Tuesday, June 30, 2015


Walk Masthead

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Saturday, September 19
PRO-ACT Recovery Walks! 2015
Penn's Landing, Philadelphia
  
Registration begins at 7:00 am
Honor Guard Photo 8:30 am
Walk begins at 9:00 am
Post-Walk Stage Program 10:15 am
Billboard Deadline Extended! 

SPONSORS: There's still time to put YOUR LOGO on the I-95 Recovery Walk billboard promoting the Walk. It will be on I-95 for at least 8 weeks, beginning July 27. To show your support of the largest walk ever assembled in support of recovery, 23,000 strong, please support PRO-ACT Recovery Walks! 2015 with a Presenting ($15,000) or Gold ($10,000) Sponsorship by contacting Marita here right away, or calling her at 215-345-6644The new deadline for us to receive your form and get your logo on the billboard is July 9.
 
YOUR LOGO will be viewed 553,689 times every week
 or 4.5 million times prior to the Walk!

But there are many other levels of sponsorship and promotional opportunities that could benefit your company or organization, while helping to reduce the stigma and grow our recovery communities. Click here to learn about those other levels, that have a deadline of August 6.
 
Team Captains and Walkers
In case you missed our June Team Captain Kick-Off Meetings
we have scheduled two more for July:

Thursday, July 16, 12 noon to 1 pm  OR
Thursday, July 236 - 7 pm
Philadelphia Recovery Training Center
444 North 3rd Street, Suite 307
Philadelphia, PA 19123

To register for either, please contact John Carlson here or call 215-923-1661.
You'll learn how to organize a team, sign your team up online, instill a sense of fun into the process, and collect more donations effectively. You may even want to design and order special t-shirts for your team (we have a contact for that). We will have plenty of tips, handouts and answers to your questions. 

REGISTER free at
www.recoverywalks.org

Register free : Sign up for the Honor Guard : Join or form a team : Donate to support a walker or the Walk : Download a Team Captains Kit
 

Please welcome and support our 
2015 PRESENTING SPONSOR
DBH logo
For a complete list of sponsors who have made Recovery
Walks! 2015 possible, click here.
Join Our Mailing List
 Women for Sobriety, Inc.
Exercise  *  Sunlight  *  Laughter

҉ 

“Today it is clear that major depression and often some lesser kinds are caused by a decrease in neurotransmitters, the brain chemicals that contribute to hope and optimism.  Antidepressants raise levels of serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine, which get depleted by emotional and physical stress.  Whatever treatment for depression you choose, hope amplifies it by fortifying your neurotransmitters.  Hope reprograms your biology and keeps you positive.  By being positive you increase serotonin and reduce stress hormones.  Hope acts as a natural stress reducer, relaxing your gut, blood vessels, and bronchioles.  Plus, science suggests that hope lessens pain by increasing levels of endorphins.

Try these techniques to improve your emotional state and transform depression.

1.  Exercise, don’t ruminate.  Rather than staying home with your head full of negative thoughts, get your body moving.  There’s something magical about just putting one foot in front of the other.  It increases serotonin and energy, enhances self-image, and improves sleep.  Start with gentle walking.  Don’t think you’re going too slowly or doing too little.  Even ten minutes daily gets your body used to the idea that it’s coming alive again.

2.  Get sufficient sunlight.  Don’t hole up in your office or home.  Exposure to sunlight elevates your mood by stimulating your brain to produce serotonin.  If you’re prone to depression, remember to maximize the natural antidepressant effect of sunlight.

3.  Laughter is good medicine.  Laughter is emotional freedom.  It raises your spirits, increases levels of endorphins, relieves pressure, and reverses learned seriousness.  Humor seems to compete with negative thoughts by inserting positive ones.  Try to surround yourself with humorous, upbeat people.  Also, watch hilarious movies, listen to comedy routines, or read books that make you smile.  Laughter will take the bite out of depression.” –Emotional Repair Kit: 50 Tools to Liberate Yourself from Negative Emotions by Judith Orloff, M.D.

