On June 6, 2009, I walked into the office of Virginia Suaro, LCSW for my last, first counseling appointment in a string of first counseling appointments. My parents had tried everything. I was listless. I cared about my journey verbally, but not enough on any level to do anything about it. Not enough to get out of my own way.
Virginia was a lovely woman with a reassuring voice. She gave me permission, from the outset, to be honest without judgement. Rather than correct my actions, she’d probe. As a surgeon under drastic illumination, slicing through layers of outer shell, carefully displacing tissue and organs to reveal the heart of the matter, Virginia had a knack for cataloging surficial issues while grazing cautiously past them on the way to where my soul had fermented.
In late April of 2009 my grandfather had passed away. He was, and is, my north star. More than eight years removed, some of it has become lore more than fact, but the light shines just as bright no matter the integrity of the backstory. I had expressed disappointment in myself to my parents. That I had never reached a point during my grandfather’s life where I could point to winning battles the way he did. That I’d let myself become overwhelmed with the work required to climb the mountain. That in some way I was leaning away from him, even when I said I was leaning in.
It may not have been the first or the second session; it was probably the third or the fourth when, during the course of conversation, Virginia used a slightly different inflection in her voice and whittled down from her normally descriptive language to the bare, “You know, Will, it might be a good idea for you to consider quitting drinking.” I can still hear the words echo in my mind. I left that meeting pursuing those words in my soul.
Probably about a month later, on August 6th, I met up with my friend, Juan, at work and waited for him to get off of work. I had a few drinks and we were set to go out for a brief period. My parents were out of town and my girlfriend was coming over. I told her to hang out and I’d be there by 10:30. That quote turned to midnight, and then before I knew it, I was driven home at 2:30 by a friend, with a series of others’ in tow. It had been a festive evening. I spent way too much at the bar and was in a great mood. I went upstairs to my room to wake my girlfriend. It was time to keep the party going.
I turned the dimmer up slightly and WHAM! in a flash I felt my grandfather, the love I had for the woman who I desperately wanted to one day be my wife, and the words of Virginia echo through the house. Not my mind – these words were real. My epiphany showed me the times and ways I would push away everyone I ever loved because of my inability to curtail my use of alcohol. It showed me the life I’d lead if I were to continue to aimlessly meander from goal to goal, never sticking with anything for long enough to have anything to show for it. It showed me the inability I’d have, forever, to make up for having missed the chance to show my grandfather that I was made of the same stuff he was. I walked out the door and told my friends they had to leave.
In tears, I moved back into my room and toward the bed. I shook my girlfriend awake slowly. Sobbing, I told her I was sorry for pushing her away, that I did not want her to leave; I wanted to stop drinking. I was going to stop. I’d had my last drink. August 7th we woke up and she asked me if I’d remembered what I’d said. I’ll never forget what I said.
And so here I am, 100 months to the day, not another grain of hops or barley, set for fermentation, ingested. I first realized when 100 months would occur on my 8th Anniversary of sobriety. I did the tabulation in months, in days. I realized the next round number in days, 3,000, closely coincided with the next round number in months, 100. I don’t know where 3,000 days is on the calendar for me. I stopped counting days around the time I hit six months. I mostly just count years now. 100 months just sounds good to me. Daily, I am reminded of the miracle by which my epiphany blessed me. I have the love of my girlfriend, now my wife. Together, we’ve partaken in God’s creation together, ushering in three beautiful lives. We guide them daily. And we guide them so that they can get to a point where they can, too, realize that they are made of the same iron that William Cody O’Connor, Sr. was – that his legacy will become theirs. I am reminded of my miracle by the measurement I take of myself. Though it be a fraction of where I want to be, I am on the path.
I still set goals. I don’t always hit them. None of us do. Goals aren’t meant to be a measurement of perfection. They’re meant to be a knot in the line in the measurement of happiness. Those goals I fail to hit are usually casualties of other, more basic requirements expanding in the short-term. I can be honest with myself about that now. Alcohol used to be my cloak from honesty. Honesty hurt in the face of failure. Now I realized that failure is most permanent when we refuse to allow ourselves the room for failure. Sobriety has given me that strength. I have had to exercise that muscle, and I still fail in that. I resume my heading as fast as I am able, adjusting goals to reflect what I know to be the newly revealed obstacles in my path.
