EBOOK
About
Addiction is not just a habit. It is a battle for control of the mind, body, and spirit
The Human Condition: War on Addiction is a tactical life manual for readers ready to confront destructive patterns, rebuild discipline, and reclaim purpose. As Pillar VI in Sergeant Tarry Bailey's Life Manual series, this guide takes a direct look at addiction in its many forms, including substance abuse, digital distractions, emotional dependency, toxic routines, and self-sabotaging behaviour.
Blending addiction recovery principles, emotional resilience, spiritual fitness, behavioural awareness, and military-style discipline, this book gives readers a structured path toward self-mastery. It does not treat recovery as a vague hope. It presents recovery as a mission.
Inside, readers will explore the roots of addictive behaviour, the emotional wounds that fuel dependency, the role of community and support systems, and the importance of physical fitness, mindfulness, accountability, and purpose. Sergeant Bailey's approach is firm, practical, and deeply human. He challenges readers to stop running from discomfort and start building the strength required to face life clearly.
This is more than a sobriety book. It is a recovery framework for anyone ready to break cycles, rebuild identity, and fight for a stronger future.
If you are ready to confront addiction with discipline, purpose, and courage, begin the mission today.
The Human Condition: War on Addiction is a tactical life manual for readers ready to confront destructive patterns, rebuild discipline, and reclaim purpose. As Pillar VI in Sergeant Tarry Bailey's Life Manual series, this guide takes a direct look at addiction in its many forms, including substance abuse, digital distractions, emotional dependency, toxic routines, and self-sabotaging behaviour.
Blending addiction recovery principles, emotional resilience, spiritual fitness, behavioural awareness, and military-style discipline, this book gives readers a structured path toward self-mastery. It does not treat recovery as a vague hope. It presents recovery as a mission.
Inside, readers will explore the roots of addictive behaviour, the emotional wounds that fuel dependency, the role of community and support systems, and the importance of physical fitness, mindfulness, accountability, and purpose. Sergeant Bailey's approach is firm, practical, and deeply human. He challenges readers to stop running from discomfort and start building the strength required to face life clearly.
This is more than a sobriety book. It is a recovery framework for anyone ready to break cycles, rebuild identity, and fight for a stronger future.
If you are ready to confront addiction with discipline, purpose, and courage, begin the mission today.
