• Home
  • Recent Work
  • Artistic
  • Human
  • Nature
  • Recovery52 Project
  • About Me
Menu

Bob Dionne Photography

Bob Dionne Photography
  • Home
  • Recent Work
  • Artistic
  • Human
  • Nature
  • Recovery52 Project
  • About Me

“It is through living that we discover ourselves, at the same time as we discover the world around us.”
― Henri Cartier-Bresson

Recovery52 Blog:

My intention here is a 52-week project with at least one photo and text content describing my journey and thoughts about my recovery from substance abuse.

[The images displayed here are based on my own captures and edits, reflecting my thoughts of journeying toward the unknown, never sure what I will encounter around the bend, accepting and learning from whatever comes.]


Featured posts:

  • January 2025
    • Jan 1, 2025 Recovery52 – Year 2 Anniversary – A Photo Project: Two Years On Jan 1, 2025
  • January 2024
    • Jan 18, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 52 – A Finish Line Jan 18, 2024
    • Jan 11, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 51 – IntentRecovery52 – Week 51 – Intent Jan 11, 2024
    • Jan 4, 2024 Recovery52 – Week 50 – One Year Sober Jan 4, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 29, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 49 – Trinkets, Tokens, & Talismans Dec 29, 2023
    • Dec 21, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 48 – Praise & Apologies Dec 21, 2023
    • Dec 14, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 47 – Fears and Trust Dec 14, 2023
    • Dec 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 46 – Seeking Truth Dec 7, 2023
  • November 2023
    • Nov 30, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 45 – Challenging Limiting Beliefs Nov 30, 2023
    • Nov 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 44 – Happy Thanksgiving! Nov 23, 2023
    • Nov 16, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 43 – Pick Up The Shovel Nov 16, 2023
    • Nov 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 42 – My Why Nov 9, 2023
    • Nov 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 41 – Not This Time Nov 2, 2023
  • October 2023
    • Oct 26, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 40 – Transitions Oct 26, 2023
    • Oct 19, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 39 – Trash Talking Oct 19, 2023
    • Oct 12, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 38 – Boarded Up Oct 12, 2023
    • Oct 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 37 – Moving Forward Oct 7, 2023
  • September 2023
    • Sep 28, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 36 – Recipe for Recovery Sep 28, 2023
    • Sep 21, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 35 – Passion Over Addiction Sep 21, 2023
    • Sep 14, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 34 – Gratitude for Today Sep 14, 2023
    • Sep 7, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 33 – Two Thieves Sep 7, 2023
  • August 2023
    • Aug 31, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 32 – Governing the Kingdom Aug 31, 2023
    • Aug 24, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 31 – Toxic Media Detox Aug 24, 2023
    • Aug 16, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 30 – My Coping Styles Aug 16, 2023
    • Aug 10, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 29 – Defense Mechanisms Aug 10, 2023
    • Aug 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 28 – Avoiding and Evading Aug 6, 2023
  • July 2023
    • Jul 27, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 27 – Trigger Stacking Jul 27, 2023
    • Jul 20, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 26 – Habit Slipping Jul 20, 2023
    • Jul 13, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 25 – Feeling My Feelings Jul 13, 2023
    • Jul 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 24 – Trust and Fear Jul 6, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 29, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 23 – Anticipation, Awareness, and Achievement Jun 29, 2023
    • Jun 22, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 22 – Finding Calm with Intention Meditation Jun 22, 2023
    • Jun 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 21 – Myopic Recovery Jun 15, 2023
    • Jun 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 20 – Taking Inventory Jun 9, 2023
  • May 2023
    • May 31, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 19 – Gratitude for Mindfulness May 31, 2023
    • May 28, 2023 A Thought ... May 28, 2023
    • May 26, 2023 A Thought ... May 26, 2023
    • May 25, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 18 – The Addictive Voice May 25, 2023
    • May 17, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 17 – Now & Then May 17, 2023
    • May 11, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 16 – Being Thankful May 11, 2023
    • May 4, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 15 – Happy Birthday to Me May 4, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 25, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 14 – Some Valuable YouTube Resources Apr 25, 2023
    • Apr 20, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 13 – Flexing the Sobriety Muscle Apr 20, 2023
    • Apr 13, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 12 – Boredom is a Choice Apr 13, 2023
    • Apr 6, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 11 – It Was Just A Dream Apr 6, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 30, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 10 – Complacency Mar 30, 2023
    • Mar 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 09 – A Time to Celebrate Mar 23, 2023
    • Mar 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 08 – My Healthy Grounding Habits Mar 15, 2023
    • Mar 8, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 07 – Attention to the Moment Mar 8, 2023
    • Mar 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 06 – Remind Me Why I'm Doing This? Mar 2, 2023
  • February 2023
    • Feb 23, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 05 – Serious Recovery ... This Time! Feb 23, 2023
    • Feb 15, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 04 – Perspective & Choice Feb 15, 2023
    • Feb 9, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 03 – Reaction vs Response Feb 9, 2023
    • Feb 2, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 02 – Self-Awareness Feb 2, 2023
  • January 2023
    • Jan 26, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 01 – Change Jan 26, 2023
    • Jan 19, 2023 Recovery52 – Week 0 – The Beginning of Intention Jan 19, 2023

