Monday, December 31, 2018

Trust Me
 Sue was having an emotional pregnancy, to say the least. When she saw me a week later, she ran up and hugged me, sobbing.  She broke away and stared at my white shirt. “Oh no, oh no, oh no!” she said. “I left makeup on your shirt. Your wife is going to kill you. I’m so sorry. Give me your phone, I’ll call her and explain.”

I laughed. “Dr. Deb is not going to be mad. She’ll joke about me making another woman cry, or ask me if I was flirting with a circus clown. No offense.”

“Are you sure?”

“I’ve never given her a reason to doubt me, mostly because I’ve been sober all these years.”

Sue smiled. “You’re boring and trustworthy. It may be a long time before anyone trusts me again.”

I said, “Trust is a precious commodity for people in recovery.  People don’t easily forget what we were like. I’m lucky that most of the people in my life haven’t seen me drunk.” I took a sip of coffee, smiled  and added, “Oh, and thanks for calling me boring.”

“You just implied I wear clown makeup.”

“Good point.”

Today I’ll be grateful for trust.

  
Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Friday, December 28, 2018

Who’s Fooling Who?
I ran into Roger at the supermarket on my way home.

“When I got home my boat was gone,” Roger said. “I thought, oh shit, another Viking funeral. I ran into the house, but all my stuff was still there.”

“What happened to your boat?” I asked.

“She sold it to pay off my new bike,” Roger said.

“Seems fair,” I said.

Roger smiled. “I don’t know how she found out, but she did.  She was waiting to see if I’d confess.  I was only fooling myself, thinking I had gotten one by her.”

“It happens. How many people knew you had a drinking problem long before you admitted it?”

Today I’ll accept I may only be fooling myself.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, December 27, 2018

Obviously
Sam forwarded me a text from a student claiming he couldn’t turn in an assignment because he’d accidentally set it on fire. The student claimed he couldn’t send his homework as an attachment because the burning paper had set off the sprinkler system, shorting out his laptop.  The text was addressed to ‘Dr. Roker.’

I laughed at the excuse, but texted back asking who Dr. Roker might be.  Sam sent me a laughing emoji with a question mark. I texted back ‘what?’

He texted, ‘Here’s a clue or two. I’m a bald black man who’s lost a ton of weight. I’m obsessed with the weather. I’m about the same age as a certain nationally known weatherman.”

‘Oh,’ I texted back, ‘Roker is your nickname. I guess I missed the obvious.’

Many laughing emoji followed.  ‘Don’t sweat it, we all miss the obvious. I was 300 lbs. before I realized I was addicted to food. Josh is selling everything he owns to gamble and he can’t see it’s an addiction. Cara is too wrapped up in herself to see her marriage is crumbling.’

I spent the rest of the morning thinking about how missing the obvious hurts people, wondering if I was missing something.

Today I’ll try not to miss the obvious.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Going Out with a Bang
The next day at work I got a call from someone wanting to make reservations at the rehab. I explained that we don’t take reservations, but I could help him schedule an evaluation.  He wanted to schedule one a week or so after New Year’s Eve.  I tried to explain that waiting was never a good idea. “I want to go out with a bang,” he said. “A big bang!”

Shame on me, I got frustrated and asked, “What kind of bang were you looking for?  We have the sad but almost comical bangs, like the drunken lady who trimmed her own bangs down to a quarter inch. We have the bang sound of breaking your wrist while trying to pee in a mailbox variety.”  He laughed.

I added, “We have dramatic bangs, like the bang of a gun shooting a guy in his own foot.  There’s the bang of two cars colliding. You might like the bang of a door slamming after you say something you can’t unsay or apologize away. And there’s the ever popular banging someone you shouldn’t.”

“You’re no fun,” he said, realizing I wasn’t joking.

“Wait, there’s more. We have silent bangs, like doors closing on opportunities missed.  Do you have kids?” He said he had three little girls.

“It’s not really a bang, but more of a click, when doors close in tiny hearts as they learn not to trust adults too busy chasing addictions to keep their promises.  Strange as it sounds, many kids who grow up with an addicted parent marry addicted people they can’t trust.”

“So what do you have any openings after January 4th?” He asked. I fought the urge to bang my head against the desk.

Today I won’t go out with a bang.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, December 24, 2018

Happy Holidays!

Dogged Determination will return on Wednesday.

In the meantime, some holiday advice, whether you're in recovery or not:

-Don't drink the eggnog, whether it's spiked or not. Most people don't know 'nog' is a shortened form of a German word loosely translated as 'diarrhea during heart attack.'

