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Proteas wicketkeeper Sinalo Jafta and her path to redemption through sobriety

Proteas wicketkeeper Sinalo Jafta and her path to redemption through sobriety

The Star04-06-2025
Proteas wicketkeeper Sinalo Jafta is widely heralded as one of the best cricketers in the world, but she is also a great advocate for overcoming addiction and the stigma surrounding the issue.
In late 2022, Jafta was voluntarily admitted to an alcohol rehabilitation facility in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands.
Back then, the 27-year-old could have been forgiven for thinking her cricketing career may already be over.
Now Jafta is coming up to three years sober, and is one of the fixtures of the South African team.
Since her debut for South Africa in 2016, Jafta has made 95 appearances across all three formats, solidifying her place in the Proteas side.
When asked how she turned her life around, Jafta revealed how she instead saw it as starting a new chapter in her life.
'I don't see it as success. For me, it's literally just the 24 hours that is very important to me. And I think when I went into treatment, that was the one thing that I wasn't focused on. I was more focused on what I am doing outside of the game," Jafta told SportsBoom.co.za in an exclusive interview.
'But then as soon as I got there, they literally said focus on 24 [hours] and how you see cricket and how you play cricket. You literally focus on that day because that's the most important.'
As any Narcotics Anonymous (NA) or Alcoholic Anonymous (AA) teachings will preach, it's about living one day at a time. This is a philosophy that the 30-year-old sticks to religiously.
'If I think too far ahead, I don't know whether relapse is coming tomorrow. But if I know that I'm sorting out what I'm meant to do today, I won't relapse tomorrow. It's more like a domino effect. And I think anyone that's going through anything with addiction or with sobriety in general, it's okay."
'I think if someone told me that it was okay and [if I had] asked for help, I think that's the biggest thing. There's nothing to be ashamed of because your story is not done yet."
'And I always think of life as chapters. It was just another chapter of my life. So now I'm looking forward to the rest.'
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