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DANG! The Todd Bridges Podcast
Todd Bridges and Bettijo Bridges
48 episodes
3 days ago
How do you support someone struggling with addiction without enabling them? In this episode of DANG!, Todd Bridges and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford to tackle this tough question and more, sharing practical, hope-filled advice on how to walk alongside someone you love with equal parts accountability and compassion—and why “tough love” is often just another way of saying true love.SUMMARYAddiction doesn’t just hijack one person’s life—it drags the whole family into the chaos. In this raw, honest episode, Todd and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford, Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center in Texas,  to talk about what actually creates lasting change, why you can’t force someone into recovery, and how to love an addict without losing yourself. Brian shares a powerful story from his clinical work about a longtime client who only revealed deep childhood trauma years into treatment—when she was finally ready—driving home a hard truth: recovery runs on the addict’s timeline, not ours.Together they dig into the messy family side of addiction: the guilt, the rescuing, the “If I don’t fix this, who will?” spiral. Brian explains why constantly stepping in—paying the fines, cleaning up the messes, smoothing everything over—might feel loving, but actually “disables” the person you’re trying to help. The key? Lead with genuine love, then add real accountability and clear boundaries. You can support someone’s sobriety, but you can’t drag them through a 12-Step program—or any kind of recovery—until they’re willing.HIGHLIGHTSWhat it’s like being Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center (1:09)Dr. Samford shares his favorite strategy for getting reluctant patients to participate: bringing the group meeting to the client's bed! (3:03)How Brian’s recovery journey began at age 24 with a counselor who truly cared, inspiring him to help others. (4:45)Parental Sabotage: How well-meaning parents now act as the greatest barrier by constantly rescuing and enabling adult children. (10:07)Maybe the hardest part: letting go of your timeline for their recovery. (37:19)Brian’s formula for families: Accountability + Compassion = Real Love. (43:08)That thin line between loving someone and enabling—and how “helping” too much can actually disable growth. (44:14)ToddFlix: Tracker and using every tool you’ve got to stay sober. (44:42)Shows like Breaking Bad and Good Girls show “normal” people pulled into the underworld. (49:19)LISTEN TO LEARNWhy length of treatment matters so much.How to walk the tightrope between accountability and compassion in a family affected by addiction.How Todd Bridges uses lessons from the TV show Tracker—and radical surrender—to help sustain 32 years of sobriety.If you’re exhausted from trying to control your family’s chaos, here’s the secret: true love means setting boundaries and holding people accountable—and if that sounds too hard, just remember what happens when you pray for patience. Hit play!Follow on Instagram:  Todd @toddbridges & Bettijo @pagingsupermom--------------------© 2025 Loop 101 MediaDANG! is produced by Loop 101 Media, Bettijo Bridges, Todd Bridges & Attalie AnneFor more information contact info@loop101media.com
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How do you support someone struggling with addiction without enabling them? In this episode of DANG!, Todd Bridges and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford to tackle this tough question and more, sharing practical, hope-filled advice on how to walk alongside someone you love with equal parts accountability and compassion—and why “tough love” is often just another way of saying true love.SUMMARYAddiction doesn’t just hijack one person’s life—it drags the whole family into the chaos. In this raw, honest episode, Todd and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford, Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center in Texas,  to talk about what actually creates lasting change, why you can’t force someone into recovery, and how to love an addict without losing yourself. Brian shares a powerful story from his clinical work about a longtime client who only revealed deep childhood trauma years into treatment—when she was finally ready—driving home a hard truth: recovery runs on the addict’s timeline, not ours.Together they dig into the messy family side of addiction: the guilt, the rescuing, the “If I don’t fix this, who