Stop Fighting Recovery: Daryl Dittmer’s Story
What happens when you stop fighting life?
Not surrender in the sense of quitting.
Surrender in the sense of finally telling the truth.
That was the turning point for author, entrepreneur, and recovery advocate Daryl Dittmer, guest on Episode 59 of UNMASKED with Wesley Farnsworth.
Daryl’s story is not only about addiction recovery. It is about identity, responsibility, emotional sobriety, faith, and rebuilding life from the inside out.
Listen here:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/show/3eHboKDDsxejrxdbH9cRfS?si=5fdb90f80c1e4062
Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/unmasked-with-wesley-farnsworth/id1851549420
YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/@Unmasked-WF-Podcast
Addiction Was Only the Beginning
Daryl grew up in a blue-collar Midwestern family shaped by hard work, discipline, and responsibility. His father was a mechanic and Korean War veteran. Work ethic was expected. College was not assumed.
At thirteen he took his first drink.
He loved it immediately.
That first experience turned into escalating substance abuse, harder drugs, deception, crime, and eventually a life centered around addiction.
But beneath the addiction was another struggle.
Internal conflict.
He described wanting to be one person while becoming someone completely different.
That tension slowly tore him apart.
The Intervention That Changed Everything
At eighteen, Daryl’s parents gave him a choice:
Get help.
Or leave.
He entered treatment.
Thirty days.
Detox.
Counseling.
Brutal honesty.
He described one terrifying detox experience where he felt physically and spiritually pulled downward — a moment that still stays with him decades later.
Recovery began there.
But sobriety was only step one.
Recovery Means Change
Daryl joined Alcoholics Anonymous and immersed himself in the 12 Steps.
Meeting after meeting.
Mentorship.
Accountability.
Community.
His message was clear:
You cannot remove addiction and keep everything else the same.
Remove the substance without changing yourself and the pain remains.
He compared recovery to a snake shedding old skin.
The old identity has to come off.
The dishonesty.
The dysfunction.
The avoidance.
The false coping.
Without change there is no forward movement.
Emotional Sobriety Matters
One of the strongest parts of the conversation centered around emotional sobriety.
Daryl explained that abstinence alone is not enough.
Recovery also means:
peace
calm
self-awareness
reasonable emotional responses
internal stability
He described success differently now.
Not money.
Not achievement.
Success is waking up with a smile.
That shift required:
taking care of body
mind
heart
soul
It required emotional sobriety.
Stop Fighting Yourself
Daryl’s books revolve around one phrase:
“When you stop fighting, the fighting stops.”
For years he thought he was fighting life.
Parents.
Expectations.
Circumstances.
Eventually he realized the real battle was himself.
That insight shaped both books:
When I Stopped Fighting
When You Stop Fighting
His message is direct:
Recovery begins when the war inside ends.
Mentorship Changes Recovery
Another major theme was mentorship.
Daryl spoke about his mentor Bud — a man who modeled peace and emotional sobriety during early recovery.
His advice:
Find someone older.
Find someone experienced.
Find someone whose life reflects who you want to become.
Recovery rarely happens alone.
Community matters.
Mentorship matters.
People matter.
The Lesson From Jimmy
The episode ended with a story about a man named Jimmy.
Forty years sober.
Quiet.
Humble.
Always serving coffee at meetings.
Jimmy repeatedly said:
“Stay small.”
Not weak.
Not invisible.
Teachable.
Humble.
Open.
That became Daryl’s closing encouragement:
Stay teachable.
Stay humble.
Keep learning.
Because healing grows where pride stops fighting.
Guest Website:
More from Wesley:

