1985 was the year I started my first career as a disc jockey on the FM radio.
This labor of love was chronicled in Left of the Dial.
Every two months I get a few radio show cassette tapes converted to CDs. They can be played back on my SONY boom box.
Not a lot of people have an actual recording of who they were when they were in their twenties.
Listening to my radio shows I’m struck by how chatty I was on-air. Talking to my audience in a hip, upbeat fashion.
The point of this introduction being that you can reclaim yourself after illness strikes.
I was diagnosed when I was 22 years old. That cut my life as I knew it short. In one night in an instant my life was forever altered.
Do you feel like you’re not the same person you were before?
Most likely a breakdown happened because something wasn’t working. You have the chance to heal what’s broken.
You have the ability at any point along the road in your recovery to change an aspect of yourself or your life that you don’t like.
Why wait until you’re 40 or 50 or older?
Though making changes in mid-life is also possible and highly recommended.
For me it started with the decision to wear makeup and dress bolder and yes shout louder.
As with any kind of change a person wants to make I recommend using the tactics outlined in Changeology: A 5-Step Method for Achieving Your Goals and Resolutions.
The technique is a 90-day plan that can work.
I’ll end here with this realization:
You might not be the same person you were before illness settled in.
That’s okay. You’re always a person of worth equal to others in society who don’t have an illness.
It takes courage to set a goal and go after what you want to get.
This doesn’t get easier at mid-life. Yet my hope is that in reading these blog entries you can be empowered to make your own resolutions.
I respect and admire anyone who has the courage to want to change their life for the better.
The only real failure is the failure to try.
As long as you give your goals your best shot, there can be no shame if they don’t work out.
I’m 53. My goal is to continue to champion my vision of Recovery for Everyone, from whatever it is you’re in recovery from.
I’m not going to back down in advancing that getting the right treatment right away results in a better outcome.
What’s your goal? Go for it.