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Kim MacDonald Her Becoming

The Woman She Had Never Met | Kim MacDonald on Sobriety & Healing

May 19, 20268 min read

The Woman She Had Never Met

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There is a video that circulates on the internet every so often of a baby giraffe, fresh and new, trying to stand on legs it has never used before. It slips. It slides. Its knees buckle against the unfamiliar weight of its own body. And yet, something in it keeps reaching for the ground, keeps pressing upward, keeps trying.

At 254 days sober, Kim MacDonald says that is exactly how she feels.

Not polished. Not graceful. Not certain of what comes next. But alive in a way she has never experienced before, standing on legs she is only now learning belong to her. This is not a recovery story wrapped in a bow. This is a becoming story. And it begins the way most becoming stories do with a woman who spent years surviving and had no idea she had never actually lived.

The Woman Who Kept Performing While Quietly Drowning

Kim has spent twenty-three years in automotive. She started as an eleven-dollar-an-hour cashier in a service department and climbed her way through business offices, retail sales, F&I, and eventually to vendor-side leadership. The trajectory, by any external measure, was impressive. She was a high performer. She delivered. She showed up.

But behind the performance was a woman running on adrenaline, perfectionism, and fear.

She describes it the way someone describes treading water while trying to hold everything above the surface, dipping below just long enough to choke, and then pushing back up before anyone noticed. Achievement became both fuel and disguise. Every milestone she reached created the next one. Every box she checked became another reason not to stop, not to feel, not to look at what was festering underneath.

She thrived in chaos. When everything around her was burning down, she knew what to do. Crisis was a language she spoke fluently. What she did not know how to do, what terrified her far more than any fire, was exist in peace.

The Collapse She Could No Longer Avoid

Eventually, the water she had been treading swallowed her.

While working in Texas, the things Kim had been shelving for years, addiction, an eating disorder, unresolved trauma, an abusive relationship, all began to surface with a force she could no longer outrun. She was still showing up to work. Still performing. But after hours, the unraveling was accelerating, and every attempt to hold herself together only widened the cracks.

She checked herself into rehab. She went through detox four times in less than forty-five days. And during one of those stays, a detox facility director looked at her and said the words that would burn themselves into her memory: he told her he was going to read about her in an obituary.

Kim pushed back, because pushing back was all she had ever known. She left. She relapsed. And then she lost nearly everything, her house, her car, her dogs, and eventually her job when FMLA protections ran out.

The fear that had driven her career, her survival, her constant forward motion, well it had finally driven her into the ground.

On October 16, 2023, Kim packed three suitcases and boarded a flight to Tampa, Florida. No apartment. No car. No certainty. Just a new job offer and the faintest pulse of something that might have been hope. She lived in a long-term Airbnb with roommates for months before finally securing her own apartment the following June.

It was not a graceful exit. It was a flight response dressed as a fresh start. But it was the beginning.

Meeting "Sober Me" for the First Time

When the chaos finally quieted, Kim was left standing in a room with a woman she had never met, herself.

At eight months sober, she describes the strangeness of encountering her own identity without the filter of alcohol, adrenaline, or emotional crisis. The people around her noticed it too. Those who had known Kim in earlier seasons of her life were adjusting to someone unfamiliar, someone calmer, more deliberate, more present. Some did not know what to do with her. Truthfully, she did not always know what to do with herself either.

Calm felt foreign. Peace felt suspicious. The quiet days when there were no fires to put out, no crises to manage, no ripples in the water, those were the scariest ones. She had spent so long bracing for disaster that stillness felt like a trap. As she puts it, you throw her in a pit of fire and she will figure her way out. But place her in a serene lake and she is immediately watching for the monster beneath the surface.

Sobriety did not hand Kim peace on a platter. What it handed her was awareness; the ability to feel her emotions instead of escaping them, to listen to what her body was telling her instead of overriding it, and to sit with discomfort long enough to understand what it was actually saying.