Recovery52 – Week 07 – Attention to the Moment

March 08, 2023 in Recovery52

“The best way to capture moments is to pay attention. This is how we cultivate mindfulness. Mindfulness means being awake.”
— Jon Kabat-Zinn

This project keeps bringing me back to its purpose: living a sober life with intention — and finding happiness in that choice. This week is steady: no lapses, no desire to be altered. I hiked and photographed, read, worked jigsaw puzzles, planned my days, and exercised. I also minimized social and news media intake. I finally arranged health-care coverage after going without it for a couple of years and completed an at-home sleep apnea test. I’m staying the course; the direction is good.

My biggest win is mindfulness — paying attention to the moment, especially in situations that once would have sent my anxiety climbing. One morning brings a whole string of irritations. My plan is simple: drop donations at Goodwill, grab groceries, then head to therapy. Here’s how it actually unfolded:

• I loaded my car with donations and drove to the nearest Goodwill, thirty minutes after they were supposed to open. Cones blocked the entrance and the center was closed. I felt a jolt of frustration — Really? Today? — but after a breath, I let it go.

• At self-checkout, as I paused to pull out my shopper’s card, the attendant swooped in to question my delay in scanning. Her tone hit me wrong — condescending, almost scolding. My irritation flared, but I reminded myself she was just doing her job. I chose to let it go.

• In the parking-garage stairwell, a young man rounded a blind corner with his head buried in his phone and nearly collided with me, knocking me off balance. My heart jumped; anger followed fast. I let myself feel it for a moment, then exhaled and let it go.

• At my counselor’s office, every visitor-spot was full. Another thing going wrong. Instead of brooding, I drove to a nearby park, paid the fee, and walked back through the trees, letting it go. It calmed me. I arrived early and shared these pause points in session.

There were other successes this week — moments where I noticed my reaction rising and chose the healthier response. These small choices prevented anxiety from piling into something dangerous for my sobriety. Respond, don’t react. I’m learning to appreciate mindfulness.

Tags: Mindfulness, Self-awareness, Resilience
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 06 – Remind Me Why I'm Doing This?

March 02, 2023 in Recovery52

“Motivation is what gets you started. Habit is what keeps you going.”
— Jim Rohn

My last post ended with the intention of describing the healthy habits and routines that help me stay on the safe path of sobriety. Lately, though, I’ve found myself a bit unfocused — my mind jumping between too many thoughts at once: routine, rigidity, self-trust, fear, uncertainty, anxiety, mindfulness. All important, but overwhelming when they crowd in together. I know I need to slow down.