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Statement #2, “Negative thoughts destroy only myself.”
My first conscious sober act must be to remove negativity from my life.
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Karen’s Perspective +
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     “Learned seriousness.”  Newly sober, I felt so serious.  I was suddenly becoming aware of my life and my disease and I was reacting to life with such seriousness.  Laughter was nowhere to be found.  I knew I could not “fake” laughter so I decided to relearn how to giggle.
     Depression is one of the hallmarks of women in addiction.  I suffered greatly from it.  Before sobriety and my New Life, I ruminated on the negative.  I sought out dramas and disasters.  I needed to feel alive since I was slowly dying.
     By first acknowledging that I was quite serious, I set out to change that.  I began to watch those television shows where they showed funny videos and gave a large money prize at the end.  I did this daily.  I recorded as many as I could and began to watch.  Some days I could not even muster a smirk, but I kept watching.  I needed to liven up and tickle my funny bone.
     Soon I found myself smiling, then laughing, then rolling on the floor laughing.  OK, I really didn’t roll on the floor but I laughed, a real belly laugh.  Genuine, raw, snorting laughter.  I was kicking my depression to the curb.
     I also got on my treadmill.  I began to walk and listen to music.  I began to feel better, head to toe.  My thoughts were becoming less serious and some days I even felt like dancing!
     Statement #2 helps me to move through my depression, understand it and learn from that pain.  I learned that I have to be ever vigilant with my thoughts, for I almost destroyed myself under the influence.  Whenever I feel a sad darkness beginning to rise, I slow down and examine where I am.  What needs changing?  What do I need to let go of?  What do I need to hold onto? Hugzzz, Karen

  • Where is your level of laughter?
  • Are you stuck in seriousness or do you feel alive again?

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+  Dee’s Insights  +
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     Hi 4C Women, I, too, felt very serious about my sobriety in the beginning as I was so focused on uncovering why I was drinking to cope.  Fortunately I had been in therapy for a while, so I had an idea of the “why” but not the “how” to cope differently until I found the WFS program.  In therapy, I learned to explore my history and was surprised at what I learned about my coping mechanisms from a very early age.  As I child, I was submissive/obedient to the point that I struggled with finding my own voice for a very long time, even as an adult.  I gave parts of my soul and body in order to be loved and, of course, that didn’t fill the empty space I was trying to fill.  In other words, I became a #1 people pleaser and left myself, my needs, out of the equation entirely.
     Once I learned to love myself, I found my voice.  As I am aging, I find myself expressing even more of what is in my heart.  Add to that, the authentic laughter.  Oh my goodness, it is like a huge weight being lifted off my chest to actually “feel” and express laughter and joy.
     I was watching Brain Games last night and one of the episodes was on positive thinking.  They said that there is a scientific chemical reaction in the brain when listening to certain music and posing/dancing.  I was reminded of the joy I felt at the Yogic (yes, that’s the right spelling) workshop at the WFS Conference when the music started playing and we were dancing with abandonment; and, one of the workshops Nina and I presented a few years ago.  I played a song “Lighten Up” by Karen Drucker because the words were perfect for our topic and, rather than the women listening to the words, there was this spontaneous dancing that took place.  I can still feel the pure joy in that moment.
     My New Life now is filled with both laughter and seriousness in a more balanced way.  Life is filled with challenges and I have had a few this past year; yet, it is empowering to know that I can still feel the joy, the laughter of moments, of being with friends, sharing and being supported through it all.  So when negative thoughts begin to destroy only yourself, what coping tools do you have in place to handle those feelings in order to heal and replace with positive thinking? -Dee
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Thank you, Karen and Dee, for your words of encouragement and inspiration to start off our week!  ~Becky Fenner, WFS Director
Email:  contact@womenforsobriety.org   *   Tel215-536-8026   *   Fax:  215-538-9026
http://www.womenforsobriety.org   *   http://www.wfscatalog.org
Kimberly Griner Heinz'; words left behind from her beautiful boy.....Please read...please vote!! "From a journal I discovered under my son's bed after he died, it reads in part: "Jan 2, 2014 Well, I guess I caved. I did heroin for the first time in over a year. I don’t know why I chose to. Like always, it’s a warm blanket on a cold night. I actually feel ok right now. Heroin masks all my physical, emotional and psychological pain completely. When it comes to drugs, alcohol, coke, Xanax, they were just affairs, but when I met heroin, it was true love". . . and, "Feb 7, 2014: I was bad again today...I bought a gram of heroin and shot it all. I can barely write, hardly keep my eyes open. I wonder if this is even legible or makes sense. But it makes me feel much better. Looking back, I can’t believe I had the power to quit. There is no better feeling in the world. Ironic that something that feels so amazing ends up destroying lives. It’s the best and worst thing in the world. I told myself I would never do it again, but I guess I had to make an exception today. The only thing that can save me is heroin..." My only child was found dead 5 days later on Feb 12, 2014. He was 26.
If love was enough, all our children would be saved. Addiction is a powerful monster, so difficult to overcome. And so, I keep running...to Stop the Stigma and Start the Support to end the epidemic of addiction. Every vote helps spread addiction awareness and promotes running as a powerful tool for healing, hope and honoring loved ones. Thank you for your votes, shares and support in the Runners' World Cover Search. Please vote once a day, every day, on both FB and Twitter, untilJuly 22 by clicking here: http://coversearch.runnersworld.com/entry/678/
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