What is a soberthday and how do you celebrate it? What are sober anniversaries?

How do people honor their sober anniversary? (Photo: Getty, Illustration by Nathalie Cruz)

How can people celebrate their soberanniversaries? (Photo by Getty, Illustration by Nathalie Cruz)

On Nov. 30, Tawny LaraAuthor of the upcoming Dry Humping: A Guide to Booze-Free Sex, Dating, & Relationships Co-host the podcast Recovery Rocks, put out a question Followers on Twitter

“Seven years sober today,” she declared alongside a smiling photo of herself. “How should I celebrate my Soberthday?!”

Lara is one of many sober people who chose to mark the day that they quit drinking. Lara tells Yahoo Life that the day means plenty of “reflection” on all she has accomplished since she quit drinking, both ‘emotionally and professionally” — but also, a fun celebration, which can include a “birthday-style party for myself with friends.”

“I know some folks keep their Soberthday quiet. My partner’s favorite way to ‘celebrate’ his Soberthday is not to drink, which is great, too! I’m super dramatic and love any reason to throw a party, wear lots of glitter and acknowledge milestones like living without alcohol for another year — especially during tough years like 2016 and 2020,” she explains.

Dr. Kenneth Stoller, director of the Johns Hopkins Broadway Center for Addiction, says celebrating one’s “soberthday” can be important for recovery.

‘Recovery is hard work, and does not always provide tangible rewards in the short term,” he explains. “Since recovery involves lots of time and hard work, much of which does not bring immediate pleasure or joy, as alcohol or drugs may have done in the past, it is important to incorporate alternative means of enjoyment and diversional activities — including recognizing one’s accomplishments in memorable, joyful and positive ways. Doing so makes ongoing maintenance of recovery something that is attractive, and diminishes the glorification of past drug and alcohol use.”

For author and photographer Beth Leipholtz, the day isn’t marked by a formal party, but by reflection. She used to go back to the last place she drank — her college campus — to reflect, but stopped when she moved away.

“I make sure to take time that day to consider how far I’ve come,” she says. “Often this means going to a local park and taking a walk and just letting my brain wander. Sometimes my family will celebrate or surprise me.”

Though the day has fallen more into the “background” of her life as the years have passed, it’s also one that brings mixed emotions.

“I am glad that I’m not living the way I was in May of 2013,” she notes. “This May will be 10 years for me, which is obviously a big milestone. It’s something I haven’t really thought about, but I would love to acknowledge it in some way.

Nancy Carr, blogger Last Call, calls her sober anniversary the “most important thing” to her, and says that her friends throw her a party every five years of sobriety. She also enjoys a dinner with Alcoholics Anonymous friends each year. Though the date is “celebratory,” she adds that “it does evoke the memory of me taking my last drink, which was somber to me.”

Dr. Stoller adds that it may be extra helpful to celebrate with others who are in recovery, explaining, “Celebrating in ways that do not involve alcohol or other drugs may be an achievement that the recovering person has little experience with. It might be unfamiliar territory. As such, celebrating with other people in recovery, who are more practiced in ways to celebrate that are least likely to result in lapse to drug use, may be useful.”

For Lara, she’s already looking forward to a soberthday that’s a few years away, as it marks an official decade of sobriety.

“I’ll probably do something big for 10 years,” she says. “Who knows what that will look like, though.”

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