All posts by Don Miller

About Don Miller

A lifetime Las Vegas resident and father of three grown children, Don spent 15 years as a licensed psychotherapist and speaker in private and hospital practices. Prior, he was part owner of an award-winning family advertising agency. Having fallen into addiction to crystal methamphetamine several years ago, losing everything to the drug, he has been clean since 9/4/11 and more sober about life with each passing day. The stories and content of this site are the accumulating epiphanies of his journey into sobriety, shared here to inspire others, especially those who remain embroiled in addictive battles of their own. LifeMeansSoMuch, the song title by Chris Rice (and you are highly encouraged to download it on ITunes or YouTube,) is the lyrical inspiration for the content of this site. Don is currently a life coach, author, speaker and manager at a non-profit, HopeLink of Southern Nevada.

On therapy…

There was a point in my 15 year career as a marriage and family therapist when I thought my shit didn’t stink.

My calendar was booked out for weeks, I had a hospital practice and influential private practice referral sources, and I made a lot of money.

I scored high on the licensure exam, my masters thesis was on record as an example for younger students on how it is done, and I was the unanimous staff vote for the top counseling student of the year.

I started on a fast track to success, or so it seemed back then.

It may be true that pride does, indeed, come before a fall.

Despite my subsequent long and painful fall from grace that followed due to my divorce and decade-long addiction to crystal meth which left me penniless, homeless and full of self-hatred and regret for all the relational fallout I had caused, I clawed my way back to sobriety.

Since then, I’ve found that the more life experience I consume, the more prideful and delusional I had been about how good a therapist I’d believed I once was.

It’s taken a lot more than just time and the spending of more years clean and sober than I’d spent in drug and sex addiction.

While I now work in an entirely different profession, once a therapist, always a therapist, the skills of which transcend most others and become most useful when parlayed into the vast self-discovery required in the process of becoming and staying sober.

But sobriety is more than getting and staying off drugs. That’s called being “clean.” Sobriety, once set in motion, is the never-ending process of self-discovery about what makes you tick and why you tick the way that you do.

Sobriety sees the world differently, and years of mental health training and practice help you learn disgusting things about yourself.

Once embraced, that never-ending process is what KEEPS you sober for years to come.

Thanks to sobriety, I’ve recently discovered that as a therapist, my shit stunk to high heaven.

These years, I read articles and listen to podcasts about mental and spiritual health, self-preservation, and insights from practicing professionals whose work is inspirational at the very least and at the most, motivational.

Therapy has come a long way since I was schooled and to a trained eye, the truly insightful and skilled practitioners are as obvious as diamonds in a coal mine.

If I can swing the expense and find a gem of a therapist, I plan to re-enter the field as a client with so much more to learn about myself.

Bad therapy can sour the experience and expense of counseling, but good therapy conducted by a skilled practitioner is worth every session.

In retrospect, I wasn’t such a bad therapist. I was pretty damn good compared to some of my graduate classmates who eventually hung their shingles on counseling center doors around town to begin their careers.

I’d seen them work first-hand in our training and judgingly wondered how they might ever become gainfully employed in this profession.

But from my view these days, I see that poor practice standards aren’t tolerated either in school or by clients anymore and therapeutic skills and interventions are much improved perhaps because more therapists themselves have sought therapy and continue unabated on a course of self discovery.And perhaps best of all, they had accepted early on that their shit stinks just as bad as everyone else’s.

If you can, seek out a good therapist. Ask which books they’ve read, what continuing education courses they have attended, what spiritual orientation they practice. Ask them if they are good therapists and how they arrived at that conclusion. Ask them what they believe they do best in their practice and what they don’t treat in their practice and why.

You may just discover the right fit with someone able to help you discover how to fish yourself out of a toilet of misbeliefs and set you on a better path.

And perhaps ours will cross in the process on our journeys.

Gratitude & agency.

Gratitude and agency are key.

Gratitude is the appreciation of the good things in our lives, and agency is the belief that we have the power to make choices and control our own destinies. Both gratitude and agency are essential for success and well-being.

Gratitude can help us to:

Be more positive and engaged in our work.
Build stronger relationships with everyone around us.
Be more resilient in the face of challenges.
Experience greater job and life satisfaction.

Agency helps us to:

Be more proactive and take ownership of our careers.
Set and achieve goals.
Develop new skills and knowledge.
Make a positive impact on our organizations and communities.

Civil war.

Be very careful, then how you live—not as unwise but as wise—making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil.
‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭5‬:‭15‬-‭16‬ ‭NIV‬‬

More and more each day, I’m not only convinced the days are evil, but they’re getting moreso by the hour.

As I read and study, I find little hope that our lives as we know them will be as easy to navigate as they are now despite how difficult they might now seem.

War is ugly.

The changes and sacrifices we will need to make to fight and survive are for most, unimaginable. But they are coming.

Being wise and making the most of today’s opportunities constitute our entire action plan if we hope to endure the war.

We know how it ends, and though comforting, between now and then, comfort will be hard to find.

Be careful, be wise, be prepared and make the most of every opportunity.

War is coming and it’s ugly.

Tantrums.

And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit.
‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭2‬:‭22‬ ‭NIV‬‬
until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.”
‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭4‬:‭13‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Like growth from newborn to mature adult, the human path is predetermined, yet we throw tantrums at each new stage refusing to fully grow up into it as if it was even an option.

The pathway of growth exists for two reasons:

  1. God’s best plan for us is to build resilience through maturity for the life ahead of us, and
  2. at some point in our life, others with vision will be spending their days on the big picture and their purpose in it with little time or tolerance for those who will not.

