What if alcohol-free living had less to do with willpower — and more to do with training?
In this episode of The Sober Edge Podcast, Teri Patterson explores what Olympic athletes can teach us about building a sustainable, alcohol-free life. As the Winter Olympics unfold, Teri reflects on the discipline, repetition, recovery, and nervous system regulation that elite athletes rely on — and how those same principles apply to lasting change without alcohol.
Rather than focusing on “trying harder,” this conversation reframes alcohol-free living as conditioning the brain and nervous system for a new baseline — one rooted in safety, clarity, and self-trust.
In this episode, we explore:
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Why identity comes before behavior in lasting change
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How discipline creates freedom (and calms the nervous system)
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The role of repetition in rewiring the alcohol-conditioned brain
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Why discomfort is part of the training — not a sign you’re failing
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How alcohol masquerades as recovery (and what real recovery looks like)
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Why environment design matters more than willpower
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The neuroscience of co-regulation, coaching, and community
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What delayed gratification teaches us about playing the long game
This episode is an invitation to treat your body and brain like an elite instrument — and to recognize that living alcohol-free isn’t about deprivation, but about becoming who you’re meant to be.
🎧 Listen in and discover how to train — not try — your way into an alcohol-free life.










