Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Addict II Athlete

69 members • Free

13 contributions to Addict II Athlete
Nebo volunteers needed
As discussed last night AIIA has been chosen as the charity for the nebo half and full marathon. The team has been asked to get atleast 30 volunteers. The more volunteers the bigger the donation the team gets. We need to start getting vollenters signed up. To do so go to Runtastic NEBO https://share.google/5lnLFl8qGIqxK93XG and find the volunteer option. Click on it and pick a category to volunteer at, pre race. Expo/setup. Or race day. After you selected where to volunteer you will be asked to answer 2 questions 1 shirt size and the next, who are you vollentering with please select AIIA. Then complete the remaining questions. You can volunteer at multiple different areas along as it dosnt interfere with another time you are already doing. Each spot you signed up for counts as 1 vollenters so one person has the ability if they want to get multiple volunteer spots covered. Please jump on and help the team out and register to volunteer now.
Nebo volunteers needed
0 likes • 3d
You can also volunteer for many different categories and times, even if you are planning on running one of the Nebo races in Payson. 👍
1 like • 1d
@Brad Waldron You better be healed up by then! Glad to hear your surgery went well!!
The Power of Showing Up
Hey Athletes! Have you ever noticed some days you don’t “fix” anything, you just kind of arrive? That’s what showing up is: not performing recovery, but being present with your people while recovery does its slow, honest work. Thats the The Power of Showing Up for your team. We like to talk about breakthroughs. But the truth is, a lot of recovery looks like this: - You show up even when you don’t feel brave - You text even when you don’t know what to say - You listen even when you want to solve - You run your part of the relay even if your legs are heavy Because teammates don’t only celebrate the win. They hold the line when someone’s doubt gets loud. “Showing Up” Isn’t a Mood, It’s a Choice. When you’re part of a team, you learn something recovery teaches fast: feelings change. But commitment can stay. So what does showing up do for Addict II Athlete teammates? It creates a bridge where words fail. It turns “I’m alone” into “I’m still here.” It reminds each other that the next exchange matters because the next exchange is how the relay moves forward. A Simple Challenge for This Week; Choose one teammate. Then do the smallest version of showing up: - Send a “thinking of you” message - Share one thing you did today (even if it’s tiny) - Offer a ride, a check-in, or a seat at the table - Say, “I’m in this with you,” and mean it The goal isn’t to be perfect. The goal is to be present long enough for hope to catch. Recovery isn’t built only in the moments you’re shining. It’s built in the quiet, repeated decision to show up for the person next to you. That’s what teammates do. That’s what Addict II Athlete is.
The Power of Showing Up
4 likes • 5d
I know I was working a few hundred miles away when this picture was taken, but honestly, I regret not ending the trip sooner to show up to the Freedom Run with you guys. I really appreciate this post, because it has already helped me reflect on the fact that I had planned to be there for weeks, but a couple last minute decisions were able to change that. It may not seem like a big deal to miss one event, but I know if I start thinking that way now, it's likely going to build momentum until I find myself completely isolated again. Of course we definitely need to show up for each other and to be available to help when needed, but just as importantly, we need to show up for ourselves. Some of what we do may feel like we're being selfish, but the decisions we make to maintain our sobriety isn't selfishness, it's self care (Thanks Paul). Once we have made the decision to show up for ourselves, the motivation and ability to show up for others should follow naturally.
Roll Call
Hey Athletes; How are you all doing out there? The good, the bad, the ugly, lets talk.
0 likes • 10d
@Brad Waldron What are you doing this time?!
2 likes • 7d
@Brad Waldron No way man, that's awful! You need to catch a break one of these days I swear.. Let me know if there's anything I can do buddy
The Holiday Plan That Keeps You on Track (Even When It Gets Loud)
Hey Athletes, holidays can feel like “just one day,” until your nervous system, routines, and support system get thrown off track. In recovery, that’s exactly when impulsive choices become more likely especially when alcohol, late nights, emotional triggers, and social pressure show up at the same time. This piece is a practical guide for building a simple plan going into this Saturday’s Fourth of July, so you’re not negotiating with your cravings in real time. Why a holiday plan matters (especially when relapse risk is real) A plan protects you from the most common trap in early recovery: waiting until you feel like “you can handle it” to decide what you’re doing. Holidays compress decision-making into narrow windows: you wake up later, eat differently, travel farther, sleep less, and you spend more time around people, places, or moods that previously powered unhealthy patterns. When that happens, your brain isn’t operating from “principles” it’s operating from *states*. And states don’t care about what you meant to do. A clear plan before the holiday matters because it: - Reduces decision fatigue. The more choices you leave for the moment, the more your willpower has to do backflips. - Prevents “mood overrides.” Feelings don’t ask permission. A plan tells you what to do before the mood gets loud. - Keeps you aligned with your recovery identity. You’re not “someone who can’t handle weekends.” You’re someone who trains recovery on purpose. - Creates boundaries before people test them. If you decide your limits at 9:47 PM with everyone talking over you, you’ll be negotiating while overwhelmed. The real enemy isn’t the holiday, it’s impulsive decision-making. In the moment, your brain often frames the next choice like it’s the only choice. That’s the illusion. The Addict to Athlete framing: recovery is training, not punishment Athletes don’t rely on motivation to show up they rely on routines, warm-ups, and pre-game strategy. Recovery works the same way. Think of this Fourth of July like a competition moment. Your job isn’t to erase feelings. Your job is to respond with training. When cravings show up, they’re not a verdict. They’re information. When emotions rise, they’re not instructions. They’re signals. Your plan turns signals into actions. And this matters: you don’t need a “perfect” day. You need a day that keeps you moving in the direction of your goals, one small clean decision at a time.
The Holiday Plan That Keeps You on Track (Even When It Gets Loud)
1 like • 10d
This is so true. I feel like it's important for me to have a plan for every single day, especially in early sobriety, but holidays and major events can bring the noise to another level. It's been so nice to have new friends, and a sober support system like AIIA to keep me grounded, especially since I lost the majority of my "friends" when I decided to get sober.
4 likes • 19d
Another great meeting with awesome people, so thank you all for sharing your experiences! Blu also mentioned the Hobbler Half marathon and I really want to run that one as well! It's 1 week after the 4th of July Freedom run, and it's all downhill, so hopefully you guys will come join me for that one too.
1-10 of 13
Loki Skarsgard
3
36points to level up
@loki-skarsgard-3509
Showing up, one day at a time.

Active 20h ago
Joined May 27, 2026