-If you're in recovery any alcohol is a terrible idea, no matter what your drug of choice.

-Drinking at the office Christmas Party can have serious consequences as you might:

  • Ask someone who isn't pregnant if they're having a boy or a girl.
  • Laugh at someone's ugly Christmas sweater not knowing if they know it's ugly. (Funny on the TV commercial, not so funny in real life.)
  • Photocopy your butt. Someone who repairs copiers told me the glass isn't made to support people. Folks break the glass, which has to be removed at the ER.
  • Order things on the company credit card you later forget you ordered.  Do you want to explain to Finance why you ordered roofing nails for your law firm? Try to convince your boss you ordered "Leather Restraint" thinking it was a safety video for new, upscale seatbelts?

-Don't rationalize your use of chemicals, just this once, just one more time, or just to get through the holidays.

-Convince yourself anything that happens in 2018 stays in 2018. Loved ones, law enforcement, collection agencies, employers, and medical professionals may not know misdeeds from 2018 don't count in 2019.

So what can you do? Enjoy the holidays! There's much to love and celebrate this time of year that doesn't carry consequences into next year.


Friday, December 21, 2018

Judge Not
“Can I store my bike in your garage?” Roger asked me.

“There’s no room in my garage,” I said.  “Besides, sooner or later you’re going to have to tell your wife about the bike.”

“I want to make it later rather than sooner,”  Roger said. He said he'd ask Trevor.

Kim called to say Roger had called her about storing his motorcycle at her house.  “Can you believe how sneaky and spineless he’s being?” Kim asked me. I heard dogs barking in the background.

I laughed. “You gave in,” I said. “You got the dog.”

“No,” Kim insisted. “Well, yes but not right away. Cara took the dog home. I went to Cara’s house to just say hello. The dog followed me home.”

“You live in Zelienople. Cara lives in Wexford. The dog followed your car for fifteen miles?”

“No. He followed me to my car. Somehow he found his way into the backseat.” I didn’t have to say anything. I just waited. Kim added, “OK , I held the door open for him.”

“Didn’t your landlord tell you no new dogs?” I asked.

“He did, but when he comes over my neighbor is going to say the dog is his.”

“So who’s spineless and sneaky now?”

Another long pause. “The guy who was horsing around with Brat Boy, broke his wife’s expensive figurine, and borrowed money from his friends so he could replace it without taking money out of the checking account. I think he did that so his wife wouldn’t find out.”

Today I’ll be a little slower to judge people.

(No actual figurines were harmed in the writing of this blog.)

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, December 20, 2018

One Day
I wanted to go back downstairs for a cookie.  Craving cookies reminded me of how much I craved alcohol when I first got sober. I had told my first sponsor I didn’t think I could stay sober for an entire day because I craved booze so much. He pointed out that I didn’t have to.

“You have to stay sober the hours you’re awake.  If you subtract the hours you work, it’s only about eight hours you have to worry about.”

“That’s still a lot of time,” I pointed out.

“So carve it up. Go play basketball and cut two hours from that time. Go to a meeting and cut another couple hours.”

“When I’m in the car, I want to go get a beer,” I said. “It’s the transition from one place to the next, one hour to the next that gets me.”

“So figure out the route that takes you past the fewest bars. If it’s the long way around, that’s more time you’ve spent not drinking.  Keep moving during the transistions. Whatever you do, don’t spend your day thinking you never get through such a long day.”

As I thought about the cookies, I reminded myself that avoiding anything isn’t usually a daylong struggle. It’s really a few hours and some difficult transitions.

Today I’ll be grateful avoiding something ‘one day at a time’ doesn’t mean resisting it all day long.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Cookie Monster
When I got home Christmas cookies overflowed from a platter on the kitchen table. I didn’t want a cookie, not the way I might want one with my coffee in the morning, or after dinner watching TV.

I wanted to roll in cookies. I wanted to scatter them across the floor and make cookie angels. I wanted to eat cookies until my bloated stomach, sugar-drenched brain, and battered pancreas formed a union to fight unfair working conditions.

My blood sugar had been a little high at my last checkup. Diabetes ran in my family. I wanted a working pancreas. I didn’t want to regain the weight I’d lost because of my blood test results.  I wanted to live as healthy a life as possible.  I trudged upstairs, away from the demon pastries.

Today I will choose what I want over what I want right now.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Right

While I was talking to Sue, I saw Roger and Josh arguing. Josh stomped away.  I asked Roger what happened.

"Josh's mad I won't lend him money," Roger said.

"You did the right thing," Trevor said.  "You know where that money was going."

