Alyx Effron | June 1, 2026
Presented By All Touch Case
Earlier this year, an individual signed up for our Weekly Peer Support Meetings. Like everyone else, they received a welcome email, were added to our weekly meeting invitations, and began receiving weekly reminders about upcoming support groups.
Months went by. No responses. No meetings. No engagement. Then one evening my phone buzzed with a text message: “STOP”.
Most organizations probably would’ve removed the number and moved on. Instead, I responded. A few moments later, another message came through. “Oh sorry, I thought they were automatic messages that didn’t have a legit person behind them!” That conversation ended up lasting for days.
What began as a request to stop receiving text messages turned into a candid conversation about gambling addiction, recovery, motherhood, isolation, shame, fear, support groups, emotional triggers, and hope.
At one point she shared that she was a military wife living far from family. Most of her close friends moved away. Gambling had become her dopamine hit. Her escape. The thing she looked forward to when life felt difficult.
She also admitted something I hear often. She wasn’t sure she wanted to join a support group. Talking about gambling sounded stressful. Listening to other people struggle sounded overwhelming. Part of her wondered if it would be easier to simply not think about it at all.
Truthfully, those concerns made perfect sense. Recovery can feel intimidating when you’ve spent so much time carrying everything alone. The entire interaction reminded me of something. People don’t always reject help because they don’t want it. Sometimes they reject help because they’re scared of it. Scared of being vulnerable. Scared of being seen. Scared of what might happen if they admit how much they’re struggling. Scared of discovering they may not be able to fix it entirely on their own.
Many people don’t need a solution first. They need safety first. When someone feels like they’re drowning, they aren’t looking for a lecture about how to swim. They need to know there’s a real person standing at the shoreline, reaching out a hand, listening, understanding, and not walking away when the waves get rough.
Recovery often feels like watching someone tread water from a distance. They call out that they’re struggling. You extend a hand. They hesitate. They pull away. They question whether they even deserve help.
From the outside, it can look like they don’t want support. The reality is often the exact opposite. Many people want support desperately. They just don’t know if it’s safe to trust it yet.
When someone raises their hand and asks for help, something changes. They’ve trusted you enough to let you see that they’re struggling. They may disappear for a while. They may second-guess themselves. Fear, shame, and uncertainty can cause people to retreat just when they need connection most.
If someone is drowning and asks you to save them, you don’t stop reaching because they panic and let go for a moment. You stay nearby. You keep the lifeline available. You remind them they’re not alone in the water.
That’s what happened when I received the “STOP” message. Months earlier, someone had signed up looking for support. Instead of assuming they wanted to be left alone, I chose to respond. What followed wasn’t a sales pitch or a debate about recovery. It was a conversation between two human beings.
That’s why community matters. Sometimes the most powerful thing you can offer another person isn’t advice, solutions, or answers. It’s your presence. A reminder that someone heard them. A reminder that someone cares. A reminder that they’re not carrying this alone.
The person who texted “STOP” ended up asking for a phone call. Not because I had all the answers. Simply because they discovered there was a real human being behind the message. Sometimes that’s all it takes.
#CollectorsMD
People rarely heal the moment they ask for help. Often, healing begins the moment they realize someone is still there after they ask.
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https://collectorsmd.com/saving-someone-from-drowning/