Gigi Langer

Worry Less Now!

 Love More Now!

Are Addictive Habits Wrecking Your Life?

Trust me, if your life isn’t working, your relationships are awful, you grew up in a dysfunctional family, or you have closed your heart to yourself or others, you might be using addictive habits to find relief from your everyday troubles. Read on if you’d like to find a practical, peaceful way of living with the uncomfortable realities and uncertainties of everyday life.

Welcome to my posts about recovering from alcoholism and other substance abuse disorders. This series of blogs describe how you can recover from dependence on alcohol or other harmful habits. I’ve taken these ideas from Chapter 6 in my newest book, Love More Now: Facing Life Challenges with An Open Heart (2023).

I hope you find the examples, guidelines, and stories helpful to your recovery from whatever is eating away at your ability to freely give and receive love. Also see my podcasts about recovery on YouTube and at GigiLanger.com.

Addiction is like a cancer that overpowers  and destroys its host. —Bohunk

I believe that alcoholism and other addictions are the ultimate heart closers. When fear whispers, I can’t stand feeling this way. I must numb myself to get relief, the person has lost the ability to access the True Self’s hope, trust, and peace of mind.

As expressed by many, they are cut off from “the sunlight of the spirit,” or what we’ve been referring to as Loving Energy or True Self. Such barren loneliness is the hallmark of the disease of addiction.

Some erroneously believe that people choose to be addicted, and therefore, it’s a personal failure: If they only tried harder, they could overcome it. But this is far from the truth. The official medical opinion is that addictions are caused by a genetic predisposition and social factors. Most important, the disease is considered a brain disorder as serious as any neurological or mental illness.

Addictions include the use of alcohol, illegal drugs, food, and prescribed drugs (not just opiates, but any pill that immediately soothes our emotions). Gambling, shopping, and sex can also become addictive. Although the addicted person believes the habit helps them get through life’s challenges, it ends up hurting more than helping. In the U.S. alone, one in five deaths among twenty to forty-nine-year-olds were caused by alcohol consumption.

Sometimes I wonder if addicts aren’t all that different from anybody else, they are better at lying to themselves. —Taylor Jenkins Reid (Daisy Jones and The Six)

What does addiction look like? It’s a chronic, relapsing disorder characterized by the following:

  • Compulsive behavior or compulsively seeking the drug, alcohol, other substances, or behavior.
  • Preoccupation with the substance or behavior.
  • Continued use despite harmful consequences.
  • Gradual escalation until control is lost.
  • Long-lasting changes in the brain.

Please, don’t let denial get in the way. Take a long look in the mirror. You’re the only one who can do something about your problem. If you have two or more of the symptoms listed in this quiz, you probably need to see a doctor or therapist to begin recovering.

  1. There is a desire to cut down on use or  unsuccessful efforts to cut down.
  2. The substance or activity is used in larger amounts, or for a longer period of time than was intended.
  3. The pursuit of the substance or activity  consumes a significant amount of time.
  4. Th ere is a craving—a strong desire—to use  the substance or engage in the activity.
  5. U se of the substance or activity disrupts  obligations at work, school, or home.
  6. Use of the substance or activity continues despite the serious problems it causes.
  7. Participation in important social, work,  or recreational activities drops or stops.
  8. Use occurs in situations where it is  physically risky.
  9. U se continues despite knowing it is the source of escalating physical or psychological problems.
  10. Tolerance occurs, indicated either by a need for a markedly increased amount of the substance to achieve the desired effect or markedly diminished effect of the same amount of substance.
  11. Physiological withdrawal occurs, or a related substance is taken to block the discomfort.

You might ask, Why is this habit of mine a problem? Shouldn’t we all be able to feel better as quickly as possible? Not if we want to grow emotionally. Think of it this way: When we have unpleasant feelings, we have two choices— to numb them or to learn how to grow through them. The only way to awaken to your open-hearted True Self is to choose growth rather than denial.

When you do the work to recover your best self, you’ll have no need to medicate your unwanted feelings away, no matter what is going on in your life.

Unfortunately, in our society, we face the belief that we can’t have fun without alcohol or other drugs. It’s in our faces every minute of every day, right? Partying is the main “fun” activity in our culture. Watching sports? Have a beer! Going out with friends? Have a few drinks! Unfortunately, the initial pleasure of a few drinks can accelerate into multiple drinks and drugs with no stopping point until we pass out, get arrested, or ruin our health.

Toward the end of our years of drinking, drugging, gambling, or other habits, we’re often completely isolated, as our closed hearts have separated us from healthy, loving people. If we’re lucky, we get the gift of desperation and begin to seek a new way of living.