"I know, but when I started my shop, he lent me some money," Roger said. "He's furious."

Trevor said, "I get you feeling bad,  but what choice did you have? You couldn't enable his gambling, even if he was angry."

"Still doesn't feel right," Roger said.'

"Still was the right thing to do," I said.

Today I will try to do the right thing if it doesn't feel right.

Monday, December 17, 2018

Life and Black Coffee
After the meeting, Sue told me raising a child in a world in such turmoil terrified her.
I told her my mother was the youngest of six. She was born during the Great Depression. She watched her brothers leave one by one to fight WWII, not knowing if they were coming back. My father joined the Navy near the end of the war. They worried he might get called back to service during the Korean War.

My parents struggled financially most of their marriage. My father worked for a couple of companies that went out of business. She fought two bouts with lymphoma, nearly died while her kids were still young.  They raised us through the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Cold War, Vietnam and civil unrest, Watergate, and the Energy Crisis.

 I said, “But, my lasting memory of my mother is her sitting in a recliner in my living room, cup in hand, reading the paper, and smiling. Do you know what she taught me?”

“The world’s a horrible place?” Sue asked. “Disaster waits around every corner?”

“No. You’ll get through this. And, drink your coffee black. Like life, even if it’s a little bitter, it’s still sweet.”
Today I’ll accept the bitter with the sweet.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Friday, December 14, 2018

I’ll Make It Up To You
Cara’s phone rang.  She turned off the ringer. “Are you going to answer that?” I asked.

“No, it’s just my husband wondering when I’ll be home,” she said with a shrug.

“You take him for granted,” Billie said.

“I’ll make it up to him later,” Cara said. “Kim knows what I’m talking about.”

 Kim asked, “What’s that supposed to mean?”

Billie said, “My ex was always going to make it up to me. Knowing he was doing something for me because he felt bad about not doing something else drained a lot of joy out of it. I felt like he was buying forgiveness for taking me for granted.”

“Oh brother,” Cara said. “Ask him in the morning if he feels taken for granted.”

Billie sighed, “You’ll never learn, Cara.”

Today I won’t take the people I love for granted.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, December 13, 2018

Nothing Changes
Sam laughed. “No doubt about it, my sister can be nuckin’ futs.  But you have to ask yourself why you date crazy people.”

Roger started to say something, but Trevor asked, “Remember the Viking funeral?”

Roger met his first wife outside the Westmoreland County courthouse. Neither was there for jury duty.  Five years into their marriage she did three months for aggravated assault after a bar fight. While she sat in jail, he hooked up with his seventeen-year-old neighbor who had given up babysitting to buy and sell pills her classmates stole from their parents. 

His first wife found out. When she was released, she put most of his belongings in his boat and towed it to the river.  She set his stuff on fire before pushing the boat out into the water, like a Viking funeral for his clothes, guns, and tools.  The boat was last seen heading downstream toward Cincinnati.  We had no trouble picturing his current wife doing the same, or worse when she found out about the new motorcycle.

“You’ve been sober decades, but your relationships haven’t changed because the women haven’t changed,” I said.  “If nothing changes, nothing changes. If nobody changes, nothing changes.

Today I’ll remember, if nobody changes, nothing changes.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

To Your Health
Sam joined us. “Where’d you go?” I asked.

 “To call my sister and yell at her.” He held up a green refillable water bottle. “I drink lemon water all day long. Yesterday she put a ton of sugar in here. Said a little couldn’t hurt and she was only trying to make drinking enough water easier for me.”

“You don’t believe her?” I asked.

“Call me paranoid, but I think she’s sabotaging my diet.  Why would she do that?”

I thought he already knew, so I didn’t spare his feelings.  “When you’re heavy or on some crazy diet, she likes to look down on you. Taking care of you lets her play the martyr.  She gets to boss you around because you don’t feel good enough to fight back.  If you get healthy, all that goes away.”

He thought for a minute. “If I get healthy, the family’s attention might turn to her problems.”

I nodded. “Your sister isn’t the healthiest person I’ve met.”

Roger growled, “Ken means she’s a batshit crazy psycho-witch the Devil chased out of hell ‘cause he couldn’t stand that screechy voice one more second.” Roger had dated Sam’s sister.

Today I will accept unhealthy people aren’t always happy about other people getting healthy.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Try Long Enough
Sue was at the meeting sitting with Billie and Cara. As Trevor, Roger, and I walked in she said, "It's the old guys!"  I tried to convince myself I wasn't that old, Sue was just really young, and I should be happy she was glad to see us.  We got our coffee and sat across from Billie, Cara, and Sue.

