A Touching Farewell to Brad Miah-Phillips

Bradley Miah PhillipsI still feel strange that my good friend and Recovery Stories Storyteller is no longer with us. Earlier today (my time), I received a message from Stuart Forshaw, Chairman of The Basement Recovery Project, asking if I had seen words he had written about Brad. I had not.

I asked Stuart if I could add those words to my In Memorium for Brad, as well as use them in today’s blog. Stuart agreed.

Stuart visited Brad in hospital where our mutual friend was in an induced coma following a massive stroke. Stuart sat with Brad and read some pages from the big book – Alcoholics Anonymous. Brad lost the ability to take breath and was placed on a ventilator. The following day, the life support was switched off and Brad passed away, sober and at peace. I continue with Stuart’s words:

‘Here was a man who had unselfishly given himself to the service of others throughout almost 15 years of sobriety and freedom from drugs; a man whose time in prison and sleeping rough on the streets were probably better qualifications for his work in the recovery field than the degree in Criminal Psychology he achieved in his early years of sobriety; and a  man who sought no recognition whatsoever for his work, let alone any gratitude for it.

He simply gave. All that he had been gifted, he gave to others.

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My Friend Bradley Miah-Phillips: In Memorium

It is with great sadness that I have to announce that one of the Storytellers for my Our Recovery Stories project passed away on 10 February 2023 at the Calderdale Royal Hospital. I am still having trouble coming to terms with the idea that Brad is no longer with us, but I know I have some special memories of him, albeit most of them on Skype, and in the words he and I wrote for his Recovery Story.

I first met Brad when Mark Gilman and I travelled up to Halifax in April 2009 to meet Stuart Honor at the Breakfast Club, a recovery-based initiative that Stu had set up and which later became The Basement Recovery Project (TBRP). Brad cooked our delicious breakfast. I was by then living in Perth, Western Australia, having moved there from South Wales at the end of 2008. 

I met Brad in person a few times after that when I visited Halifax. During one of those visits, Brad introduced me to his magic tricks, two of which you can see in the short video below. I got to know Brad better when he became a regular blogger on our Wired In To Recovery online community. We were in regular contact with each other. 

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‘Brad, You Haven’t Just Got a Problem with Alcohol.’

‘The most important thing that therapists can do to be helpful is to find ways of supporting, stimulating, and energizing client’s investment and involvement. The second most important thing is to stimulate and support powerful client learning and meaning-making processes.’ How Clients Make Therapy Work: The Process of Active Self-Healing by Arthur C Bohart and Karen Tallman.

I’d like to introduce to another our Storytellers, Brad Miah-Phillips. In many ways, Brad’s life couldn’t have been more different to the last Storyteller to whom I introduced you, Tim. However, they have both come back from very dark places.

I first met Brad in April 2009 when he made Mark Gilman and I breakfast at The Basement Project in Halifax, UK, or the Breakfast Club as it was known then. Mark and I were visiting Stuart Honor, the amazing man who originally set up this recovery initiative. I only met Brad in person once after that, but I came to know him well when he became a regular blogger on Wired In To Recovery. We have spent a lot of time on Skype as I have interviewed Brad about his amazing life.

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