Because my experience is with Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), and because of the recent Stanford research study documenting its effectiveness, I focus here on how working the Twelve Steps opens our hearts to our True Selves.

If you’re concerned about the “spiritual” or religious language in the Steps, you may substitute Loving Energy or True Self for AA’s use of higher power or God. But remember, it’s your conception of a power greater than your troubles that will save your life. Don’t let mere terminology stop you.

Stay tuned for my next posts on how the Twelve Steps can work for you.


My newest book, Love More Now: Facing Life’s Challenges with an Open Heart is only $9.99 –available from Amazon HERE.

Get my award-winning book, 50 Ways to Worry Less Now, for only $6.00 at GigiLanger.com/buy (or get e-book at Amazon)

Thank you for POSTING your REVIEWs on Amazon.

Gigi Langer has been sober 38 years, and holds a PhD in Psychological Studies in Education from Stanford University. Her 50 Ways to Worry Less Now won an Indie Excellence Award in 2019. Gigi worked at Eastern Michigan University for 25 years, and now lives happily in Florida with her husband, Peter and her cat, Easter.

gigi langer worry less now

I CAN’T BELIEVE I LOVE IT SO MUCH!

Today I was moved to read through my latest book, “Love More Now: Facing Life’s Challenges with an Open Heart.” I had published it last year and had not really done much n terms of marketing it. So, there it sat–neglected!

But this morning I got a nudge (from my True Self) to pick it up and read every page. It took me about 4 hours (without doing any of the reflection questions), and I was amazed to discover how good it is. In fact, I can’t believe I wrote it!

Well, I didn’t really write it–not alone. Although the inspiration and ideas came from my heart and my higher power, I hired two fabulous editors to help make the book logical and interesting. They were expensive, but, looking back, I am so glad I spent those many dollars!

So, I thought I would begin sharing excerpts with you in my blog posts. Here’s a bit that shares how my life launched me on a quest for happiness and joy, in spite of my troubled past.

What is this True Self I’m referring to? It’s the divine you, deep inside, that guides you through the world with love and wisdom. Although this True Self has never left you, it may have been hidden by heart-closing fears, resentments, and self-criticism. Fortunately, you can remove these barriers by opening your heart to Loving Energy, thus revealing the power of your True Self.

It’s not as hard as you might think. In fact, you’ve already experienced many heart-opening moments of your own. It’s just a matter of noticing and cultivating receptivity to them. Here’s a story about one such moment in my life.

Many years ago, my third husband and I took a trip out west. Having realized too late that I had married the wrong man, I was miserable the entire time. My stomach hurt constantly, but when I went to the ER, they found nothing wrong. There was something wrong, alright, but not with my stomach. I just hadn’t been able to face it.

One afternoon late in the trip, we pulled up to a gift shop bordering Jenny Lake in the Grand Tetons. As soon as I entered the shop, I heard a bell-like voice filling the space with song. I just had to know who the singer was! After the shopkeeper told me about Kate Wolf, I immediately bought her tape. From that day on, Kate’s music would accompany me as I journeyed out of a hellish life into one of beauty and peace.

With the sweet music still in my head, I exited the shop, made my way to the shore, and found a rock to perch on. Sitting quietly, I watched as the sunlight grazed the water, reflecting back the white-tipped mountain peaks. The image held my gaze. For one long, beautiful moment, I forgot the turmoil of my strangled dreams and baffling, troubled life.

As I stared, the white peaks beckoned to me, seeming to offer another way of thinking, of looking at the world. New, surprising feelings came to me in a warm, kind voice: Believe! Trust! Your dreams are still possible. The past is over. Begin anew now.

Tears welled up in my eyes as I grappled with this unex- pected invitation. Taking a leap of faith I didn’t know I had, I believed. I trusted. Suddenly, my old feelings of shame, guilt, and hopelessness began to disintegrate.

After that day, I started receiving amazing gifts. First, I found sobriety and a Loving Energy greater than my fears. Then, a therapist helped me overcome the barriers that had been closing my heart: codependency, perfectionism, and people pleasing, to name a few. As I continued to grow, I found A Course in Miracles (ACIM), a spiritual text that teaches how to choose Love over fear in every circumstance.

My newest book, Love More Now: Facing Life’s Challenges with an Open Heart is only $9.99 –available from Amazon HERE or Barnes and Noble HERE.

Get my award-winning book, 50 Ways to Worry Less Now, for only $8.95 at GigiLanger.com/buy (e-book at Amazon)

Thank you for POSTING your REVIEWs on Amazon.