Sue said to Billie, "Most days I'm convinced being pregnant will absolutely keep me sober. Today I'm worried.  What if I can't do this?"

'"What if you can?" Billie asked Sue. She pointed out that Sue hadn't had a drink since she found out she was pregnant. Sue seemed unconvinced.

"I know," Sue said. "You never know until you try, but I’ve tried before."

Billie shook her head, "People try and fail, and don't try again. They never learn what they can do. You don't know what you can do until you do it." She looked at me.

 "Ask Ken if he thought he'd ever get sober.  He'll tell you he didn't think he could until he did."
I nodded. "Trying becomes doing if you try long enough."

Today I will try until I do.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, December 10, 2018

Need Deep 
Cara had convinced the group to start going to the same Monday night AA meeting.  Trevor, Sam, and I were standing outside when Roger rolled up on an enormous motorcycle.  I turned to Trevor and asked, “Is that the bike he wanted? The one he thought was a good investment?”

“You know anything about motorcycles?” Trevor asked me.

“I know they have two wheels and if you turn the thing on the handlebar they go vroom, vroom.”
“That bike cost more than your car. His crazy wife will kill him.”

I turned to Sam. “Is it at least a good investment?”

Sam shook his head “Not really.  Vehicles have to be classic and rare to gain in value. That bike is just expensive.”

I turned to Trevor who answered my question before I even asked. “Ken, he thought he needed it.  He convinced himself he couldn’t be happy without it.  He’s got at least four bikes already.”

“That’s crazy,” I said, sounding a more than a little judgmental.

“Remember when you thought you needed vodka to be happy?” Sam asked.  

Today I’ll ask myself why I ‘need’ something.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Friday, December 7, 2018

Concerned
Later that day Billie texted me. She wanted to know if Trevor had seen anybody about his hand.
‘He’s not answering my texts,’ she wrote.  ‘I texted him about what could happen if his wound isn’t cleaned properly.’

‘You can bet he didn’t have it looked at. Text him again, skip the medical part and focus on how  you’re worried about him.’

‘No,’ she texted. ‘He’s a grown man. He needs to take care of this himself.’

I got her point. It wasn’t her job to make Trevor take care of himself. On the other hand, I thought it would have been good for him to know Billie wasn’t just being a nurse. She was concerned for him. He was lucky to have someone cared.

Today I’ll count myself lucky to have people concerned for me.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, December 6, 2018

Fighting with my Laptop

The next day I sat down to post my blog. I got an error message when I tried to open the file. Invalid path. I opened the directory looking for that file. Somehow the whole directory had gotten moved. I tried to move the directory back and got a message saying it would take seven minutes to copy the directory.

I cursed my laptop. "I don't want to copy the directory, I just want to open one file," I said, holding my coffee cup over the keyboard where the camera could see. "I'll pour this right into your guts."

The laptop wasn't intimidated. A message flashed saying it would take seven minutes to copy the directory. Twenty minutes later it let me know my file would be copied in six minutes and thirty seconds. "You suck at math," I said. "Seven minus twenty is not 6.5."

I hit cancel. My laptop whirred, made a clicking sound which I took as its way of laughing at me, and flashed a message telling me it was canceling my request and that would take six minutes.

"Now you've done it," I said. "I'm going to have to get the Task Manager." I opened Task Manager and canceled the canceling. "How you like that?" I said looking right into my laptop's camera eye.

I re-opened the directory. Half my files were gone. I cursed again, wrote a blog entry, and got myself another cup of coffee. "You win," I said to the laptop.  'Maybe a night sitting on Brat Boy's worktable, surrounded by the carcasses of all the electronics he's disassembled, will take a byte out of your stubbornness,' I thought.

Today I will accept I can't win them all. 

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Glaciers and Cadillacs
“Where’s your car?” I asked Josh, not seeing his boat-mobile Cadillac from the 70’s.

“I downsized,” Josh said. He pointed to an older Honda two cars away. “It gets better gas mileage, friendlier to the environment.”

“Josh the environmental warrior,” Trevor said sarcastically.  The only thing Josh ever recycled was denial. The denial he used before he got sober became the arguments he used to convince himself he didn’t have a gambling problem.  He’d been caught pouring old paint into the storm drain in front of his house. Josh driving a smaller car had nothing to do with the environment. 

I suspected he’d sold his car to pay off gambling debts. Switching to a smaller car wasn’t a catastrophe, but it reminded me of a glacier melting. Sometimes small chunks of the glacier fall off. Not enough to even notice if you weren’t watching. The small chunks were a warning sign that much bigger pieces were about to fall. Boats too near the glacier were likely to get swamped when they fell.
 
