Dear Reader,
Today I was reading in the Book of Exodus, chapter 34. These words caught my attention:
“Observe thou that which I command thee this day: behold, I drive out before thee the Amorite, and the Canaanite, and the Hittite, and the Perizzite, and the Hivite, and the Jebusite.
Take heed to thyself, lest thou make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land whither thou goest, lest it be for a snare in the midst of thee.”
This was spoken to the people of Israel after they had already stumbled—after Moses broke the first tablets from Mount Sinai.
It was a warning:
Do not return to the ways that will pull you away again.
It reminds me very much of where we stand in early sobriety.
My Friend,
Starting recovery is not easy.
In fact, it may be one of the hardest—and most honest—places a person can stand.
There is a part of you that wants a better life—
peace, clarity, maybe even a sense of God again.
But there may also be another part…
that still wants to hold on.
Not fully go back—
but not fully let go either.
That place in between can feel safe.
But it usually isn’t.
In Exodus, there is a warning:
Be careful not to make a covenant… lest it become a snare.
A snare doesn’t grab you all at once.
It tightens slowly.
That’s how it often works in early recovery.
- “Just this once”
- “I’ll handle it differently this time”
- “I don’t need to tell anyone about this”
These don’t feel like big decisions…
but they are quiet agreements.
And those agreements matter.
Because recovery is not just about stopping something—
it’s about choosing a different way of living.
And that way begins with something simple, but not easy:
👉 rigorous honesty
Not perfection.
Not having it all figured out.
Just honesty.
- Being honest about what you feel
- Honest about what you want
- Honest about what still pulls at you
You don’t lose recovery because you struggle.
You lose it when you start hiding.
The good news is—you don’t have to do this perfectly.
You just have to stay willing.
Willing to be honest.
Willing to be guided.
Willing to let go, one layer at a time.
And as you do…
The things that once had power over you
will slowly lose their grip.
You are not being asked to become someone else.
You are being invited to become
who you were always meant to be—free, clear, and at peace.
This is a message we can all take wisdom from.
What we make peace with, we make room for.