Gigi Langer has been sober 38 years, and holds a PhD in Psychological Studies in Education from Stanford University. Her 50 Ways to Worry Less Now won an Indie Excellence Award in 2019. Gigi worked at Eastern Michigan University for 25 years, and now lives happily in Florida with her husband, Peter and her cat, Easter.

gigi langer worry less now

SIX REASONS TO PRAY 🙏

Before I got sober, I didn’t pray, unless you count uttering in desperation, “Help me!”

Even though I didn’t know what it meant, I memorized the Lord’s prayer, just to fit in at my best friend’s church.


** I had no idea that connecting regularly with a Higher Power (HP) could solve my troubles and fears. **

My favorite author, Karen Casey, writes:
“(1) Prayer promises relief when we are anxious.
(2) Prayer connects us with our Higher Power when we feel isolated and full of fear.
(3) Prayer frees our minds from the obsession to plan other people’s lives.
(4) Prayer helps us take action when we feel compelled to change the circumstances of our lives.
(5) Prayer becomes a wonderful resource to draw on when living through our painful moments.
(6) And prayer gives us the willingness to accept God’s solution for every problem that plagues us.” (from “A Life of My Own”)


My friends say that praying is asking, and meditation is listening to the God of our understanding. So, I meditate to gain all the wise direction I can get! (I also attend meetings, do service work, and read inspiring spiritual texts to keep myself balanced and stress-free).

** HOW DO YOU MAINTAIN YOUR CONSCIOUS CONTACT WITH YOUR HP?

Gigi Langer Gigi Langer is a former teacher who quit drinking, only to find that her negative thinking, judging, and fears kept her in a cycle of worry, codependency, chronic pain, perfectionism, and overworking. Her award-winning book “50 Ways to Worry Less Now” (Amazon 4.8 stars) is available in paper, e-book, and audiobook. Honest, practical, simple. Relevant to anyone! GigiLanger.com/buy

How to Stay Serene with Your Family During The Holidays

worry less now gigi langerThose of us who grew up in dysfunctional homes often have an especially hard time staying serene during the holiday season. For example, long ago I saw a TV ad showing a smiling, happy family sharing Christmas dinner. I just blew up, “That’s not how it was at my home!” Later, I wrote this poem.

Possum Hill Christmas

 “I’m the youngest of four at this Christmas dinner. My feet dangle—clean socks, patent leather shoes. We sit, waiting for Dad to come home. Mom’s tense, fretting over peas, turkey, and gravy. Her mother is quiet, reserved, disapproving. Something unspoken thickens the air. But we pretend it isn’t there. Finally, he arrives, boots muddying the carpet, drunken roars clouding the air. I sink lower and lower into my chair. This isn’t happening. I’m not here.”

[Read how I healed the insecurities created by these and other events in Chapter 5 of 50 Ways to Worry Less Now.]

So many of us have harsh memories of the drunken bashes and ugly scenes birthed by copious amounts of holiday “spirits.” What an upside-down way of celebrating Christ’s birth! We knew we were supposed to be happy, but all too often we felt hurt and confused.

 Family Holidays: Tips To Stay Serene

Now, however, we’re no longer at the mercy of others. We can choose to be serene with our families by using the following tips.

  • Family Wounds. If you were harmed by your family members OR if you harmed the family you created, the damage may take years to heal. Instead of trying to fix that, we first heal ourselves and gain spiritual strength. If being with your own family might prove too distressing this year, feel free to set some boundaries.
  • Time with Family. Early on, I discovered (the hard way!) that, after about three days, I reverted to my old insecurities and unhappiness. So, I kept my family visits short. After a few years of growth, I was able to extend my time and stay serene.
  • Prayer and Meditation. To prepare for family gatherings, I often increase my prayer and meditation. If I start feeling upset or defensive during the visit, I use one of my favorite prayers : “Please help me to see this (situation, family member, etc.) differently.” It acknowledges that my perceptions are clouded by judgment or anger; and that a power greater than my self-centered fear can restore my serenity. I also use guided meditations to reprogram my tension or negativity, for example Kelly Hine’s bodyandsoulretreats.com and Kristin Neff’s SelfCompassion.org.

My Wish for You

I wish you the wisdom and power to put your own happiness and serenity ahead of the need to please others, especially family, during this holiday season. I send you lots of love and encouragement!

What are some of your favorite ways of staying serene during the holidays? Please share them in the comments section below.

Worry Less Now; Gigi Langer
From me to you!

Gigi Langer is a former “Queen of Worry” who  holds an MA in Psychology and PhD in Psychological Studies in Education from Stanford University. She is a popular speaker who has helped thousands of people improve their lives at home and work. Gigi hasn’t had a drug or drink for over 30 years, and lives happily in Michigan with her husband, Peter and her cat, Murphy.