The Discipline of Healing
By: Beth Durling MS, CADCII, ICADC
We often hear about desire in recovery. The desire to change. The desire to break patterns. The desire to heal. And while desire is powerful—and often holy—it’s not enough on its own.
Desire without discipline is just a dream.
At The Family Recovery Foundation, we sit with families every day who are desperate for change. They long for peace in their homes, for safety in their relationships, and for healing in their hearts. But longing alone won’t create transformation.
What creates lasting change is discipline.
And here’s something we don’t talk about enough: stopping abuse is a discipline.
It’s not just about leaving toxic relationships or setting boundaries. It’s about doing it consistently. It’s about choosing every day not to participate in patterns that harm you or your family. It’s about rewiring your nervous system to no longer tolerate dysfunction just because it feels familiar.
For many of us—especially those raised in environments marked by addiction, neglect, or emotional instability—abuse doesn’t feel like abuse. It feels like home. And when something feels like home, it becomes easy to excuse, normalize, or even justify.
This is why healing requires more than awareness.
It requires more than education.
It requires discipline.
Discipline to walk away when someone stonewalls or gaslights.
Discipline to pause instead of reacting to chaos.
Discipline to name truth, even when it makes other people uncomfortable.
Discipline to say, “I cannot accept this anymore.”
And yes—discipline hurts. Especially in the beginning.
Choosing to change old dynamics can feel like standing in fire. But you won’t burn. You’ll rise. Slowly. Over time. Breath by breath.
At The Family Recovery Foundation, we teach families to practice active surrender—a sacred process of handing over what we cannot fix and grounding ourselves in what we can choose: our next right step.
Start small.
Sit in silence for two minutes a day.
Light a candle.
Take a walk.
Breathe before you respond.
Catch the thought. Change the thought.
Do it again tomorrow. And the next day.
Healing isn’t a one-time breakthrough. It’s the quiet, repeated practice of choosing something different—even when everything in your system tells you to go back.
Desire is the spark.
Discipline is the flame that keeps it alive.
If you’re reading this, you already have the desire.
Now we invite you to choose the discipline.
Your healing is worth it.
Your peace is worth it.
And so are you.