I confided in a friend that I was feeling low and unsure of my direction. She gently suggested that I return to the purpose of this project — to reconnect with the light and let the heavier reflections wait. Hearing that helped. It was the external reminder I needed.

Before moving forward, I needed to revisit the difference between intention and motivation. Intention is my direction — chosen, deliberate, steady. Motivation is the energy that carries me toward that intention, and unlike intention, motivation isn’t constant. It rises and falls. Some days it feels natural and effortless; other days it barely shows up. That fluctuation isn’t failure — it’s human.

Motivation also comes in different forms. Intrinsic motivation — purpose, meaning, curiosity — comes from within. Extrinsic motivation — support, accountability, encouragement — comes from outside. Both matter. Both shift. Intention stays constant. Motivation moves around it.

Here’s where I stand today — my what and my whys:

Intention: To achieve and maintain joyful sobriety from alcohol.

Motivations:

• Awareness that I’ve lived too long without direction — and a desire for a meaningful, fulfilled life.

• Excitement and commitment to this Recovery52 project.

• The mental and physical benefits of healthy living.

• Devotion to family, loved ones, and friends — wanting to be reliable and present.

• The determination to end the physical, mental, and emotional pain caused by drinking.

Reviewing this lifts some of the fog. I feel clearer, steadier — no slip, no backslide, just an honest check-in and a renewed commitment to sobriety.

Related Riffs: Self-Awareness, Resilience, Gratitude


Tags: Self-awareness, Resilience, Gratitude
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 05 – Serious Recovery ... This Time!

February 23, 2023 in Recovery52

“My recovery must come first so that everything I love in life doesn’t have to come last.” — Anonymous

At the end of last week, I thought I might write about the routines that keep me grounded, but as this week unfolded, my reflections returned to something deeper: the seriousness of my commitment to recovery and why it matters.

This is not my first attempt at recovery from alcohol misuse — but I want this one to be lasting. I often turned to alcohol as a numbing agent when facing pain and anxiety, or as a celebratory indulgence when chasing excitement. Sometimes both urges collided — running from pain while chasing pleasure. The result was always the same: temporary escape, deeper regret, and greater loss.

The pain I tried to bury never went away. The pleasures I chased were illusions, and in pursuing them, I hurt the relationships that mattered most. Broken trust became the echo of every relapse.

Now I want to go deeper in understanding my lapses. I know there is early childhood trauma. My lifelong patterns of avoidance, dishonesty, and self-protection have roots there — shaped by fear of rejection and fear of commitment. I wrestle with depression and wonder whether other mental health factors may also play a role. Am I ready for this deep dive? I believe so. I’m committed to counseling with a therapist I trust, and this phase of recovery — addressing root causes — will show up in future posts.

My commitment to abstinence is serious. I’m intentional about protecting my recovery by keeping distance from situations or people that could endanger it. My days begin with intention and end with reflection: the first line in my planner reads, “Sobriety / Well-Being,” and I close each journal entry with, “A safe and sober day.” Between those two lines lies the practice of mindful living — creative pursuits, structured routines, and deliberate self-care.

This isn’t selfishness — it’s self-preservation. Recovery grows when self-care becomes daily practice.

Tags: Self-care, Resilience, Clarity
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 04 – Perspective & Choice

February 15, 2023 in Recovery52

“Whatever choice you make makes you. Choose wisely.” — Roy T. Bennett

At the end of last week, I thought I might continue exploring the tools I use to separate reaction from response, but as this week unfolded, my reflections kept returning to something deeper: how perspective shapes the choices I see — and the ones I believe I have.

Following last week’s exploration of reaction vs. response, I’m continuing to notice how awareness gives me power over my choices. Every moment offers a chance to pause, think, and act intentionally. The question isn’t only how I respond — it’s also how I see the situation that requires a response.

