When I first dried out, I felt like a guy who had just been handed a life sentence of “No.”
No more cold beers after a round. No more late-night shots to celebrate—or mourn. No more smoky bars where the lighting is dim enough to hide who you really are. Recovery felt like a giant eraser, rubbing out all the parts of my life that had any color in them. I looked at the road ahead and saw a desert: a long, dry, boring stretch of “can’t.”
If you’re in early sobriety, or even if you’re years in and having a rough week, you know that feeling. It’s the sense that you’re living a life of deprivation. You feel like you’re missing the party, and all you got in exchange was a lousy cup of lukewarm coffee and a clear memory of how much you’ve screwed up.
But here’s the shift. And it’s the hardest “read” you’ll ever make on the green of life.
The Disease is the Thief, Not the Cure
We talk about addiction like it’s just a bad habit or a love affair with a bottle. Nope. It’s a disease. It’s a glitch in the hardware — a systemic failure that makes your brain believe that “poison” is “fuel.”
The disease is what was actually taking things away from me. It took my sleep. It took my bank account. It took my ability to look my wife in the eye without flinching. It took my “calm” and replaced it with a buzzing, frantic anxiety that only more poison could quiet for an hour.
Recovery isn’t the act of giving things up. It’s the act of finally receiving the things you never actually had.

Finding the “Calm” in the Chaos
In golf, there’s a feeling called “the zone.” It’s that rare moment where the noise of the gallery, the wind, and the internal critic all go silent. You aren’t trying to hit the ball; you’re just letting the swing happen.
When I was drinking, I tried to force that feeling. I tried to buy “calm” by the liter, gallon, bottle, pill, joint, pull, whatever. But that wasn’t calm—it was a blackout. It was a temporary truce with a war that was still raging inside me.
Recovery gave me the chance at something I literally didn’t have the biological capacity for when I was using: genuine peace. And I say “chance” intentionally – you don’t just automatically gain peace with sobriety. Far from it. I’ve had to go through way more hell than I was expecting since I got sober. But, at least I have the chance to get the ability to sit on a bench at the turn, watch the sun hit the fairway, and not feel like I need to crawl out of my own skin. It’s the realization that “happiness” isn’t a high; it’s a baseline. It’s the quiet strength of knowing that no matter what the scorecard says at the end of the day, I’m not going to lose my soul in the process.

The New Bag
Imagine showing up to the first tee with a bag full of lead weights. You’re exhausted, your back hurts, and you’re swinging like a man in a straitjacket. Someone comes along and offers to take the weights out.
Would you complain that they’re “taking things away” from you? Would you mourn the loss of the lead?
Of course not. You’d feel light. You’d feel powerful. You’d realize that by losing the weight, you gained the game.
That’s what the Skull & Bogeys lifestyle is about. We wear the skull because we acknowledge the disease. We know we’re fighting something that wants us dead. But we play the game because we’ve finally found the “plus” side of the ledger.
I didn’t give up drinking. I gained the morning. I didn’t give up “going out.” I gained the ability to actually be present when I’m there. I didn’t give up my edge. I gained a center.
Recovery is a gain, not a loss. It’s the realization that the “good times” the disease promised were just cheap knock-offs of the real life that was waiting for us once we cleared the fog.
The path isn’t about what you’ve lost. It’s about the fact that for the first time in your life, you’re actually playing with a full set of clubs.

Live for the gain. Grind for the calm. Gear up at skullandbogeys.com.





