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I have been reading Dana’s recovery memoir Bottled; our library’s selected read for
this year’s ARL Good Neighbor Project.
The theme of this year’s project focuses on ‘stories of recovery and
hope,’ intended to break stigma associated with harmful addictions as well as,
share resources for finding help. Dana
candidly tells of her life spiraling out of control, how she found the strength
to face her fears, and finally how to live in sobriety.
The following review of her book comes from Linda Sladkey, originally
published in Covenant Church Magazine (Apr 15, 2016).
Vulnerability draws me in like a magnet every time. Combine
quick-witted sarcasm with transparency and I feel I’ve made a new best friend.
You see, I identify with scuffed up people. Even though addiction is not my
personal battle, as I read Dana Bowman’s Bottled:
A Mom’s Guide to Early Recovery, I could relate to her honest and biting
humor as she tells how “it took a wedding, two babies, and a funeral to help me
understand I needed to get sober.” How she found celebration while in recovery
is the real story.
From her beginning
references to a “Sharpie-marker-on-the-couch kind of day,” Bowman transported
me to the time when my own kids were small and the black Sharpie marker
decorated the dog and then, with a later child, the living room carpet in broad
sweeping arches. The toddler years are a season parents remember—some more
fondly than others.
Anyone who has ever
been through a significant hurt or life-altering season knows that everyone has
a story. We all have our private pain. Bowman, who attends the Lindsborg
(Kansas) Covenant Church, is candid enough to share hers—and in so doing,
reminds us to see others in a more generous light. She reminds us to listen
more and judge less.
With chapter titles
such as “Birth with a Beer Chaser,” “The Big Tell,” “Toddlers at 4:00 p.m. Are
the Devil,” and “Steve the Sobriety Cat,” she recaps her arduous journey from
messy discovery to never-ending recovery without sugarcoating the process or
her faith. “This is the story of how I stopped and keep being stopped every day,
twenty-four hours at a time,” says Bowman. Even if you are not in recovery,
there are so many lessons to help readers understand the battles an alcoholic
mother of young children is fighting and how to be present in the moment.
Bowman, an English teacher and part-time professor
at Bethany College in Lindsborg, Kansas, recalls the moment she realized she
was still funny—even without a drink. And she is funny. Her popular
momsieblog.com and workshops on both writing and addiction offer more
opportunities to hear her potent narrative. (Her blog includes an engagingly
comic story about the Barnes & Noble sales clerk who helped her find Bottled on the store’s shelves.) Her
forthright account of life in “recovery at its sloppy best” invites us all to
lift up our face, connect with another human being, and remember to laugh.
Whether you yourself struggle with addiction or love
someone who does—friend, neighbor, family member—Bottled will instruct and encourage. The twist that sets this
memoir apart from other poignant addiction stories is the quirky and sometimes
irreverent humor she infuses into the telling. Bowman is proof that there is
joy in sobriety and a genuine possibility of liking yourself at the end of the
day.
Copies of Bottled are available at the library. Pick one up today to read and share with
friends. You may relate to this book
more than you expect. Come out to meet
Dana and have lunch (free) at 12:00 p.m. on October 30 at Hensley Hall in West
Jefferson United Methodist Church. I
admire Dana’s courage in sharing her story and highly recommend it to
everyone. Stop by the library to
register for this luncheon event, or call us at 336.846.2041 x111.
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