338 Episodes

  1. E17: Alcohol and the Heart

    Published: 10/16/2020
  2. E16: Signs I was a Problem Drinker (That I Ignored)

    Published: 10/9/2020
  3. E15: Stigma and Social Death

    Published: 10/2/2020
  4. E14: Nature vs Nurture

    Published: 9/25/2020
  5. E13: SSRIs and Alcohol-Induced Aggression

    Published: 9/18/2020
  6. E12: Why We Blackout From Drinking Alcohol

    Published: 9/11/2020
  7. E11: Why Alcohol Feels Good (Endorphins and Opioid Receptors)

    Published: 9/4/2020
  8. E10: Denial and Dry Drunk Syndrome

    Published: 8/28/2020
  9. E9: From Chronic Day Ones to Forever Sobriety

    Published: 8/21/2020
  10. E8: What to Expect During Withdrawal

    Published: 8/14/2020
  11. E7: Shame

    Published: 8/7/2020
  12. E6: How the Body Processes Alcohol

    Published: 7/31/2020
  13. E5: Sugar Addiction

    Published: 7/24/2020
  14. E4: Drunk Sex is the Worst

    Published: 7/17/2020
  15. E3: Alcohol, Sleep, and Drinking Dreams

    Published: 7/10/2020
  16. E2: Alcohol Cravings. Why does our brain tell us to drink?

    Published: 7/3/2020
  17. The Last Night I Drank

    Published: 6/30/2020
  18. E1: Introduction and How Alcohol Causes Anxiety

    Published: 6/25/2020

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Why do some people stay sober and others relapse back and forth? Getting sober isn’t about restriction, it’s about rewiring your brain to function without intensity, chaos, dopamine spikes, and avoidance. Hosted by Gill Tietz, a former biochemist turned sober coach, this show dives into the neuroscience of long-term sobriety — why some people relapse, why others stay free, and how to build the kind of brain that can handle life without alcohol. Each episode blends science, psychology, and real experience to help you strengthen the four pillars of neuro-resilience: 1. Neural Recovery – healing your brain’s reward and stress systems after alcohol. 2. Emotional Regulation – calming reactivity and learning to feel without escaping. 3. Cognitive Rewiring – changing the thought patterns that pull you backward. 4. Behavioral Integration – designing routines and habits that make being sober your default. Whether you’re newly sober or years in, you’ll learn research-backed tools and mindset shifts so sobriety stops feeling like something you’re trying to want and starts feeling like who you are. This is hard work. If you want my support, then check out my online sober community or my 1:1 work. Website: www.soberpowered.com