That is where the baby giraffe lives. Not in the falling, but in the standing back up. Not in certainty, but in the willingness to keep trying.

Boundaries, Accountability, and the Hard Work of Healing

Sobriety demanded that Kim rebuild more than her habits. It demanded she rebuild her entire life.

One of the hardest lessons was learning to set and hold boundaries; something she admits she could hand out generously to others but never maintained for herself. Professionally, she had always been the one who said yes to everything, immediately, without pause. She began to change that. Instead of instant compliance, she started asking when things were actually needed and holding to those timelines. It shifted the way she worked and, more importantly, the way she valued her own capacity.

Personally, the stakes were higher.

Kim recently walked away from a twenty-eight-year friendship after recognizing it had become conditional and draining. When a California visit forced a scheduling conflict between the friend and a family obligation, the fallout revealed patterns Kim could finally see clearly. She responded not with the reactivity of her past but with honesty and grace, and then she let go. She still texted her friend happy birthday. She still wished her well. But the door to her life for that person was now closed..

She made a similar decision with her mother, establishing firm boundaries around behavior that challenged her sobriety. These were not easy choices. But Kim is clear-eyed about what is at stake. She says she has a million drinks left in her, but she does not have another drunk. Boundaries are not optional. They are imperative. And anyone who challenges her sobriety no longer has a place in her life.

That clarity extends to accountability. Kim shares her sobriety openly on social media. Her director knows her full story. Her team supports her. She does not hide, because hiding is what almost killed her.

Learning Compassion for Herself

Of all the assignments Kim's therapist has given her, one stands apart.

During intensive outpatient treatment, her therapist asked her to spend four days looking for signs of compassion in the world around her. Kim resisted at first. She thought the exercise was pointless. But she committed to doing it with intention, and slowly, the world began to open up. She noticed people holding doors. A man placing his hand on his elderly wife's back. Small, quiet acts of care that she had been too consumed by survival to see before.

Then came the harder question: how could she show that same compassion to herself?

Kim is a self-described workhorse who works seven days a week and rarely unplugs. Learning to rest, to extend grace inward, to treat herself with the same tenderness she recognized in strangers? That has been the deeper, slower work of her healing. Her therapist put it simply: if you cannot give compassion to yourself, how do you expect other people to know how to give it to you?

It was the kind of truth that rearranges something inside you. Kim had spent years forgiving others, giving second and third and tenth chances to people who hurt her, while refusing to extend even a fraction of that mercy to herself. Recognizing that pattern, and choosing to interrupt it has become one of the most transformative parts of her journey.

The Life She Is Building Now

For the first time, Kim is building a life from peace instead of panic.

She is working with a realtor and a lender to buy a house in Florida. She has a boyfriend who is patient and present and learning alongside her what healthy love looks like. She has a best friend whose family has become her own. She has a team at work that trusts her with growing responsibility. She has a circle, smaller than before, but built on honesty, accessibility, and safety, the three things she now knows every relationship requires.

And she is in her pink era.

If you knew Kim ten years ago, you would understand why that detail matters. The woman who once dressed in darkness, who armored herself against the world, now wears bubblegum pink hoodies and sleeps on bubblegum pink sheets. It is not a small thing. It is a woman choosing softness after years of sharpening herself just to survive. It is color where there was once only shadow.

Not every day is easy. She still spirals sometimes. She still has moments where the old panic response tries to surface. But now, when it does, she has people around her who simply ask: Are you okay? What do you need?

And sometimes what she needs is vanilla frozen yogurt with gummy bears and a Lifetime movie. And that is enough.


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Kim MacDonald

Kim MacDonald is an automotive professional with more than 23 years of experience spanning dealership operations, retail automotive, and vendor partnerships. Currently based in Florida, Kim is navigating a new season of life centered around sobriety, healing, self-discovery, and intentional living. Through honesty, accountability, and compassion, she hopes her story encourages others to believe that it is never too late to rebuild, rediscover yourself, and begin again.

Connect with Kim on LinkedIn and Instagram.


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