Chemsex Recovery: Distraction Phase

"Exhaustion, distraction, and loss of interest sets in. The energy it's taking to NOT use becomes draining and veering from the path sets in."
Hey y'all,
I need to be honest with you before we start this one: Part 3 (Find Part 1 and Part 2) of this series is the one I wish someone had handed me when I was seven weeks into my own recovery, staring at the ceiling at 2 AM, wondering why I felt absolutely nothing about the decision that had felt so monumental just a month earlier.
If you're reading this and you're currently in weeks seven through nine, I want you to know something right now, before we go any further:
You are not failing. You are exactly where you're supposed to be.
The Distraction Phase is the most dangerous stretch of the first 90 days. It's where the majority of relapses happen. Not because people are weak. Not because they didn't want it badly enough. But because nobody warned them that this phase was coming, so when it hit, they mistook a predictable neurobiological event for a personal failure.
I'm going to make sure that doesn't happen to you.
The Day the Music Stops
Here's what happens around week seven: you wake up and the resolve is just... gone.
Not gone dramatically. Not gone like a fight or a crisis. Gone like a faucet that someone turned off in the middle of the night. You didn't hear it happen. You just noticed the silence.
The excitement from the Honeymoon Phase? Distant memory. The profound insights from the Epiphany Phase? They're still in your journal, but they feel like someone else wrote them. The words are the same, but the feeling behind them has evaporated.
Everything is gray.
You go through the motions. You get up, go to work, eat something, come home. But there's no juice in any of it. The world hasn't changed—you've just stopped being able to feel it.
And then something worse happens: the tiredness sets in.
Not physical tiredness. You're sleeping fine.
This is a bone-deep exhaustion that lives in your soul.
You're tired of the constant vigilance.
Tired of saying no.
Tired of meetings and check-ins and journaling and therapy and all the fucking work that recovery demands every single day without a break.
The energy it takes to NOT use has become the central fact of your existence.
And you're starting to wonder if this is what the rest of your life looks like—this joyless grind of constantly resisting something while feeling nothing in return.
That thought—"Is this it?"—is the most dangerous thought in recovery. And it's about to get louder.
I help men who have sex with men break free from the addictive patterns of chemsex and become their best and highest selves. Our group coaching, Recovery Alchemy, is a 12-week, intense program that can literally change your life. We are always accepting new clients. Apply Here.
What's Actually Happening in Your Brain
I need you to understand the neuroscience here because it's going to save you from the story your brain is about to tell you.