Expounds on what addicts can expect from the people around them as they embark on a sober life and a new way of being. Prepares people for what life looks like for themselves and their loved ones and how to anticipate their new reality. Makes for a great group study in faith-based recovery meetings and treatment center curriculum. Addresses unrealistic expectations that come with what sobriety looks like for addicts and their loved ones so that recovery doesn't become one more failure or alienating experience in which the addict is alone. Serves as honest material for care ministries that allows them to process how to walk with people after the miracle and into their new reality.
Expounds on what addicts can expect from the people around them as they embark on a sober life and a new way of being. Prepares people for what life looks like for themselves and their loved ones and how to anticipate their new reality. Makes for a great group study in faith-based recovery meetings and treatment center curriculum. Addresses unrealistic expectations that come with what sobriety looks like for addicts and their loved ones so that recovery doesn't become one more failure or alienating experience in which the addict is alone. Serves as honest material for care ministries that allows them to process how to walk with people after the miracle and into their new reality.
David Hampton is an author, speaker, songwriter, and musician, as well as a practicing Certified Professional Recovery Coach in the greater Nashville, TN area. His personal story of living with his own alcoholism, all the while caring for a chronically ill spouse and working as a "professional Christian" staff member of one of the Nashville area's most high profile congregations, has given him a unique platform among the faith-based recovery community as well as various other audiences.
David is a featured guest on a variety of podcasts, as well as conferences, and retreats. He is formerly the Director of Worship/Arts Ministries at Christ Community Church in Franklin, TN and is now in private practice working in the field of addiction recovery. David lost his wife after a long battle with Multiple Sclerosis in May 2013. His story of restoration and recovery was the basis of his first published book, Our Authentic Selves: Reflections On What We Believe and What We Wish We Believed.
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