Cowpuncher Life Recovery

Cowpuncher Life Recovery we admitted we were powerless over our problems and our lives have become unmanageable

The most intense photo about addiction I've ever seen💔
03/24/2026

The most intense photo about addiction I've ever seen💔

03/24/2026

So, you finished rehab. You’re sober now. Living in a Sober Living house. Waking up early to catch the bus to a job that barely pays the bills. You’re splitting a fridge with three other addicts, listening to them fight over food or relapse excuses, trying to stay focused on your own lane — your own recovery.
You’re hitting your meetings. Three a DAY. You’re sitting in folding chairs under fluorescent lights, listening to other people’s pain, trying to believe that maybe… just maybe… one day, yours will turn into purpose too.

And I know there are nights when it doesn’t feel worth it. When you’re sitting on the edge of your bed staring at the same four walls, thinking, Is this really what I got sober for? When the silence gets so loud it starts screaming your name. When giving up feels easier than fighting through another day.

But let me tell you something — it takes a rare kind of strength to do what you’re doing.

Because anybody can self-destruct. Anybody can run. Anybody can hide behind a bottle, a pill, or a pipe. But it takes a fighter to start from scratch and rebuild their life one day at a time.

You’re not weak because it’s hard. You’re not broken because it hurts. You’re becoming. You’re laying the bricks for a life that’s going to mean something.

That bus you’re riding to that minimum wage job? That’s not humiliation — that’s humility. That’s faith in motion. Every mile is proof that you’re not who you used to be.

That sober house that smells like burnt ramen and resentment? That’s your launching pad. That’s where your comeback story is being written.

And those meetings you drag yourself to? Those are your classrooms — where pain turns into wisdom, and strangers turn into family.

Listen to me — what God is building in you right now, in this season that feels small and insignificant, is going to blow your mind when it unfolds. You’re not just surviving this chapter — you’re being prepared for the next one.

You might not see it yet, but you’re a walking miracle in progress. A warrior in transition. A Rockstar in recovery.

So don’t quit now. Not when you’ve already made it this far. The world hasn’t even seen what you’re capable of yet.

I see you.

I’m proud of you.

And I promise you — if you just keep going, it gets better.

03/21/2026
Yesterday a woman walked in at 4 PM. No appointment. Asked if I could squeeze her in.“What do you want?” I asked.She sho...
03/17/2026

