The Rebuild Blog
I did not build this system because life was going well. I built it because mine was falling apart. Alcohol was a big part of that collapse.
For a long time, I told myself I did not really have a drinking problem. I called it stress. Long shifts. Anxiety. Burnout. Lack of focus. Anything but what it actually was. The truth was a lot more simple than the excuses. I was drinking every night to avoid myself. From the outside, I looked functional enough. I went to work. I handled responsibilities. I was not the kind of drunk people picture in movies. I was not loud or violent. I was not smashing things or disappearing for days. However, I was far from fully present.
I’d be mildly hungover most mornings, distracted most evenings, and mentally counting down the hours until I could drink again. I told myself I was still holding life together, but really I was doing the minimum needed to keep people from seeing how bad it had become. The people closest to me were living with a version of me that was always a little absent, numb, and too often looking at my phone instead of paying attention to the people I loved. Eventually, I could not keep pretending.
While I was working at Teck in Fording River, I finally admitted out loud that I had a drinking problem. I asked for help. I got sent home, and not long after that, I went to rehab. That should have been the moment everything turned around but it certainly was not. While I was there, my wife left me in a “trial separation” and the hard truth is, I understand why.
By the time I looked for help, the damage had already been done. Too many promises had been broken. Too many chances had already been used up. I wanted recovery to fix everything at once, but life does not work that way. Sometimes you finally do the right thing after doing the wrong thing for too long. Help can come in time to save your life, but not in time to save everything you hoped to keep. Looking back on it, that was one of the hardest lessons I have ever had to face.
When I came home, I was left sitting with the full weight of what my choices had cost me. My marriage was over. My mind was chaos. I could not sleep properly. I could barely eat. For the first time in my life, I understood how fragile a person can feel when they no longer trust themselves. That was the real beginning.
It wasn’t because everything got better. I had just finally run out of the energy to keep lying to myself and avoiding everything I needed to face.
What I slowly started to understand was that alcohol was not the whole issue, not even close. It was simply the method I used to shut everything down. The deeper problem was avoidance. I avoided hard conversations, responsibility, discomfort, and the feeling I was failing. Drinking was how I escaped all of it for a few hours at a time, until the escape itself became the thing destroying my life.
So recovery, for me, could not just mean quitting alcohol. It had to mean rebuilding the man underneath it. I have worked in construction for most of my life, and that is where the idea for four pillars came from. I did not sit down one day and invent some polished self improvement system. These pillars were built slowly, through pain, reflection, relapse, failure, effort, and honesty. They came from trying to figure out what kind of structure a person actually needs if he wants to stop collapsing every time life gets hard.
They also did not arrive in a perfectly neat order. Some of what I understand now about the later pillars helped me improve what I thought I already knew about the earlier ones. I have organized this blog in a cleaner order than life actually happened, because it makes the system easier to explain and follow. But the system itself was built over time, through real events, mistakes, and lessons that did not always come in sequence.
For me, those four pillars became:
Clarity - seeing yourself honestly and seeing your life as it is
Discipline - doing what needs to be done whether you feel like it or not
Equanimity - learning to stay steadier when life hits hard
Stalwartness - becoming someone dependable, someone who can carry weight without folding
Those pillars did not rise on their own. They had to be built on life events and experiences. That is where the framework came in. I think of it like rebar in concrete. It is not always visible, but it gives the whole structure strength. Underneath the pillars are the traits and practices I found helped strengthen them. Other things can apply too, but these became my base framework:
Integrity - being honest with yourself first, because nothing solid can be built on lies
Balance - learning not to live at the extremes and building a steadier way to move through life
Resilience - getting back up after setbacks instead of using them as excuses to quit
Compassion - treating yourself and others with enough understanding that growth can actually happen
Purpose - having a reason to keep going when motivation disappears
Mindfulness - paying attention to your thoughts, habits, reactions, and patterns so you can live in the present instead of on autopilot
Gratitude - recognizing what is still good, still possible, and still worth protecting
Those are the things that help a person build a foundation instead of just making promises. They hold when motivation disappears. Some of them were already forming in my life before I had words for them. Others had to be learned the hard way.
This website is where I am starting to lay that out in the open. It’s not because I think I have everything figured out. I definitely do not. It’s also not because I think my current version is the best version of me. That changes as life moves on.
I am sharing it because this framework helped me start improving my life when willpower alone clearly was not enough. It helped me begin building something stronger than mood or motivation, and stronger than the version of me that kept reaching for escape.
This blog will begin with the first pillar, Clarity, and how the seven framework items help build it. Next it will be Discipline, then Equanimity, and finally Stalwartness, or how to maintain the system you built. I hope that this blog can help you.
I will be using my own examples, how I built them, where I got them wrong, and what started helping me get them right. But I also know not everyone thinks, acts, or struggles the way I did. Part of this will be offering ideas people can adapt in ways that actually fit their own lives.
That is the hope behind all of this. I want these ideas to inspire people who are fighting addiction, rebuilding after failure or loss, trying to strengthen their character, or simply looking for a better way to live.
That is what Rocky Mountain Rhythm is really about. It is not about pretending to be perfect, sounding wise after the fact, or building a brand around pain.
It is about building a life that holds. I also hope this grows into more than a blog. I hope the website and clothing line do well enough that one day I can work from home, be closer to my son, and put my energy into building something meaningful full time.
The long term goal is even bigger than that. I would love to help build a rehab facility in Canada one day. Somethingp rooted in real support, honesty, and recovery. Something that meets people where they are.
This first post is the starting point. The next ones will go deeper into how the framework was built and how the first pillar, Clarity, started to change everything for me.
That’s because before I could become stronger, steadier, or more dependable, I had to finally see clearly what I was doing, what it was costing me, and who I was becoming if I kept going.
That is where the rebuild started.
Music built from lived experience and written ideas, then performed through AI using Suno and guided instructions.