Misunderstood Strengths

A coffee mug, a pen, and a piece of paper with the question "what are my strengths?"

Written By, Dan F.

I used to look back on my childhood with confusion. I knew I was different—how I learned, how I connected—but I didn’t have the language for it. I just knew I didn’t fit.

It wasn’t until I entered recovery that those memories began to shift. Not because they changed, but because I did.

Step 7 didn’t take me back to childhood—it gave me a new way to stand in it.

I began to see that the traits I once saw as flaws—my sensitivity, my resistance to conformity, my need for meaning—were actually signs of resilience. They weren’t shortcomings to be removed; they were misunderstood strengths waiting to be reclaimed.

Through recovery, I learned to let go—not of who I was, but of who I thought I had to be. That was humility: not erasing myself, but making space for my true self to emerge.

And as I did, something else became clear: my story wasn’t just mine. It was a bridge.

The more I shared, the more I saw others reflected in my words. The more I listened, the more I recognized the quiet courage in their stories.

That’s where community contribution began—not in grand gestures, but in small acts of presence. In showing up with honesty. In offering my story as a way to say, “You’re not alone.”

Step 7 taught me that letting go is an act of service. When I release shame, ego, and fear, I make room for connection. And in that space, community grows.

Published By ANL – November 2025

More Articles

  • Heard in a Meeting

    “I’m having positive transitions. This is the promise of recovery.” – Anonymous Published in A New Leaf – June 2025

    Heard in a Meeting
  • This Tune Shall Pass

    By, Jesse P. It started out as one teenaged wishthe click of a lighterand turned into a lifeIt was excitingand floating from the groundcame the laughter and the closeness I needed to have somehowyou turned into a danger from someone I held so close, I don’t knowbut it was time for you to go Oh…

    This Tune Shall Pass
  • Dear Cannabis Sativa

    By, Melissa H. Dear Cannabis Sativa,We were introduced by a cool, blond-haired rebel girl from Colorado. I was a 15-year old flatlander from Pennsylvania who had never even heard of you. I took to you because you elevated fun to a new level. I hadn’t known that fun was smokable. You made rolling over on…

    Dear Cannabis Sativa
  • Depression and the Twelve Steps

    By, Carol M. I am an addict and a depressive. I wish I were manic depressive, but I have never experienced the up, just the down. Getting to the “almost OK” has been a struggle all my life. My first attempt at suicide was at eleven. Depression is a disease. In many ways it’s like…

    Depression and the Twelve Steps
  • Thought of the Month

    “Life, Itself, Is The Proper Binge.” – Julia C. Published in A New Leaf – February 1991

    Thought of the Month
  • Break-Up Letter

    By Vinnie C. Dear Mary Jane, We are now broken up, retroactive to Dec. 29th, 2024. It’s not you. It’s me. Let me explain. When we first met back in February of 2004, you absolutely rocked my world. I’ll never forget that first time, smoking with a shady Russian guy in a New Jersey college…

    Break-Up Letter