arrive, having been notified by federal agents, while the flight was en route, that they suspected there were guns and drugs on the plane.[103] Law enforcement officials later revealed they found three handguns and 70 lb (32 kg) of marijuana on the aircraft.[104] They also said several members of Higgins' management team aboard the flight told them that Higgins had taken "several unknown pills",[104] including allegedly swallowing multiple Percocet pills to hide them while police were on board the plane searching the luggage.[105]

    Higgins then began convulsing and seizing, after which two doses of the emergency medication Narcan were administered as an opioid overdose was suspected.[106] Higgins was transported to the nearby Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was pronounced dead.[107][108]

    Higgins' funeral was held on December 13, 2019, at the Holy Temple Cathedral Church of God in Christ in Harvey, Illinois.[109] Friends and family were in attendance, including collaborators Ski Mask the Slump God and Young Thug.[110]

    On January 22, 2020, the Cook County Medical Examiner stated that Higgins died as a result of toxic levels of oxycodone and codeine present in his system.[111]

     

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