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Episode 0059 Feed the Sheep

In this episode the Old Rucker dives into the emotional realities of recovery exploring anger, hate, violence, gratitude, and the importance of emotional sobriety. Bob talks about why people struggling with “isms” must learn to recognize and manage powerful emotions before they spiral into destructive behavior, and why the show intentionally avoids political controversy in favor of discussions that build understanding, spirituality, and personal growth. Through practical tools, reflections on service work, and a moving story about gratitude, reminder that recovery isn’t just about sobriety it’s about learning to live with humility, compassion, and love for others. The message is simple: practice love and tolerance, help someone who needs it, and remember that today is all we have so feed the sheep.

Tools to Manage Anger and Build Emotional Sobriety

Anger is a normal human emotion, but unmanaged anger can damage relationships, decision‑making, and personal well‑being. Learning practical tools to pause, calm down, and process emotions in healthier ways is an important step toward emotional sobriety. Emotional sobriety means being able to experience difficult emotions without reacting impulsively or returning to destructive habits.

Below are practical tools that can help manage anger in the moment and build healthier emotional habits over time.


Immediate Cool‑Down Techniques

These tools help interrupt anger before it escalates.

Deep Breathing
Slow, controlled belly breathing helps calm the nervous system and reduce the physical signs of anger.

Take a Time‑Out
Step away from the situation that triggered the anger. Distance often prevents emotional escalation.

Count or Distract
Counting to ten or redirecting attention can help slow down impulsive reactions.

Physical Release
Channel the energy safely through physical activity such as running, intense exercise, or hitting a pillow.

Sensory Grounding
Use calming music, visualization, or focused attention on physical surroundings to reset your emotional state.


Cognitive and Behavioral Tools

These strategies help reshape the way anger is interpreted and expressed.

Cognitive Restructuring
Replace exaggerated or hostile thoughts with more realistic and rational perspectives.

Anger Journal
Record situations that trigger anger. Tracking patterns can reveal common triggers and warning signs.

Assertive Communication
Use “I” statements to express feelings clearly without blaming others. For example: “I feel frustrated when this happens.”

Problem‑Solving Approach
Focus on practical solutions instead of remaining stuck on the frustration itself.


Long‑Term Preventative Practices

Managing anger effectively requires ongoing habits that support emotional stability.

Physical Health
Adequate sleep, balanced nutrition, and regular exercise help regulate stress and mood.

Mindfulness and Meditation
These practices increase awareness of emotional triggers before they escalate into anger.

Professional Support
Counseling, therapy (such as cognitive behavioral therapy), or support groups can help develop healthier coping strategies.

Creative Outlets
Art, music, writing, or other creative activities provide constructive ways to process emotions.


Building Emotional Sobriety

Emotional sobriety goes beyond avoiding destructive behaviors. It involves learning to experience emotions without being controlled by them.

Key elements include:

  • Healthy Coping: Using positive tools instead of harmful reactions.
  • Emotional Regulation: Experiencing difficult emotions without immediately escaping or numbing them.
  • Balance and Perspective: Accepting life as it comes without extreme emotional swings.
  • Self‑Awareness: Understanding personal triggers and emotional patterns.

Developing emotional sobriety takes time and consistent practice, but these tools provide a foundation for healthier emotional responses and stronger relationships.


Small changes practiced consistently can prevent anger from becoming destructive and instead turn it into an opportunity for growth and self‑understanding.

 

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Episode 0055 Joel B’s Journey – ESH

Joel’s story is a blunt reminder that rock bottom doesn’t always involve handcuffs or headlines. In this episode, Joel opens up about childhood trauma, addiction, ego, control, relapse, and the moment his internal voice shifted from self hatred to hope. He shares how detox, honesty, service work, music, and community, especially Bridging the Gap, became the foundation of his recovery. This episode explores shame, guilt, faith without dogma, the danger of isolation, and why “the only thing waiting in the comfort zone is alcoholism.” If you’re new to recovery, stuck in the middle, or questioning whether change is possible, Joel’s experience offers a grounded, lived example of how growth happens one honest step at a time.

New Year One Honest Challenge – you can use the links below to submit.

Text Us at 501-613-8915

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Email us team@shoutoutfromthepit.com

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Episode 0052 Chris T: From Hellion to Helper – Sobriety, Service, and Second Chances

The tribe sits down with Chris T., a husband, father, tech wirehead, astronomer, and recovering alcoholic with just over 20 years of sobriety. Chris shares a raw, unpolished story of early rebellion, crime, addiction, repeated detox attempts, and the moment he finally asked for help; not because he had a plan, but because he wanted to live. The conversation dives deep into long-term recovery, sponsorship, service work, accountability, boundaries, amends, and spiritual growth without dogma. Chris also reflects on surviving catastrophic motorcycle accidents and multiple strokes, and how perspective, gratitude, and helping others keep him grounded today. This is a grounded, experience-driven discussion about what it actually takes to stay sober, grow up, and give back one day at a time.

New Year One Honest Challenge – you can use the links below to submit.

Text Us at 501-613-8915

Leave a voicemail 501-613-8915

Email us team@shoutoutfromthepit.com

 

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Episode 0050 Team Cheremy: The Alcoholic Family

This episode Team Cheremy opens the new year with a raw, deeply personal conversation about the family disease of alcoholism, focusing on how addiction and recovery ripple across generations. They explore lived experience rather than theory, as Linda and her niece Lauren both sober members of Alcoholics Anonymous share candid stories of growing up around alcoholism, navigating abandonment, secrecy, relapse, and ultimately finding recovery, boundaries, and spiritual grounding. Through honest dialogue, reflections, and practical insight, the episode examines detachment with love, family roles, myths around “rock bottom,” and how trust in recovery communities can heal fractured relationships. The result is an educational, unscripted discussion offering hope, clarity, and tools for families and individuals walking the long road of recovery together.

Text Us at 501-613-8915

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Email us team@shoutoutfromthepit.com

 

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Episode 0049 Edye and Paul: Couples in Recovery

In this episode of the Old Rucker sits down with Edye and Paul and joined by Mandy, Sherry, Jeremy, Dwight, Joel & Linda for a blunt, experience driven conversation about what it actually means to be a couple in recovery. Drawing from deeply personal histories of addiction, grief, loss, and long term sobriety, Edye and Paul break down how independent recovery programs, clear boundaries, service work, and honest communication make a healthy relationship possible not easy, but real. This episode cuts through recovery cliches and relationship myths, focusing instead on actions over words, accountability over comfort, and why love in sobriety only works when neither person tries to be the other’s higher power. If you’re navigating relationships in recovery or questioning whether you’re ready, this is a grounded, no nonsense look at what sustainable sobriety together actually requires.

Text Us at 501-613-8915

Leave a voicemail 501-613-8915

Email us team@shoutoutfromthepit.com

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