Today I won’t ignore warning signs.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Help
“Who bandaged your hand?” Billie the nurse asked.  She gestured for him to hold out his arm. He resisted, she shot him that look nurses and drill sergeants use to remind people who’s in charge.

“I did,” Trevor said as Billie unwrapped the gauze strip from his wrist and left hand.

“What did you do?” I asked staring at the open wound.

“I had a disagreement with a sander,” Trevor answered.  “Took the skin right off.”

“I’ll re-wrap it, but you should have that looked at,” Billie said.  “At a med clinic or a doctor’s office.”

“I will,” Trevor said. I knew he wouldn’t. Trevor thought of himself as the ultimate do-it-yourselfer. There was nothing he enjoyed more than not getting professional help.  From the leaky pipes in his basement, to the faulty wiring in his shop, Trevor fixed and installed things on his own, and not very well. I had no doubt he’d keep bandaging his own wound until his hand fell off.

“There are things you fix on your own,” I said to Trevor. “And there at times you get help. I brush my teeth, but I don’t fill my own cavities.” He rolled his eyes.

Today I will seek professional help if I need it.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, December 3, 2018

Sooner Rather Than Later
After the funeral we walked to our cars.  Someone had placed a rose on Kim’s windshield. 

“Ooh, what did you do to get a rose?” Cara asked.

“Nothing,” Kim said shaking her head. “I went out with this guy Tony.  He was nice but not my type. He’s been after me to see him again.  I’ve gotten a couple of cards from him and some text messages.  I guess he’s upping his game.”

Trevor picked the rose from the windshield with his heavily bandaged right hand.  He turned the flower over and over again, looking at it like it was evidence.  “Do you want me to talk to this Tony? Maybe help him see the light?”

Kim laughed. “Tony is harmless. He’ll get tired of this and move on.”

Trevor looked at the rose again, looked at Kim. “Alright, but let me know if he bothers you anymore.” Trevor had really never stopped being a cop at heart.  “Always best to deal with problems sooner rather than later.”

Today I will deal with problems sooner rather than later.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Friday, November 30, 2018

Nice Doggie
The girl, whose name was Sue, added, “I remember something else you said.  Your friends had to convince you not to pet a police dog in The Original Hot Dog Shop.  One night I threw a cheeseburger to a police dog. They said I threw it at the mutt. I got arrested for assaulting a police officer.”

We laughed and people started exchanging stories of stupid things they’d done under the influence, and the people they wished would forget. 

Today I’ll be grateful I’m not adding to my list of stupid things done under the influence.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Seen it All
I got out of my car and walked over to a group of people standing in front of the church.  The girl who had been crying was wiping her eyes with a tissue.

She said to me, “I heard you speak when I was in my first rehab.  The rehab took us to an outside meeting.  You were grateful your wife and kids had never seen you drunk.  I told the guy next to me someone should put Ex-Lax in your coffee. Maybe flush out the stick.”

“Wow,” I said, rolling my eyes. “Good to know you got something out of my lead.”

She laughed. “I’m crying but I’m happy.  I’m pregnant.  Katie helped me get sober. If I stay this way, my kid will never see me drunk.” She wiped away a final tear.  

Today I’ll be grateful for all the people who will never see me drunk.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Nothing to Cry About
“We have a dog,” my wife reminded me. “Where are you?”

“Parked outside the church,” I said. “The funeral doesn’t start for half an hour. I’m watching people arrive.”

“That’s a little creepy. Are you OK?”

“I’m really good. Katie was a teacher, not a school teacher, but someone who taught people about enjoying life, never losing your sense of humor.  One new girl she sponsored is crying, but most people are smiling and laughing.  Katie had a knack for helping people find the humor in the darkest days. They’re doing that now.”

Today I’ll be grateful for people who never lose their sense of humor.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Thinking of Pooper-Scoopers
‘So now what?’ Kim texted. ‘The fuse is lit. I can’t forget how cute this dog is.’

I texted, ‘Apply the slogan: think, think, think. When I see the booze commercials I have to think, think, think. By the end I was drinking mostly alone.  No models in bikinis, no rooftop parties, no cuddling by a fireplace, wine glass in hand. Just me in my depressing apartment drunk all alone. Thinking about how my drinking ended snuffs out that fuse pretty quickly.’

‘I know. I know. I know that I know, but still…’

‘’Think about why didn’t you want another dog to begin with. Get out your pooper-scooper and ask yourself if you want to use it even more often.  Look at your last vet bill.’

