
From Isolation To Connection: Healing Addiction’s Hidden Roots with Severn Lang part 1
Healthy Living by Willow Creek Springs
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Ever feel like the thing that “helps” you is the very thing that keeps you alone? That’s where Severn Lang lived for years—sipping ease, swallowing pain, and drifting further from the people who could save him. What follows is a rare, generous conversation about how addiction hides inside isolation, how grief calcifies into clutter, and how the right words at the right moment can turn a life.
Severn grew up disconnected: a father battling schizophrenia who could preach to a crowd yet couldn’t speak to his own child, the loss of an older brother who had been his social bridge and his guide through dyslexia, and trauma that trained him to stop asking for help. Alcohol first appeared as communion wine and later as a constant companion that promised connection but delivered silence. As a hairstylist, he could perform sociability in short bursts, then vanish to drink and create alone. The spiral accelerated after his father’s death, peaking at half-gallons every 36 hours, the kind of pace that steals voice, work, and home.
The turning points were small and seismic: a leadership forum that stripped away excuses, a salon client who said “you look horrible” with love and urgency, and a cousin in long-term recovery who got him to a meeting. From there, Severn found the irreplaceable medicine of community—sponsorship, shared language, and people who’ve been through it. He learned how addiction transfers into “acceptable” habits like shopping, coffee, or overworking and built a practical framework to stop the drift: applying 12-step questions to non-substance behaviors, boxing up his belongings, only keeping what he used, and interrogating every attachment as need, want, regret, or heirloom.
With sobriety came a new vocation. Despite dyslexia, Severn leaned into storytelling, partnering with a co-writer to craft plays and films that make the emotional tangible. We talk about ego’s hunger for comfort, why isolation is relapse fuel, and how purpose, routine, and honest mirrors keep recovery alive. If you’re navigating addiction recovery, grief, codependency, or the slow burn of burnout, this conversation offers practical tools and hope you can use today.
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