Learn how to support a friend struggling with addiction. Discover tips for starting the conversation and offering effective guidance throughout their recovery journey.
Why It’s Important to Talk About Addiction
What Is National Recovery Month and Why Is It Important?
How Experiential Therapies Help with Boundary Setting in Addiction Recovery
6 Addiction and Recovery Podcasts to Help Your Sobriety Thrive
One of the hard truths of recovery is sticking with your decision to lead a sober lifestyle takes work. It isn’t a choice you make once, but rather one that you keep making time and time again. When the sobriety motivation starts to wane, having an arsenal of resources to support you can help you get through the tough moments without risking the progress you’ve already made. Grab your headphones and your favorite booze-free treat, here are 6 empowering recovery podcasts to keep you motivated on your path to sobriety.
How to Talk to A Child About a Parent Going into Addiction Treatment
Learn 7 tips for talking to children about a family member's addiction and entering treatment. It emphasizes the importance of preparation, creating a positive and supportive environment, explaining addiction in age-appropriate terms, discussing treatment, validating children's feelings, seeking additional support, and highlights the services offered by The Walker Center for mental health treatment and family therapy.
What Are Substitute Addictions & How Can You Avoid Them In Recovery?
What are the 5 Stages of Mental Health Recovery?
There are 5 stages of mental health recovery. The stages include accepting support, educating yourself, taking action, building the framework, and committing to recovery. Each stage involves different aspects of seeking help, gaining insight, implementing tools, finding fulfillment, and making a commitment to ongoing recovery.
4 New Ways to Start the New Year Sober
Do you have a hard time during the holiday season? This is often a time of year when family and friends spend time together, and cities are bustling with life, shopping, and all the seasonal merriment.
The holidays also offer up a lot of tricky situations when we are at our most vulnerable. There may be triggers that come along with the end-of-the-year celebrations. The temptation to drink or use is heightened. With that in mind, here are four methods to help you start the new year sober or clean.
What are the 5 Principles of Trauma-Informed Care?
“Trauma-Informed Care” is the new kid on the block when it comes to addiction treatment. But what exactly does it mean?
Trauma-informed care recognizes that it is not only physical trauma that can have long-lasting neurological, emotional, social, biological, and psychological effects. It also involves five guiding principles that are adhered to by people’s physical and emotional safety.
5 Mindfulness Hacks to Step Up Your Recovery
7 Things You DON'T Say to Someone in Recovery
Recovery is a beautiful journey marked by self-discovery and transformation. That doesn't mean that it's easy, linear, or guaranteed. If your friend or loved one is in recovery, providing the proper support could be the difference between recovery and relapse. In honor of April being Alcohol Awareness month, we give you the inside scoop on ten things you DON'T say to someone in recovery.
Setting Realistic Goals For Recovery - Get SMART
Healthy Holiday Habits - 5 Ways to Choose You This Holiday Season
Zach N: From Near Death to Recovery from Heroin & Opioid Addiction
Zach had a great job, was making “killer” cash, and thought that because he had money, his drug use wasn’t a problem. He was spending $600/day on heroin & opioids for years. After a near-death experience, he got help. Now, he’s been clean for six years. Read his inspirational story & learn what message he has to share with anyone struggling with addiction.
Addiction is a Disease. Here's Why.
There are those that say addicts and people who are dependent on alcohol made their choices. They picked up their first drink, they tried their first illicit substance, they were present and willing every time the decision to drink and use again was made. They view the addict or alcoholic as “weak willed” or rebellious and selfish, and fail to see the human being displaying symptoms of a potentially fatal disease. Addiction is a disease. Here’s why.