Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

A Mother Shares the Story of Her First Year of Sobriety
A real woman's memoir and her story of recovery in hopes that she inspires other mothers to maintain sobriety.

A mom who turned to alcohol. With three children under five, a set of twins and a newborn, Rachell Brownell wanted to feel like an adult again. So she turned to three bottles of white wine a night.

The good, the bad, and the ugly of getting clean. Through wit and honesty, Brownell lets readers into her world of addiction, but also towards hope. Through examples of community, wisdom, and support, this book provides a map for anyone trying to get through the early stages of recovery.

Inspiration for the first year of recovery. Learn how a couple of glasses of wine lead to a big problem. Understand how mommy cocktail groups and the desire to feel like “more than a mommy” can lead to addiction. In Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore you will find:

The good, the bad, and the ugly of parenting
The truth about the first year of recovery
Hope for a light at the end of the tunnel

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore is one woman's recollection of the pressures of motherhood, addiction, and the first year of sobriety. Without preaching, Brownell lets you into her heart-wrenching and inspiring story. If you learned from books like The Happier Hour, Drunk Hour, or Quit Like a Woman, then you'll want to read Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore.

"1020001775"
Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

A Mother Shares the Story of Her First Year of Sobriety
A real woman's memoir and her story of recovery in hopes that she inspires other mothers to maintain sobriety.

A mom who turned to alcohol. With three children under five, a set of twins and a newborn, Rachell Brownell wanted to feel like an adult again. So she turned to three bottles of white wine a night.

The good, the bad, and the ugly of getting clean. Through wit and honesty, Brownell lets readers into her world of addiction, but also towards hope. Through examples of community, wisdom, and support, this book provides a map for anyone trying to get through the early stages of recovery.

Inspiration for the first year of recovery. Learn how a couple of glasses of wine lead to a big problem. Understand how mommy cocktail groups and the desire to feel like “more than a mommy” can lead to addiction. In Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore you will find:

The good, the bad, and the ugly of parenting
The truth about the first year of recovery
Hope for a light at the end of the tunnel

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore is one woman's recollection of the pressures of motherhood, addiction, and the first year of sobriety. Without preaching, Brownell lets you into her heart-wrenching and inspiring story. If you learned from books like The Happier Hour, Drunk Hour, or Quit Like a Woman, then you'll want to read Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore.

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Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

by Rachael Brownell

Narrated by Wendy Rich Stetson

Unabridged — 3 hours, 52 minutes

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore: Getting Through the First Year of Sobriety

by Rachael Brownell

Narrated by Wendy Rich Stetson

Unabridged — 3 hours, 52 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$18.00
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

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Overview

A Mother Shares the Story of Her First Year of Sobriety
A real woman's memoir and her story of recovery in hopes that she inspires other mothers to maintain sobriety.

A mom who turned to alcohol. With three children under five, a set of twins and a newborn, Rachell Brownell wanted to feel like an adult again. So she turned to three bottles of white wine a night.

The good, the bad, and the ugly of getting clean. Through wit and honesty, Brownell lets readers into her world of addiction, but also towards hope. Through examples of community, wisdom, and support, this book provides a map for anyone trying to get through the early stages of recovery.

Inspiration for the first year of recovery. Learn how a couple of glasses of wine lead to a big problem. Understand how mommy cocktail groups and the desire to feel like “more than a mommy” can lead to addiction. In Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore you will find:

The good, the bad, and the ugly of parenting
The truth about the first year of recovery
Hope for a light at the end of the tunnel

Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore is one woman's recollection of the pressures of motherhood, addiction, and the first year of sobriety. Without preaching, Brownell lets you into her heart-wrenching and inspiring story. If you learned from books like The Happier Hour, Drunk Hour, or Quit Like a Woman, then you'll want to read Mommy Doesn't Drink Here Anymore.


Editorial Reviews

Library Journal

Brownell is a frequent contributor to various online parenting spaces, including The Imperfect Parent(www.imperfectparent.com), Babble.com, and Yahoo's Shine site (shine.yahoo.com). In this frank memoir, she journals her slide into alcoholism and her first year of recovery. She details in a conversational voice how her postpartum depression and the stresses of mothering three children, all under five years old, triggered her gradual dependence on multiple glasses of white wine. Her participation in social "cocktail playdate" groups for mommies with young children deepened the problem. Brownell doesn't pull any punches about the ugly side of her addiction, and her first year of sobriety is fraught with times where she felt lost, as if she were hanging on only by her fingernails, and overwhelmed by life without alcohol to help buffer it. VERDICT Brownell has an easy, readable style and a simple message. There is no glowing happy ending, just the reality that life must be faced one day at a time. This work will appeal to readers who like memoirs about ordinary people overcoming difficult life problems; individuals who find 12-step and recovery literature helpful will also be interested in this personal journey.—Crystal Renfro, Georgia Inst. of Technology, Atlanta


—Crystal Renfro

Reviews

"Rachael Brownell's true story of her journey into those first 12 months of recovery is a candid mirror. Written straight from her heart, Brownell understands the denial, fear, guilt and shame. She also conveys the pride she gained as she continued in her recovery. Comfort, encouragement and support are interwoven with her words. A gift for anyone who is seeking their own Truth regarding addiction and recovery." Barbara Joy, author of Easy Does It, Mom

Product Details

BN ID: 2940159509598
Publisher: Everand Productions
Publication date: 08/08/2023
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

"I want to be the kind of mother who never talks about diapers or potty training, who doesn't dream of boring you with which child did or didn't wake Mommy up last night. I want to be the kind of mother who loves her children without losing herself and whose sassy sense of humor is slightly off kilter and makes engineering husbands deeply uncomfortable. 'I need this', I say to myself while pouring that first glass of crisp white into a pretty glass. My shoulders relaxing, I look at my three kids through narrowing warrior eyes and think, 'Bring it!'"

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