An hour later I called my wife. “What do you think about getting another dog?” I asked. Sometimes it’s easier to give advice than to take your own advice.

Today I will think, think, think.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, November 26, 2018

Fused
I got a text from Kim. She’d sent me a picture of her new purse. Cara had kept her promise to replace Kim’s old purse if they went to the animal shelter together. I texted her back, ‘Congrats on the purse, but did you come home with another a dog?’

She texted, ‘Help me! I went back to the shelter yesterday without Cara and took a picture of this little guy.’ She’d attached a picture. ‘I thought I’d send it to my sister who lost her dog a month ago, but now I can’t stop thinking about him! My dog habit has been triggered!’

I texted, ‘LOL, You haven’t been triggered. If you’d been triggered, you’d already have the dog. You lit a fuse! If you don’t do something, that fuse will burn slowly until you give in and get the dog.’

‘I’m so stupid.'

‘You’re not stupid, but there’s a reason they tell you to avoid the people, places, and things of our addiction. It’s ‘cause we all have fuses and if we get too close to the flame, they get lit, sometimes without us even knowing it.’

 Today I’ll avoid anything that might light a fuse.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Dogged Determination will return on Monday. Happy Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Five People
I woke up the next day not looking forward to the funeral.

When I trained addiction counselors, I always gave them three or four gratitude exercises.  The only one that raised eyebrows was asking them to name five people they were grateful they were not. Some thought it was a cold approach to gratitude.

I thought of five people. Some names were serious, others not so much.

I was grateful I wasn’t Katie.  I had a heavy heart, but I was alive with a full day ahead of me.  I was grateful I wasn’t my wife. She had to put with me.  I was grateful I wasn’t a fan of certain NFL teams. The list went on.

Today I’ll make a list of five people I’m glad I’m not.

 Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Home Groupies (daily recovery message novella)

Monday, November 19, 2018

Another Day
“Long day?” Dr. Deb asked as she turned out the light.

“Sure was,” I said. “Katie was one of a kind. I like Cara in much smaller doses. Not sure what’s going on with Kim and Josh.”

“Tomorrow’s another day.”

“It’s the day of the funeral, but it’s still another day.  Who knows what good might come from it?”

Today I’ll be grateful for another day.

 Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Free This Week:
Dancing with Rachel
AArdvarks: A Daily Recovery Message Novella
Home Groupies


Friday, November 16, 2018

You Bet
“While I’m thinking about it,” Dr. Deb said, “what’s with all the scratch off tickets in the garbage?”
I said, “Josh’s new thing is gambling.  He buys them twenty at a time.  He likes to say if you want to win, you gotta play.”

“The state doesn’t make money by printing winning scratch-offs. The house, the state, they always win.”

“I told him you have to play the odds.  It’s like being an alcoholic. Drive drunk often enough and you’ll get a DUI. Do the next right thing long enough, and odds are things will turn out OK.”

“Track mud through the house again and maybe your wife poisons you.  Odds aren’t in your favor.  Has Josh won a lot?”

“He makes twice what I do and he tried to borrow $100,” I said. “Because I bet on doing the next right thing, I had the money to give him. I didn’t give it to him because chances were good it would just feed his gambling habit.”  

Today I will play the odds.

 Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Something New
“What’s your other Katie memories?” Dr. Deb asked.

I said, “Guys in my first AA home-group had been into cocaine as well as alcohol. They were always looking for adrenalin rushes to replace the coke rush.  Katie got talked into going whitewater rafting with them."
“And Katie loved it?” Dr. Deb asked.

I laughed. “No, Katie hated it. These guys took her down some rain-swollen, boulder-strewn, boat-eating, killer of a river.  She banged up her arm and a leg, thought she was going to drown. Stayed mad at them for a month.”

“That’s your fond memory? Your friend almost drowning?”

“It’s a fond memory because she forgave them.  They took her skydiving and she loved it.  She taught me a valuable lesson. If you give up something that’s been a big part of your life – good or bad – you may have to do some searching to find something new.   I thought Katie was close to relapse before she took that first jump from an airplane. If you don’t find something new, you’re likely to fall back into old habits.”
Today I will try something new.

 Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Treating People Kind
I went to bed. Dr. Deb was still awake, reading a book.  She asked me about Katie. I told her my first sponsor had said when someone dies, the first thing you should do is call up three good memories of that person.

“What do you remember about Kate?” Dr. Deb asked me.

“We were at a diner after an AA meeting. Some new guy gave the waitress a nasty answer when she asked him to repeat his order.  After the waitress walked away, Kate took a spoon and splashed steaming hot coffee onto his arm. He asked her what the hell she was doing. She told him he was going to apologize to the waitress or she would dump the whole cup onto his lap.”

