Kenny L. had just earned a full day of sobriety—something he hadn’t managed in months while trying to stay in the program. In this AA speaker tape, he describes the moment that clarity evaporated in less than five minutes at his apartment door, caught between the rational part of him and the insane thought that hijacked his decision.
Kenny L., an AA speaker, recounts gaining his first full day of sobriety after three and a half years in the program, only to have the obsession return the moment he walked into his apartment. Standing at his door, he describes being mentally torn between unlocking it to stay home and locking it back to call his using contacts, unable to break the cycle. The insane thought finally won out, and he relapsed after just 24 hours of sobriety.
Episode Summary
Kenny L. peels back the curtain on one of recovery’s most terrifying moments: the instant when the mind becomes the enemy. He doesn’t tell his full story here—instead, he zooms in on a specific moment three and a half years into trying to get sober, when he finally managed something that had eluded him for months: a full day without using.
That day felt like a victory. He’d made it through a meeting, gone home, and avoided the phone calls that usually sabotaged him by 8 p.m. His new sponsor knew he was handling it. Everything was in place. He should have been safe.
But the moment Kenny L. put his key in his apartment door, something shifted. An insane thought arrived—not a craving, not a desire exactly, but a thought: “You ought to call these guys and see what’s going on tonight.” It was the kind of thought that sounds casual, reasonable even. Just a phone call. Just to check in.
And then the war started.
He locked the door. No, that’s a bad idea. He unlocked it. They probably won’t even answer anyway. Just give them a call. He locked it again. For three, four, five minutes, he stood there at his own threshold, locked and unlocked, locked and unlocked—the rational part of him knowing this was a test, a setup, a setup of his own making. The insane part of him winning inch by inch.
This is the moment that AA speakers often dance around, but Kenny L. doesn’t. He doesn’t dress it up as a spiritual lesson or a turning point that led to something better. He just describes the raw mechanics of how the obsession works: how it doesn’t roar in like a craving. How it whispers. How it reasons. How it locks and unlocks the door until the insane thought wins out and you walk back out into the night.
The value of this AA speaker’s share isn’t that it ends well. It’s that it shows, in brutal detail, what the disease actually does when you’re standing in the gap between wanting to stay sober and the compulsion to use. It’s a portrait of the cunning part of alcoholism—the part that wins even when you’ve done everything right, even when you’ve got meetings, a sponsor, and a full day under your belt.
For anyone who’s stood at their own door, faced their own insane thought, and knows how easy it is to lose, this is what that sounds like.
Notable Quotes
I left his car and I walked 50 feet, made a right turn, walked down two doors to my apartment, put the key in the door and unlocked it. And then this thought came over me.
You ought to call these guys and see what’s going on tonight.
I must have stood there three, four, five minutes and the insane thought won out.
I locked the door, never walked in the apartment and back out on another two or three day binge.
Early Sobriety
Denial
Step 1 – Powerlessness
Topics Covered in This Transcript
- Relapse & Coming Back
- Early Sobriety
- Denial
- Step 1 – Powerlessness
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Full AA Speaker Transcript
This transcript was auto-generated and may contain minor errors. For the best experience, listen to the audio above.
Let me skip kind of to the end. You know, we're kind of at the end here, three and a half years later and I'm going to AA meetings and I'm trying to stay sober. I can't get two days.
Um, I've got a a day and a half or I've got I've got a day of sobriety and I felt really good because I knew all I had to do was go home that night from the meeting and get something to eat. I'd go right to sleep and I'd have a a day of sobriety. It had been a while since I'd had a whole day of sobriety because I'd usually make a phone call during the 8:00 meeting or I'd, you know, something would happen.
Uh, and I got home, I told my new sponsor, I'd be fine. I was doing okay. I'll call him in the morning.
Goodbye. And I was I was just fine. And I I left his car and I walked 50 ft, made a right turn, walked down two doors to my apartment, put the key in the door and unlocked it.
And then this thought came over me, you know, you ought to call these guys and see what's going on tonight. And I'd say and I unlocked the I locked the door back up. And then I would think, no, that's a bad idea.
And I would unlock the door and I think, well, you know, they probably won't answer the phone anyway. Just go give them a call. And I locked the door and then I would unlock the door and I must have stood there 3, four, five minutes and the insane thought won out and I locked the door, never walked in the apartment and uh back out on another two or three day binge.