will?” spiral. Brian explains why constantly stepping in—paying the fines, cleaning up the messes, smoothing everything over—might feel loving, but actually “disables” the person you’re trying to help. The key? Lead with genuine love, then add real accountability and clear boundaries. You can support someone’s sobriety, but you can’t drag them through a 12-Step program—or any kind of recovery—until they’re willing.HIGHLIGHTSWhat it’s like being Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center (1:09)Dr. Samford shares his favorite strategy for getting reluctant patients to participate: bringing the group meeting to the client's bed! (3:03)How Brian’s recovery journey began at age 24 with a counselor who truly cared, inspiring him to help others. (4:45)Parental Sabotage: How well-meaning parents now act as the greatest barrier by constantly rescuing and enabling adult children. (10:07)Maybe the hardest part: letting go of your timeline for their recovery. (37:19)Brian’s formula for families: Accountability + Compassion = Real Love. (43:08)That thin line between loving someone and enabling—and how “helping” too much can actually disable growth. (44:14)ToddFlix: Tracker and using every tool you’ve got to stay sober. (44:42)Shows like Breaking Bad and Good Girls show “normal” people pulled into the underworld. (49:19)LISTEN TO LEARNWhy length of treatment matters so much.How to walk the tightrope between accountability and compassion in a family affected by addiction.How Todd Bridges uses lessons from the TV show Tracker—and radical surrender—to help sustain 32 years of sobriety.If you’re exhausted from trying to control your family’s chaos, here’s the secret: true love means setting boundaries and holding people accountable—and if that sounds too hard, just remember what happens when you pray for patience. Hit play!Follow on Instagram:  Todd @toddbridges & Bettijo @pagingsupermom--------------------© 2025 Loop 101 MediaDANG! is produced by Loop 101 Media, Bettijo Bridges, Todd Bridges & Attalie AnneFor more information contact info@loop101media.com
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Personal Journals
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From TV Star to Behind Bars: What Life is Like Behind Bars - Ep. 42
DANG! The Todd Bridges Podcast
1 hour 30 minutes
2 months ago
From TV Star to Behind Bars: What Life is Like Behind Bars - Ep. 42
How does someone go from teenage heartthrob to the brink of self-destruction—and back again? In this fan-favorite DANG! episode, Todd Bridges opens up about the choices that led him to prison, the twists that brought redemption, and the surprising humor he found along the way. Now remastered and combined into one seamless episode, this raw story is one you don’t want to miss.SUMMARYWhen this episode first aired, many of you said the sound quality didn’t do Todd’s powerful story justice. We’ve fixed that and merged Parts 1 and 2 into one seamless episode. While we’re away on a short vacation, we couldn’t think of a better encore than this listener favorite.Todd Bridges opens up about the decisions, struggles, and life-altering moments that ultimately landed him in prison. From his tumultuous battle with addiction to finding himself in a transformative sober living program, Todd reflects on how his path was shaped by both poor choices and divine timing.He recounts his early recovery days, including being placed in a unique living environment that taught him self-love and patience, and how those lessons set him on the road to rebuilding his life. Todd also shares poignant moments like experiencing the 1994 LA earthquake while in a sober living facility and grappling with the ripple effects of his addiction on his family.Few people know that after entering recovery, Todd quickly dedicated himself to helping others achieve sobriety. This work brought him face-to-face with the harsh realities of the legal system, including making difficult decisions—like sending individuals back to jail when recovery efforts failed. These experiences taught Todd profound lessons about accountability, the justice system, and the complex path to lasting sobriety.From the realities of prison food to the intricate group dynamics, Todd shares how he navigated life on the inside—fitting in, surviving, and even finding moments of connection. He breaks down the key differences between county jail and prison, offers a glimpse into the personalities of his fellow inmates, and reflects on a particularly chaotic stint in a psychiatric ward.But it’s not all grit and hardship—Todd weaves in the moments that