Yesterday a woman walked in at 4 PM. No appointment. Asked if I could squeeze her in.
“What do you want?” I asked.
She showed me a photo on her phone. Numbers. Just numbers.
“392. On my wrist. Simple. Black. Can you do it now?”
I looked at her. She’d been crying. Eyes red. Hands shaking.
“Yeah, I can do it. But can I ask what 392 means?”
She sat down in my chair. Took a breath.
“It’s the number of days my daughter stayed clean before she overdosed. I found her yesterday. I want to remember she tried. That 392 days mattered.”
I didn’t know what to say. Just nodded. Started setting up.
She kept talking. Needed to talk.
“Everyone’s going to say she relapsed. That she failed. That addicts always relapse. But they won’t say she was sober for 392 days. That she went to meetings. Got a job. Started painting again. That she was my daughter again for 392 days. They’ll remember one day. The last day. But I’m going to remember 392.”
Her voice broke.
“This tattoo is proof those days existed. That she fought. That she almost made it.”
I finished the tattoo. Simple numbers. 392. On her wrist. Where she could see it every day.
She paid. Tipped way too much. Started to leave. Then turned back.
“Can I ask you something weird?”
“Anything,” I said.
“Can you keep that stencil? The 392? And if anyone ever comes in here struggling with addiction. Or losing someone to addiction. Can you offer to do this tattoo for free? Any number. However many days their person stayed clean. 10 days. 100 days. 1 day. I don’t care. Just so they know those days counted.”
She left before I could answer.
I kept the 392 stencil. Put it in a frame behind my counter. Wrote under it:
“Days of sobriety tattoos — always free. Any number. Because every day counts.”
I didn’t think anyone would take me up on it.
Three days later, a man came in. Saw the sign. Started crying.
“Can you do 1,279?”
“Absolutely. Who’s it for?”
“My brother. He was sober 1,279 days. Died in a car accident last week. Sober driver hit by a drunk driver. The irony is killing me. He fought so hard. And some stranger took him out.”
I did the tattoo for free. He hugged me for five minutes.
Word spread.
I’ve done 23 sobriety number tattoos in three weeks. Free. Every single one. 47 days. 6 days. 1,823 days. 2 days. One woman got “14 hours” tattooed.
“My son stayed clean for 14 hours before he relapsed and died. Everyone says 14 hours doesn’t count. But it does. He tried. For 14 hours he tried.”
I tattooed 14 hours on her shoulder. She sobbed the entire time.
When I finished, she looked at it and whispered, “Now everyone will know he tried.”
Yesterday someone came in and asked for “0 days.”
I was confused. “Zero?”
He nodded.
“My daughter never got clean. She tried to quit so many times. Went to rehab four times. But never made it past a few hours before using again. She died at 23. Everyone says she didn’t try. But she did. She tried so hard. Zero days sober but a million attempts. Can you tattoo 0 with a little infinity symbol?”
Because her attempts were infinite even if her days weren’t.
I cried while doing that tattoo. Zero with an infinity symbol. For a girl who never stopped trying even though she never succeeded.
A teenager came in two days ago. Seventeen years old. With his dad.
“Can you do 91 days? For me. I’m 91 days sober. I want to remember.”
I looked at his dad. Dad nodded.
“He asked for this. I’m proud of him.”
I did the tattoo. 91 on his forearm. When I finished, the kid stared at it.
“Now when I want to use, I’ll see this. I’ll remember I made it to 91. I can make it to 92.”
His dad paid. Tipped $200.
“You’re saving lives with ink,” he said. “Keep doing this.”
The kid comes back every 30 days. I add a small tally mark next to his 91. He’s up to 151 days now. Five tally marks. He’s going to make it.
The original woman came back yesterday. The 392 tattoo.
“I wanted to show you something,” she said.
She pulled up her sleeve. Another number.
“1.”
Just the number 1.
“What’s that for?” I asked.
She smiled through tears.
“One year since my daughter died. One year I’ve survived without her. Someone told me I should get a tattoo for my own sobriety. From grief. From giving up. I’ve been sober from ending my own life for one year. Because of this.”
She pointed to 392.
“Every time I wanted to give up, I looked at this. If she could fight for 392 days, I could fight for one more. So I’m marking my days now too. One year. 365 days of choosing to stay.”
I have a wall now. Photos of every sobriety number tattoo I’ve done. 47 tattoos in two months. Numbers ranging from 14 hours to 6,247 days.
Every single one free.
Every single one a story of someone who tried. Who fought. Who stayed clean for as long as they could. Some made it. Some didn’t.
But every number matters.
Because addiction isn’t about the day someone relapses. It’s about all the days they didn’t.
And those days deserve to be remembered. Marked. Honored.
I started this because a grieving mother asked me to remember 392 days. Now I’m remembering hundreds of days. Thousands of days. Marking them in ink on the skin of people who refuse to forget.
Every number tells me the same thing:
Trying counts. Fighting counts. Even if you lose, the fight counted.
I’m a tattoo artist. But these aren’t just tattoos. They’re monuments. Proof that someone tried. And in a world that only remembers the last day, I’m making sure we remember all the days before it.

SHEEP VS. GOATS by Sylvester D. Mitchell🐑🐐The sheep and the goat can look similar from a distance, but Heaven never conf...
03/01/2026

SHEEP VS. GOATS by Sylvester D. Mitchell🐑🐐

The sheep and the goat can look similar from a distance, but Heaven never confuses the two. You can separate them by what’s on them:

•Wool vs. coarse hair.
•Submission vs. stubbornness.
•Flock vs. isolation.

Sheep stay in the flock.
Goats wander.
Sheep follow the shepherd.
Goats test the fence.

But the real difference isn’t what’s on them…
It’s in the eyes.

A sheep’s vision is narrower than a goat’s. The goat can scan more territory. The rebellious one often “sees” more. They notice flaws. They detect inconsistencies. They spot weaknesses in leadership quickly. Yes… goats see better.

But watch this.
The sheep has tear ducts.
The goat does not.
That means the sheep can see the struggle of the shepherd and cry. The sheep can intercede. The sheep can allow tears to cleanse its vision. Pain doesn’t distort a sheep it purifies it.

The goat sees broadly but cannot weep. It sees error but cannot cover it. It observes failure but does not pray through it.

The goat has sight…
The sheep has vision.
Sight is what has been.
Vision is where God is going.
A goat will freeze leadership in its worst moment.
A sheep will pray leadership into its next season.

When prophecy comes from sight alone, it becomes criticism.
When prophecy comes from vision, it becomes intercession.
Goats live from the pain of their hurt.
Sheep live from the purity of their tears.

And when prophecy is rooted in hurt, it becomes poisonous. It carries discord. It spreads infection in the flock. It sounds spiritual, but it’s fueled by offense.
God did not call us goats.
He called us sheep.
There is a reason Jesus is the Shepherd.

Don’t choose the wide field of rebellion just because you can “see” more. Choose the narrow path of vision. Choose tears over tension. Choose covering over gossip. Choose intercession over isolation.

Yes, goats may see more terrain…
But sheep see the heart of the Shepherd.
And that is the only vision that sustains destiny.

Address

2600 Highway 64
Wartrace, TN
37183

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Cowpuncher Life Recovery posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Place Of Worship

Send a message to Cowpuncher Life Recovery:

Share