“Did he apologize?”

 “He stomped out of the diner never to be seen again.”

“Why is that one of your favorite memories?”

“Katie set a good example, sticking up for that waitress. Even though he left, she gave the new guy something to think about.  Other newcomers heard the story and the message. Being newly sober, maybe struggling with withdrawal or the mess you’ve made of your life, isn’t a good reason to treat people badly.”

Today I won’t use my problems as an excuse to treat others badly.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Persistent
The tapping stopped.  He pulled out his laptop and looked for a solution online. His expression told me he’d gotten the answer, but still didn’t understand the process.  He picked up his phone and typed a message. Long pause, smile.  I guessed he’d texted his sister, who also excelled at math and science.  His phone rang. 

“Mom’s upstairs, Dad’s sitting in his chair,” Brat Boy said.  After he listened for a second he turned to me and added, “Blondie says not to pay her rent, give that money to me, she’ll be happy to live in the homeless shelter until she graduates college.”

“She told you to tell me she loves me, didn’t she?” I asked.

“That might be a closer translation of what she said, but I don’t speak blonde, so who knows?”  

Brat Boy picked up his notebook, read the problem to Blondie. He explained his answer and what he’d seen online. “It’s right, I know, but it doesn’t look right.” Another pause. “Okay, thanks.” 

Brat Boy boy was smart, but it was his persistence that really drove his success.  He reminded me of so many people I’d known who’d gotten sober, lost weight,  or moved ahead in their careers by combining something they knew with persistence.  They knew they had to make a change.   Day in and day out, they did what needed to be done to make that change.

Today I will be persistent.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, November 12, 2018

Physics
“I’ll be up in a minute,” I said to Dr. Deb. Brat Boy sat in a chair across the room and started working on his Physics homework. He began tapping his pencil on his notebook. 

“Can I help?” I asked.

Brat Boy read the homework question to me. The problem involved a body’s velocity and momentum.  Apparently momentum had something to do with Mass, although for the life of me I couldn’t figure out what the body’s religion had to do with the problem.  

I was a psychology major. I asked, “How does it feel about its body as it goes forward?”

Brat Boy laughed. “You’re a big help Dad. I’ll be sure to ask my teacher tomorrow. Love you Dad, but math and science are not your strong suit.”

Today I’ll be grateful for people who love me despite my shortcomings.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose


Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.

Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Friday, November 9, 2018

HALT
We talked most of the afternoon and into the night.  Everybody left.  I got out my computer. 

“It’s getting late,” Dr. Deb said as I sat down next to her on the couch.

“Feel like I ought to do something,” I said. “I haven’t  done anything all day.”

“What’s that slogan? STOP?”

“HALT,” I said. “Don’t let yourself get too Hungry, Angry, Lonely, or Tired.”

“Didn’t you tell me about a study you read connecting Alzheimers and lack of sleep?”

“Good point,” I said.

“Let’s go to bed.  I’ll let you rub my back.”

“Lucky me,” I said, knowing I truly was lucky.

Tonight I will get a good night’s sleep.

 Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Replacements
As the afternoon wore on, I noticed nobody said anything about wanting a drink.  Early in recovery, all of us had struggled to stay clean and sober. We had all seemed one crisis, one sad event, away from relapse.  Over the years we’d all replaced drinking with other ways to cope with stress.

Sam had turned to food.  If Cara was to be believed, sex had become Kim’s drug of choice. Josh gambled.  Cara shopped. 

Roger and Trevor had replaced drinking with work.  I went to the gym.  Both Roger and Trevor sometimes spent longer hours on the job than they needed to.  At times I went to the gym when I had more important things to do.  All three of us were much better off because of what we’d chosen to replace drinking with.

Today I’ll replace something unhealthy with something healthier.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Worst Case Scenario
So we talked about Katie.  Like most people, we focused on all the good she had done.

Trevor said, “I know it’s strange, but when I die, I don’t want people to pretend I was a saint.  Talk about the good and my faults.”

“What’s the worst you could say about Katie?” Kim asked. “Before she got clean she stole pills from her dying grandmother. She sold her kids’ Christmas presents for drugs.”

“What’s the worst thing you could say about her after she got clean?”  Josh asked.

“If I she had shown me one more picture of that damn dog,” Billie said, “I would have killed her and the mutt.”

“Getting diet advice from somebody as skinny as Katie got old fast,” Sam said.

“She thought I had a gambling problem,” Josh said. “She wouldn’t get off it.”

