SMART Recovery USA Blog

Connection Doesn’t Expire: What 31 Years in Recovery Taught Me

Written by smart recovery | 23 Jun 2026

[Guest post by Burk Jackson]

Someone reached out for peer support recently. She had 29 years of recovery behind her.

That number stopped me. Not because it was unusual — but because it challenged something I think many of us carry quietly into long-term recovery: the assumption that enough time means enough self-sufficiency. That eventually, you build the skills, the perspective, the internal tools to handle whatever comes. That you graduate out of needing other people.

She hadn’t graduated. Neither have I. Neither, I suspect, have you.

The Tools Don’t Replace the People

I stopped drinking at 23, in 1994. I’m 55 now. Over three decades I’ve built a strong internal toolkit — the kind of practical, behavior-based strategies that SMART Recovery champions. I’ve learned to examine my thinking, challenge unhelpful beliefs, and build a life that doesn’t center on substances. Those tools are real and they work.

But here’s what thirty-one years has also taught me: the tools and the people are not the same thing. You can have every cognitive strategy in your toolkit and still hit a wall at 9pm on a Tuesday that no worksheet reaches. Not a crisis. Not a relapse. Just the specific weight of being human in a long recovery, with nobody nearby who truly gets what that means.

Research backs this up. Studies consistently show that social support and peer connection are among the strongest predictors of sustained recovery outcomes — not just in early recovery, but across the long arc of a person’s life. Isolation, by contrast, is one of the most reliable predictors of relapse, regardless of years of sobriety. The data says what lived experience already knows: we are wired for connection, and that wiring doesn’t change.

The Specific Loneliness of Long-Term Recovery

There is a particular loneliness that finds people in long-term recovery that doesn’t get talked about much. In early recovery, the community forms around you. The meetings, the sponsors, the check-ins — the support is visible and accessible. But somewhere around year three, or year seven, or year fifteen, the scaffolding quietly comes down. People assume you’re fine. You assume you’re supposed to be fine.

Sometimes you’ve spent so long being the strong one — the person others lean on, the person with the years and the perspective — that you genuinely forget you’re allowed to need something too. Asking for help starts to feel incongruous with who you’ve become. So you don’t ask.

That woman with 29 years reached out anyway. That took courage — maybe more courage than reaching out on day one, when asking for help is expected and the community is right there waiting.

Self-Empowerment and Connection Are Not in Conflict

SMART Recovery’s self-empowerment philosophy resonates with me precisely because it doesn’t treat recovery as passive or dependent. You build skills. You develop agency. You take responsibility for your own change. I believe all of that deeply.

But self-empowerment doesn’t mean self-isolation. Choosing to reach out to another person who has lived experience — someone who has navigated the same terrain and come through it — is itself an act of self-empowerment. It’s using every available resource. It’s refusing to white-knuckle something alone when you don’t have to.

That belief is what led me to found RecoveryBridge (recoverybridge.app), a free platform connecting people in recovery with peers who have lived experience — available at any stage, any hour, no waitlists or intake forms. Not a replacement for the tools. A complement to them. Because sometimes what sustains change isn’t a strategy. It’s a person.

Thirty-one years in, I’m still learning that. Connection doesn’t expire. And neither does the need for it.

 

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About the Author

Burk Jackson has 31 years of personal sobriety and is the founder of RecoveryBridge (recoverybridge.app), a free peer support platform for people in recovery at any stage. He lives in New Mexico.