My counselor once used the phrase “choice points,” a concept that mirrors what I now think of as pause points. Both ideas remind me that in nearly every circumstance, there is space for deliberation — but that space only exists if I’m aware of it. Too often, I move through life reacting automatically, not realizing a choice is there. Mindful awareness helps create that space, turning impulsive reaction into intentional choice.

As I sit with this idea, I realize that my perspective — how I interpret my options — is often my greatest limitation. My mind too easily defaults to a filter of “can’t” instead of “can.” When an opportunity appears, I’m quick to list reasons it won’t work rather than ask, “Why not?” or “How can I make this possible?” That negative bias feeds self-doubt and keeps me from action.

That mindset has real consequences. When I believe I have no control, I slip into powerlessness. Worry spirals into anxiety; fear narrows my view until the only choice left seems to be avoidance. And avoidance, for me, used to mean turning to alcohol — to forget, to numb, to escape. That illusion of relief only deepened the sense of having no choice at all.

But I’m done with that. Now I try to stay open-minded when opportunities arise. Perspective and choice are active practices, not passive states. Shifting perspective takes effort. Making good choices takes courage. But they’re worth it — because each time I choose mindfully, I reclaim a bit more of my freedom.

“When you have to make a choice and don’t make it, that is in itself a choice.” — William James

Tags: Self-awareness, Clarity, Courage
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 03 – Reaction vs Response

February 09, 2023 in Recovery52

“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.” — Viktor E. Frankl

Last week, I thought I would write about relapse, but as this week unfolds, my reflections are pulling me toward something more immediate: the space between reaction and response.

My counselor recently used the phrase “pause points” while we were discussing my repeated lapses with alcohol. The idea sticks with me. My lapses often happen when I surrender to urges — seeking relief from anxiety or trying to amplify fleeting good feelings. It’s usually a swirl of conflicting emotions that pushes me into blind reaction mode, blunting rational thought and giving myself permission to think, “Just one drink,” or “Just tonight.”

Nonsense. When I’m sober and clear, I know drinking is never okay for me. My history shows this. I’m one of those people without an off switch — “If one is good, more is better.”

The concept of pause points distills Frankl’s idea into something immediate and practical. It reflects what I learned through SMART Recovery and cognitive behavioral therapy: there is a moment — brief but powerful — when awareness can interrupt habit. Too often, I react without thought, sliding toward a lapse. The challenge is to recognize when I’m entering that slope and pause before taking the first step.

Knowing I’m at a pause point means using that space to imagine the consequences ahead. I can picture the hurt that follows a lapse, or the pride and strength that come from choosing health. For me, that choice must always be abstinence.

To separate reaction from response, I’ve found three tools particularly helpful:

  • Urge log — recording urges to spot patterns and identify triggers, especially in pre- and early-recovery.

  • Mindfulness — staying present rather than getting lost in rumination or worry.

  • Journaling — tracking thoughts and behaviors as a record and a problem-solving tool.

Each of these tools will receive more attention in future posts, as they are shaping my current effort to find clarity and steadiness through abstinence.

Tags: Mindfulness, Clarity, Self-awareness
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 02 – Self-Awareness

February 02, 2023 in Recovery52

“Until you take the journey of self-reflection, it is almost impossible to grow or learn in life.” — Iyanla Vanzant

In last week’s reflection on change, I wrote about how transformation begins with intention. This week, I turn toward self-awareness — the ongoing practice of knowing myself honestly, without the filters of old stories or defenses.

A dictionary defines self-awareness as having good knowledge and judgment about yourself, but I’ve learned it’s far more complex. It’s the willingness to examine who I am beneath assumptions and habits, and the humility to admit that my understanding of myself hasn’t always been accurate.

Early childhood trauma and longstanding, unexamined fears have shaped my life in ways I didn’t fully see. Avoiding confrontation, retreating from emotional discomfort, seeking distraction, and guarding myself too tightly become familiar patterns — ones that protect me for a time, but also limit me. These tendencies interfere with relationships and keep me from facing the truth of my own behavior.