made him laugh, the friendships that surprised him, and the lessons that shaped his outlook on life. HIGHLIGHTSThe First Hit: Todd’s first encounter with the white powder that changed his life.Crossroads: Choosing between his old life and a fresh start.Court-Ordered Recovery: A judge’s unusual requirement—daily court appearances as rehab.Finding Self-Love: Rediscovering himself in a compassionate sober living home.Shaken but Grounded: The 1994 LA earthquake tested recovery and the power of community.From Survivor to Advocate: Opening sober living homes and working with courts, while witnessing the system’s failures.Lessons in Redemption: Hard truths about accountability and consequences.Prison Food Horror Stories: Wish sandwiches and other jailhouse “meals.”Psych Ward Shortcut: A bizarre twist lands Todd in a straightjacket.Welcome to Chino: Shackles, chaos, and a prison entrance like a movie.An Unlikely Guardian: A towering inmate claims Todd as his “brother.”Prison Politics: Race, respect, and survival rules.Trust No One: Why making friends in prison could cost you.Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/toddbridgeshttps://www.instagram.com/pagingsupermom© 2024 Loop 101 MediaDANG! is produced by Loop 101 Media, Bettijo Bridges, Todd Bridges & Attalie AnneFor more information contact info@loop101media.com
DANG! The Todd Bridges Podcast
How do you support someone struggling with addiction without enabling them? In this episode of DANG!, Todd Bridges and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford to tackle this tough question and more, sharing practical, hope-filled advice on how to walk alongside someone you love with equal parts accountability and compassion—and why “tough love” is often just another way of saying true love.SUMMARYAddiction doesn’t just hijack one person’s life—it drags the whole family into the chaos. In this raw, honest episode, Todd and Bettijo sit down with addiction expert Dr. Brian Samford, Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center in Texas,  to talk about what actually creates lasting change, why you can’t force someone into recovery, and how to love an addict without losing yourself. Brian shares a powerful story from his clinical work about a longtime client who only revealed deep childhood trauma years into treatment—when she was finally ready—driving home a hard truth: recovery runs on the addict’s timeline, not ours.Together they dig into the messy family side of addiction: the guilt, the rescuing, the “If I don’t fix this, who will?” spiral. Brian explains why constantly stepping in—paying the fines, cleaning up the messes, smoothing everything over—might feel loving, but actually “disables” the person you’re trying to help. The key? Lead with genuine love, then add real accountability and clear boundaries. You can support someone’s sobriety, but you can’t drag them through a 12-Step program—or any kind of recovery—until they’re willing.HIGHLIGHTSWhat it’s like being Chief Clinical Officer of The Arbor treatment center (1:09)Dr. Samford shares his favorite strategy for getting reluctant patients to participate: bringing the group meeting to the client's bed! (3:03)How Brian’s recovery journey began at age 24 with a counselor who truly cared, inspiring him to help others. (4:45)Parental Sabotage: How well-meaning parents now act as the greatest barrier by constantly rescuing and enabling adult children. (10:07)Maybe the hardest part: letting go of your timeline for their recovery. (37:19)Brian’s formula for families: Accountability + Compassion = Real Love. (43:08)That thin line between loving someone and enabling—and how “helping” too much can actually disable growth. (44:14)ToddFlix: Tracker and using every tool you’ve got to stay sober. (44:42)Shows like Breaking Bad and Good Girls show “normal” people pulled into the underworld. (49:19)LISTEN TO LEARNWhy length of treatment matters so much.How to walk the tightrope between accountability and compassion in a family affected by addiction.How Todd Bridges uses lessons from the TV show Tracker—and radical surrender—to help sustain 32 years of sobriety.If you’re exhausted from trying to control your family’s chaos, here’s the secret: true love means setting boundaries and holding people accountable—and if that sounds too hard, just remember what happens when you pray for patience. Hit play!Follow on Instagram:  Todd @toddbridges & Bettijo @pagingsupermom--------------------© 2025 Loop 101 MediaDANG! is produced by Loop 101 Media, Bettijo Bridges, Todd Bridges & Attalie AnneFor more information contact info@loop101media.com