“Wow,” Trevor said. “My critics could say a lot worse about me.  I feel like I gotta raise the bar, leave this world with less bad things for people to say about me.”

Today I will raise the bar on how I live my life.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

To Face the Things I Cannot Change
“Speaking of avoiding things, did you notice none of us has said one word about Katie?” Josh asked.

“I’ve accepted that she’s gone,” Cara said. “I don’t need to talk about it.”

“She hasn’t even been buried yet,” Josh said. “We’re all together for the first time in at least a decade because she’s gone. It seems a little odd not to talk about her.”

“Somebody will probably mention her passing,” Trevor said. “Seeing as how we’ll be at her funeral.” Everybody but Cara laughed.

“You don’t accept things by ignoring them,” Roger said. He put an arm around Cara. I couldn’t remember ever having seen her cry before.

Today I will accept - and face - the things I cannot change.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Monday, November 5, 2018

Tour De Frantic
“Even if I wanted to date, I don’t have the time,” Billie said. “I’ve gone back to school for my master’s degree.  I’m working my regular job and two days a week in the doc’s office.”

“If you had to work two jobs to make ends meet,” Trevor said, “I’d admire your effort.”
“I hear a ‘but’ coming,” Billie said.

Trevor said, “But I gotta wonder if you’re not riding in the Tour De Frantic. Keeping so busy, pedaling so fast, you don’t have time to think or feel.”

“I want to better myself, and make life a little nicer for my son,” Billie said.

“No doubt, but are you trying to do too much all at once? Why the second job and school at the same time?”

Billie started to say something, but stopped and stared at Trevor.

Trevor said, “I’m not judging you, I’m just asking you to ask yourself why you’re doing so much.  Getting ahead? Avoiding doing something else?”

Billie said she’d think about it. I wondered if there were times I kept busy to avoid rather than accomplish something.


Today I’ll ask myself why I’m doing what I’m doing.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Friday, November 2, 2018

Getting Past That
None of the men in the room, including me, took offense at being called a dog. We knew Billie was really talking about her ex, a lying cheating dog who abandoned her when she needed him most.
Billie had torn her shoulder moving a heavyset elderly man at work. She got addicted to painkillers and soon began diverting them from patients. She collapsed in a hospital elevator. The ER found opioids, muscle relaxers, and Xanax in her urine. She lost her job and was sent to rehab.

While she was in detox, her ex dropped their son off with Billie’s sister, cleaned out their bank accounts, sold her car, and moved to Arizona with his girlfriend. Billie hadn’t known about the girlfriend.

“You can’t let past mistakes rule your life,” Sam said. “Not all men are like whatshisname.”

Cara, having all the tact of a runaway garbage truck, said, “At least sleep with a few while you’re still relatively young. Kim can show you how to hook-up online.”  Being used to Cara, we all ignored her, including Kim.

“Sam’s right,” I said. “You can’t let past mistakes rule your life.”

Today I won’t let past mistakes rule my life.

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Doggone Smart
Billie pulled a ratty piece of paper from her purse. Putting on her glasses, she said, “This reminds me of something you wrote about your dog, Ken.” She read out loud. “My dog’s brain is the size of a walnut.  We used to walk in the woods behind my house.  Two days in a row he got a big thorn in his paw.  Now we walk the other way.  When I try to walk him toward the woods, he sits down.  He cannot be forced down the path where he felt the pain.  I have a much bigger brain than my dog.  Time and again I walked down a path that nearly killed me.  When I look in his eyes I know he knows he’s smarter than I am.  Now and again I have to remind him who smashes his muzzle on the cabinets because he’s forgotten for the umpteenth time that he cannot stop on the linoleum.”*

“Hey Ken, give yourself credit,” Trevor said. “Your brain’s at least the size of an avocado.”

“There’s more,” Billie said. She began reading again. “I will prove to myself that I have as much common sense as the average dog.  I will not return to the places where I used alcohol and other drugs.  I will not pick up the first drink or other drug. God, thank you for the dogs.  Remind me of their wisdom the next time I curse one as I clean the sole of my shoe.”

I smiled, “I wrote that a long time ago. Do you read it when you’re thinking of repeating past mistakes?”

“Whenever I think about dating again,” Billie said. “It reminds me men are dogs.”

Today I’ll try to use as much common sense as the average dog.

*from Meditations for the First Thirty Days ©2002 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination ©2018 by Ken Montrose

Dogged Determination is a work of fiction. Any similarity between the characters and anyone you might know is purely coincidental.


Other works by Ken Montrose are available at: www.greenbriartraining.com https://www.pinterest.com/kenmontrose/mt-rose/