In recent years, I’ve had multiple lapses. Each time, I believe I’ve finally figured it out — only to fall back into familiar thinking and drinking patterns. My lapses happen in silence, because I drink alone, convincing myself that no one will notice. But that silence is loud to the people who care about me. Alcohol misuse is never invisible. It is harmful, selfish, and never “just this once.”

Developing self-awareness takes commitment. I turn off distractions and practice stillness. I use mindfulness and meditation, journal when it helps, and pay attention to my instinctive reactions — to others, to the world, and to my own thoughts. The goal is not perfection but honesty: to see what’s inside, understand it, accept it, and sometimes forgive it.

Self-awareness is not comfortable. It brings up guilt, shame, remorse, resentment, and regret — but these feelings show me where I still have work to do. And as with change, I know I can’t do this alone. Reaching out for professional support is essential to this process.

Next week, I plan to explore relapse more directly — how it happens, how to recognize early warning signs, and how greater awareness can help me avoid giving in to the urge.

Tags: Mindfulness, Humility, Clarity
Comment

Mt. Hood, Oregon

Recovery52 – Week 01 – Change

January 26, 2023 in Recovery52

“Your life does not get better by chance, it gets better by change.” — Jim Rohn

This first post marks the true beginning of my Recovery52 journey — an honest look at my substance abuse, my missteps, and the healing I’m trying to work toward.

The project is meant to share my thoughts, experiences, and emotions — the hardest things for me to express — through weekly posts and photographs that capture what resonates most in each moment. These reflections serve as both personal therapy and, I hope, a source of encouragement for others in recovery.

Change Is Necessary

A few years ago, I started recognizing that my substance abuse was toxic to both me and my relationships. I tried therapy without real success, then joined the SMART Recovery community, where I found some footing for a time, but not long-term sobriety.

Accepting the need for change allows me to begin seeing moments of mental clarity, improving relationships, and renewed motivation to keep moving forward in sobriety.

Change Is Difficult

Change takes work — painful, persistent work. It means learning to see what disturbs me, understanding the relationships that trouble me, and, hardest of all, facing the inner critic that keeps replaying old stories.

My environment is changed: moving from raising children in a home to living alone in an apartment, and beginning a midlife career shift. My relationships changed through divorce and heartbreak, both tied to my drinking. I let friends and family down in my periods of “silence,” and attempts at new relationships faltered. I left behind a trail of broken trust.

The most difficult change, though, is within — acknowledging that I need to grow up and recognizing that real healing must start from within.

Real change demands real effort. It’s not a recipe or a one-time act. It’s a process requiring intention, humility, and continuous motivation. For me, that means finally admitting I can’t do it alone — and seeking professional help. Asking for help remains hard, but it’s necessary.

Change Is Empowering

I’ve stumbled — relapsed — along the way, falling into old thought patterns and behaviors. A relapse feels like failure, but it also teaches me something. It’s a chance to analyze what went wrong, understand my triggers, and recommit to staying on track.

Sobriety brings clarity. With it, I find greater passion for creative work, honesty in relationships, competence in my commitments, and growing self-awareness. Each small success builds confidence — each step forward is empowering.

Accepting the need for change is only the beginning. Setting intention and maintaining motivation — those will be next week’s focus.

Tags: Self-awareness, Clarity, Courage
Comment

Recovery52 – Week 0 – The Beginning of Intention

January 19, 2023

“Intention sets a conscious direction; motivation sustains our drive in that direction.”

The last couple of weeks have been a haze, and I’m still trying to steady myself. I need something to hold onto, even something small. So I’m starting a 52-week photo project — one picture a week and a few lines about how things are going while I try to stay sober.

I don’t have much clarity yet. I just know I need some structure and a reason to keep paying attention. Maybe this will help. Maybe it won’t. But it’s something I can try.

So this is the beginning. One week at a time.

Tags: Sobriety, Humility
Newer / Older
Back to Top

email: bdionne.photography@gmail.com
phone: 503.313.4911