The Adversary Doesn’t Fight Fair—So Why Are You Showing Up Unarmed?
If alcoholism is irrational, and the adversary is the cause of that irrationality, then we must ask:
What empowers the adversary? What weakens our defenses?
The answer, for many of us, is spiritual vulnerability. When our spiritual health is low—when grace is distant, when clarity is fogged—the adversary doesn’t just whisper. He walks into the ring like a 100kg, 6'4" MMA fighter, 80% muscle, trained in exploiting emotional fractures.
And we? We’re just us. Tired. Distracted. Spiritually malnourished.
But What If You’ve Been Training?
What if you’ve been exercising your spiritual muscles—through grace, surrender, service, prayer, or even just honest reflection?
What if your spiritual telemetry is online, scanning for sabotage, tuned to divine frequency?
Then the ring changes.
A 1,000-foot, 7-tonne being steps in.
99% muscle.
Seven eyes around his head.
He drops a silk jacket with “GOD” stitched across the back.
And he squashes the adversary like an ant.
For the Non-Believer
You don’t need to believe in a literal God to feel this. Call it clarity. Call it higher purpose. Call it the part of you that’s bigger than chaos.
When that part is active, the adversary loses his grip.
When it’s dormant, he’s in charge.
Recovery Is a Spiritual Fight
Not a moral one. Not a logical one.
It’s a fight for influence.
And the adversary doesn’t care how smart you are—he cares how spiritually grounded you are.
So if you’re walking into the ring today, ask yourself:
Who’s walking in with you?
Jason Bresnehan
Jason is a fixer—of businesses, of broken momentum, and occasionally of entire spiritual frameworks gone sideways. He speaks fluent boardroom and AA, deploys Catholic doctrine with the subtlety of a scalpel, and isn’t afraid to lace his insights with both war-room metaphors and dad-sermon tenderness.
Founder of Evahan, a consultancy built on the idea that legacy and liquidity don’t need to fight, Jason draws on 30 years of commercial grit, tactical leadership, and emotional radar to help people rebuild what entropy took. He works with companies, communities, and recovery misfits alike—often using the same principles to sort both cap tables and chaotic lives.
Jason draws deep inspiration from historical figures who got results—especially those who led from the margins, built with scarce resources, and refused to be shackled by conventional wisdom. He’s known for assembling unorthodox teams of passionate experts to solve complex problems in chaotic environments. Whether in boardrooms, recovery communities, or legacy disputes, Jason’s approach is rooted in common purpose, tactical innovation, and the belief that clarity thrives when paradigms are challenged.