Then we will no longer be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of people in their deceitful scheming.”
‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭4‬:‭14‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Strong, mature believers make the best warriors against the insidious evils of this world that would otherwise consume all the babies and toddlers alive.

Ain’t nobody got time for dat.

Growing up isn’t optional.

If you’re not compelled by the kingdom vision, you’re destined to become a burden for others who expected more of you, and rightfully so.

Grow up.

It’s not optional.

Where the heart is.

Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.
‭‭John‬ ‭15‬:‭13‬ ‭NIV‬‬

I think I’ve finally arrived at a place which regards my time and brief existence on this big blue ball more properly.

‘Course, I don’t relish the idea of being tested on it, I believe I could and would sacrifice my life for a friend or a worthy cause.

My turning point was much like dialing the finely tuned frequency on a radio channel I’ve listened to through static of the world much too long but is now gone.

I can see clearly now.

If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own.
John 15:18 NIV

In a kinder and gentler world, I might be a lot less sacrificially-minded, but recent events have shifted my perspective.

Attempts to silence my worldview have only made me more courageous and resilient.

As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world.
That is why the world hates you.
‭‭John‬ ‭15‬:‭19‬ ‭NIV‬‬

To be perfectly honest, I’ve never felt more chosen, esteemed, nor set apart from it than where I am right now.

I’m convinced that as our courage grows, this world will grow to hate us even more than it already does.

This world is not our home.


Home’s not where the hate is,

it’s where the heart is.

The Big Picture.

Whoever sows to please their flesh, from the flesh will reap destruction; whoever sows to please the Spirit, from the Spirit will reap eternal life.
‭‭Galatians‬ ‭6‬:‭8‬ ‭NIV‬‬

The big picture.

It’s easy to lose sight of it.

We are a myopic people whose vision is so nearsighted, focused so much on our immediate wants and indulgences of the day, that we often overlook our bigger purpose of why we’re actually here among another 8 billion souls.

For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
‭‭Ephesians‬ ‭2‬:‭10‬ ‭NIV‬‬

What are you sowing? Where are you applying your gifts for the unique handiworks of God? On what do you waste your time, energy and resources for indulgences and selfish pursuits?

The bigger picture awaits your attention. And time is quickly passing.

Grasp it and your purpose in it. Focus your everything on it while we still have time.

The 2nd of October.

My dad had been home in a hospice hospital bed for 17 days.

He hadn’t eaten in 4 and was weaker each day.

But even though he’d awaken for only 30 minutes a day, 5 minutes at a time, he still managed to make the family laugh.

When he asked mom if he was ever going to get better, she told him he just needs to go meet Jesus, to which he replied, “But I already know him.”

He passed two weeks later.

Though nobody laughed that October 2nd, he bequeathed us a giant sense of humor and we all still continue spending it like there’s no tomorrow.

Burdens and loads.

Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way you will fulfill the law of Christ.

‭‭Galatians‬ ‭6‬:‭2‬ ‭NIV‬‬

As a psychotherapist for 15 years, I learned early on the difference between carrying the burdens of others and letting them carry their own loads (Gal 5)

Buildings have walls that carry some weight of the roof but aren’t critical to the task as are load-bearing walls, without which, the structure would collapse.

Likewise, helping someone through a crisis eases their burden when we help bear some of their weight but acknowledge the load-bearing is theirs alone to carry. 

People would ask me how I could hear such tragic stories in my therapy office all day and still sleep at night. 

This burdens vs loads analogy was key to maintaining my own mental health while still being a helper to my patients. 

If you find yourself all consumed when helping a friend through their troubles, knowing which of their weight-bearing walls are within your purview and capacity to carry and which are not might make all the difference for you to continue being an effective helper for someone who deserves a break. 

Lies.

People are zealous to win you over, but for no good. What they want is to alienate you from us, so that you may have a zeal for them.

‭‭Galatians‬ ‭4‬:‭17‬ ‭NIV‬‬

Belief and faith central to Christianity, it comes as no surprise that strategies formed against us are to obscure truth, to plant seeds of doubt, and to take what is clearly evident and gaslight us to the contrary. 

It’s actually a brilliant strategy, for to sow such confusion then reinforce it through media channels, and authorities over us, their win is staged to convert what was once truth to a lie. 

“Conspiracy theories” and unanswered questions which might otherwise lead to rediscovery of those truths become self-refuting and ridiculous. 

To avoid such ridicule, the masses are lulled into consent to believe against what they’d once considered a much better judgment. 

Winning you over, alienating you, and converting your zeal away from Christ to another gospel is the dastardly insidious plan in action. 

“Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain, the almighty Wizard of Oz has spoken!”

Hold fast to Truth revealed by the One who is truly the Almighty.

The fight for your confidence has only begun.

Don’t be the victim of:

“They exchanged the truth about God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator—who is forever praised

Romans 1:25

That one.

Each of us has that one teacher who showed us the valuable difference between just going to school and loving the idea of education itself.

That one who taught us excellence over mediocrity, passion over passivity and the fine art of learning how to learn for ourselves instead of regurgitating another someone’s thoughts and convictions.

One who soothed our painful rejections at the hands of bullies, listened after hours to our deepest revelations, and was in the front row of every event to cheer us on to victory.

One who after our school days were over when life learning was just beginning, kept in touch with us and sent invitations to their own family dinners as if you always belonged at their table and insisted you call them by their first name as awkward as it seemed.

Much older now with faded memories and my own eternity in sight by pure serendipity, mine came back into my life once again, and again I was that student thankful for so many differences she made in my life that she will never fully understand but for which she is fully responsible.

And now the most sincere words I can muster are thank you, Mrs. Nimmo. May God give you the rest you have earned.