Most recovery stories end at sobriety.
This one begins there.
For years, David Garcia believed survival was the goal. He survived a ruptured brain aneurysm with only an eighteen percent chance of walking away neurologically intact. He survived alcoholism that nearly cost him everything. He survived divorce, loneliness, and the relentless pursuit of a life he thought would finally make him feel complete.
Then the applause stopped.
Treatment taught him how to stop drinking. It didn't teach him what came next.
Living After is not a story about hitting rock bottom. It's a story about learning how to live once you've climbed back out. When the emergency is over, when the milestones have been celebrated, and when no one is standing beside you telling you what to do next, a different kind of work begins.
With unflinching honesty and quiet wisdom, Garcia explores the questions that remain after survival:
Drawing from his experiences in long-term recovery, fatherhood, faith, and everyday life, Garcia writes with the voice of someone who has stopped looking for dramatic answers and started finding meaning in ordinary moments. His reflections are candid, deeply personal, and free of easy clichés. Rather than offering formulas, he invites readers into the slow, often uncomfortable process of becoming emotionally whole.
At its heart, Living After is about the quiet miracles that happen long after the crisis has passed. It is about discovering that healing isn't a destination reached in a single triumphant moment, but a daily practice built one ordinary day at a time.
Whether you're recovering from addiction, rebuilding after loss, searching for purpose, or simply trying to understand what comes after surviving life's hardest seasons, this memoir offers something increasingly rare: hope that feels earned.
Because sometimes the greatest miracle isn't surviving.
It's learning how to live afterward.