


Tori Utley is an entrepreneur working jointly in technology innovation and addiction recovery, holding an M.B.A. and an addictions counseling license in Minnesota. By day, she works as a mobile Product Manager at Mayo Clinic and is working with the Department of Psychiatry and Psychology on a new mobile application for mood monitoring and mental health.




Tori Utley is an entrepreneur working jointly in technology innovation and addiction recovery, holding an M.B.A. and an addictions counseling license in Minnesota. By day, she works as a mobile Product Manager at Mayo Clinic and is working with the Department of Psychiatry and Psychology on a new mobile application for mood monitoring and mental health.
Humility is a central characteristic of recovery. Being humble helps you keep your recovery centered and strong while simultaneously keeping you teachable. While there are many benefits of humility, putting it into practice in your daily life isn’t always easy, especially at work.
The workplace brings unique challenges, which can often be the personalities of those you work with on a day-to-day basis. Although difficult, humility in your leadership and work ethic will carry your career, so it’s important to leverage this recovery practice in your everyday life.
Humility creates the space where great ideas are born, where collegiality is fostered, and where a healthy team can work together. According to Lazslo Bock, the former HR guru with Google, humility creates space for others to contribute – do your part, and step back and let others create alongside you.
But this space is not realized if you are operating in a territorial, defensive manner. Be open to criticism, feedback and the ability to default to your colleagues. You don’t know it all, and you had to recognize that in your recovery – so now, do the same thing at work.
Staying humble, teachable and coachable makes you a better colleague to work with, a better entrepreneur and a much more approachable person.
Here are three ways to make sure you’re creating a safe environment for yourself, your recovery and your peers through humility in the workplace:
By leveraging these three principles in the workplace, you can more effectively strive after humility – a principle of recovery that will help you stay grounded and focused in all aspects of life and sobriety. In addition to the benefits in your personal life, humble leaders are inspiring leaders – so be one of them. Be an example and an inspiration for your peers and fellow leaders – and create the space where others have the ability to do their best work alongside you, and even ahead of you.
Said best by Ernest Hemingway, “There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” Strive to be better than your former self, day after day, both in your life and at work. By leveraging the principles of humility in your recovery and the workplace, you will stretch yourself and grow into the leader that your recovery has equipped you to be.
We believe everyone deserves access to accurate, unbiased information about mental health and recovery. That’s why we have a comprehensive set of treatment providers and don't charge for inclusion. Any center that meets our criteria can list for free. We do not and have never accepted fees for referring someone to a particular center. Providers who advertise with us must be verified by our Research Team and we clearly mark their status as advertisers.
Our goal is to help you choose the best path for your recovery. That begins with information you can trust.