What If Recovery Isn’t About What Works — But What Fits?

By Brian Miller

 

For a long time, I believed there was a right way to get sober. I believed that if I waited until I was truly ready, if I approached recovery seriously and with respect, the solution would reveal itself. I believed that when the time came, something would click. The cravings would fade. The noise would quiet. The relief people talked about would arrive — what I didn’t yet understand was that recovery isn’t one-size-fits-all, and that alternative paths to recovery are sometimes necessary.

When the “Right” Way to Get Sober Doesn’t Work

 

I held out hope that AA would be that solution.

Because I respected it, I kept AA in my back pocket. I told myself I wasn’t ready yet. Not disciplined enough. Not desperate enough. I didn’t want to half-commit. I wanted to do it right. In my mind, I held AA out like a light on the horizon, something that would save me when the time was right.

When that time finally came, I walked into the rooms expecting something to change. “I’m Brian, and I’m an alcoholic,” I said aloud. There. I’d done it. Now the change would come.

It didn’t.

It wasn’t just one meeting. For more than a decade, I went to meetings. I listened carefully.  Along the way, I followed the language and the stories.  I met men who would walk through fire to help me get sober. And still, I kept waiting for the magic people describe, the internal shift where alcohol finally loosens its grip.

But the cravings didn’t fade.
The pull toward drinking didn’t weaken.
The noise in my head didn’t quiet.

What I felt instead was desperation.

 

The Fear of Doing Everything Right and Still Feeling Stuck

 

There’s a particular kind of fear that sets in when you do the thing everyone says works and it doesn’t work for you. Not because you’re resisting it. Not because you’re doing it halfway. But because, for reasons you can’t explain, it simply doesn’t land.

That fear is isolating. Because if this isn’t the answer, then what is?

I didn’t leave AA angry. I left confused — and wondering what that said about me.

Was I doing it wrong? Was I incapable of recovery? Or was there something fundamentally broken in me? The hardest part wasn’t that AA didn’t work for me. It was the silence that followed, the feeling that I had tried the responsible, accepted path and come up empty.

Over time, I realized that what I was experiencing wasn’t resistance or failure. It was a lack of orientation. I was doing what I believed I was supposed to do, in rooms that felt closed off and heavy, waiting for clarity to arrive.

Most of the meetings I attended took place in basements. Church basements. Windowless rooms beneath everything else. I remember sitting there, listening, hoping that something would eventually lift. That the darkness would break. That a sense of direction would appear.

For some people, those rooms become a place of relief and transformation. For me, they felt static. Not unsafe. Not hostile. Just unmoving. I wasn’t angry and I wasn’t rebelling. I simply couldn’t see a way forward.

 

When Alternative Paths to Recovery Become Necessary

 

That realization didn’t send me back to drinking. It sent me searching. Not for an easier answer, but for one that allowed me to orient myself again. One that offered some sense of movement, even if it came slowly and without certainty.  I wasn’t rejecting recovery — I was learning that alternative paths to recovery were sometimes necessary when the first answers didn’t land.

Once the “right” way failed me, I started trying everything. Therapy. Medication. Books. Discipline. Conversations that scared me. Ideas that didn’t quite fit but felt worth exploring. I wasn’t looking for an easier way out — I was looking for a way forward.

Which effort would help, or whether any of them would, wasn’t clear. I only knew that staying where I was wasn’t an option.

Looking back, I can see that this was where my recovery actually began. Not in a dramatic moment of surrender, but in a long stretch of uncomfortable effort. Quiet work. Trial and error. Persistence without validation.

When I finally stopped drinking, it felt sudden to outsiders. To me, it felt inevitable. Like something I had been building toward for years without realizing it.

Sobriety didn’t arrive with fireworks. It arrived quietly, and it stayed.

Getting sober wasn’t about finding the right program, but about discovering what works for you in recovery — often through alternative paths to recovery.  It was about refusing to stop trying when the first answer didn’t work.

I’m sharing this because I know there are people reading who are doing everything they’re “supposed” to do and still feel stuck. People who are earnest, serious, and willing, but terrified that nothing is working.

If that’s you, I want you to hear this clearly: struggling doesn’t mean you’re incapable of recovery. It may simply mean you haven’t found the right shape for it yet.

I explored this idea more deeply in The View from a Windowless Basement, a book about recovery for people who didn’t hit rock bottom but still knew something had to change.

If you tried to get sober the way you were taught and it didn’t work, you’re not alone. And you’re not done!

Brian Miller is a husband, father, and entrepreneur who has been sober since May 16, 2022. After years of trying to quit drinking through traditional paths that never quite worked for him, he began exploring other ways to build a life without alcohol. He writes honestly about long-term sobriety, persistence, and what it looks like to keep going when the first answers don’t land. He is also the author of The View from a Windowless Basement.