Control to Connection
When I first
walked into this room, I came because of a relationship that had become
codependent. When that dynamic was recognized and space was created, it broke
me. I was in love, and part of me believed that if I came here and worked on
myself, maybe things wouldn’t fall apart. Looking back now, I can see something
clearly: it was actually the mechanics of my codependency that got me through
the door — the habit of bending my will around someone else.
Those first
couple of months were rough. I had to let go — not just of a person, but of a
fantasy. I had to quit an idea that gave me highs, crashes, and withdrawals.
Letting go forced me to finally face the things I’d been running from for
years: the looping anxiety, the way I chased connections that weren’t rooted in
reality, and the fear that I was unlovable unless I was needed. The funny thing
is, when I finally let go of trying to control the outcome, the relationship
began to heal naturally. What I thought would save it never could — but
surrender made room for something healthier to exist.
Something
shifted recently after a meeting where Step 11 came up. I’m not on that step
yet, but the conversation stayed with me. I never knew how to talk to God or
anything bigger than me, but I started trying — mostly alone in my car. I spend
a lot of time driving, and the steady hum of the road is where my mind finally
quiets. I’m not performing or overthinking — I’m just present. And somehow,
it’s working. These past few weeks have been the most serene I’ve ever felt.
I’ve lived with
social anxiety my entire life. Recently, I traveled, spent time with friends,
and felt calm and grounded. I didn’t think that was possible for me.
What brought me
here doesn’t define why I stay. The freedom I’m feeling now is about letting go
and trusting something greater.
My codependency
got me here. My recovery is what’s keeping me here. This program and these
rooms have been a huge part of that.
Bob H.
01.21.2026
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