My support network has been critical along my journey through sobriety. It is not always easy to discard the “Why can’t I do that,” questions that swirl through my head at holiday gatherings or trips with the boys.
And yet here I am, 100 months in, buoyed by the fiber of my forefathers, the love of my wife, and the gentle, yet firm words of a tactical surgeon of the mind and heart. God grant me the serenity to continue.
Yours in the Pursuit of Happiness,
Will O’Connor
Thursday: We set out from Midlothian, Virginia to Manassas, Virginia just after lunch. A two-hour jaunt north and west, we settled on the urban setting of my wife’s aunt’s house. Having described that here before, this year’s iteration can only be described as meeting its billing. There were 40 people in attendance for the first time since I’ve been going (my 10th year). Of these 40, 10 were 7 years of age or younger. In the society we live in, where having children is often put on hold to achieve more individual accomplishments, it is a feat in-and-of-itself to be a part of a family so devoted to its proliferation. My two toddlers were enraptured by their older cousins. They played “lava and forest”, blocks, trains, zoo and countless other games I didn’t even come into contact with for the fact that they were so seemingly independent. My wife and I got the distinct pleasure, which before this year was but a memory, of having conversations last more than three minutes at a time. We had oysters and appetizers of all shapes and sizes. Gathered with some cousins we hadn’t seen in years. We got a chance to take a picture together! Of all the holiday photos we have of family, we never seem to be on the same side of the room. In all, an amazing day where we were blessed to be around some of those for whom we have so much love.
Friday: Having driven up to Maryland to my in-laws’ after the featured Thanksgiving festivities, we ventured down to Old Ellicott City, a place both my wife and myself have so many fond memories. Our first kiss, first admission of love, wedding photos and time spent with great friends all reside here. We took our children, along with my mother and father-in-law, two sisters-in-law and one of their boyfriend’s to the B&O Railroad Museum. After spending time immersed in model train gardens, former B&O rail cars and cabooses and several sightings of Thomas, we did a bit of browsing in the many stores along Main Street. My son, having been a model citizen in a very difficult place: an antique shop, earned himself an old fire engine. The lights and sirens even work (when I allow the batteries to be engaged)! We had lunch together before the men took the children back home, so the ladies could shop. After putting the kids down for a nap, we treated ourselves to football and basketball on television. I’m the only husband to my father-in-law’s three daughters, so having Theresa’s boyfriend, Mark, there was fun to expand the group with. Friday night featured the boys’ bonfire. My two brothers-in-law, two of their cousins, myself and a few other friends make up a group of guys who I fondly share many of my life’s accomplishments. Theirs is the brotherhood I am most invested in. It was a fantastic night. We lit stuff on fire, kept ourselves warm, caught up and told lies about all manner of topics for the better part of four hours. It was everything I had hoped for.
Saturday: On the road again, we found ourselves bound for Lake Anna, Virginia. My parent’s place and the location of our second Thanksgiving Feast. This year, my brother and sister held their own feast in Charlotte, North Carolina. They were sorely missed, but we did not let it alter our dedication to fun and being together. My children love to fish. Their version of fishing is rigging a worm to a hook, dropping the line straight down and waiting for the small bass and rainbow trout to engorge themselves. We have a small aquarium we fill with water, and by the end of each venture, the aquarium is to capacity. They all go back in, with sore mouths and the inability to resist the worm the next day. I often wonder how many times each of them has been caught. My children are in their element, delighting in each catch, demanding by the urgency of their voice that each fish be carefully examined by however many adults happen to be down on the dock in supervision. It is an amazing time.






Opening the door at 6:00 in the morning, I could smell it instantly – the sensation of a hard day on the water foretold by the soggy smell of wet, stony soil and moss, barraged incessantly by a fresh whipping wind and heavy, sideways rain drops. The lodge was situated quite perfectly near the center of the lake, but the ripest fishing grounds were to the extremities of the amoeba-shaped basin. Having endured the first day, with much success, I knew that the catch awaiting us would be worth the cold, the rain, the bone-shaking combination of the two as the skiff cut through the water for the next 45 minutes. I adorned my warmest jacket atop my thickest hoodie. For good measure, I donned a winter hood, the kind with the round cut-out in it just large enough for your eyes and nose. My feet were wrapped in two layers of wool socks and water-proof boots. Despite the added weight to my attire, my soul lifted considerably beyond any height or breadth it had ever encountered.







