What
you need to know - How a Personal Program can empower your
recovery - and how to get started today.
Share Your Recovery Story
At the core of addiction - is a compulsive
tendency to use a drug or to engage in an activity that
changes how I feel.
This compulsion to use may be active
and obvious - or it may linger and recur during times of
anger, stress or complacency.
And because the tendency of addiction
persists over time - so too must we remain active in the
Principles and Ways of recovery from addiction.
Share Your Recovery Story is a reminder list
- of those things important to do - one day at a time in
your recovery from addiction.
Ask for help in the morning - Give thanks
at night. The recovery meetings that you attend to each
week. Quiet time to journal write. Connecting with others
in recovery.
These and other items each have a place
in your Program.
Share Your Recovery Story is a commitment to your self - and is best written
down.
It is easy to lose track of things kept
just in our head. We get busy - and distracted - and it
is easy to lose our way.
Writing your Program down on paper will
help you to organize, sustain and to track your involvement
in recovery.
Share Your Recovery Story is a foundation
- a steady part to your day and to your week.
Regardless of what else happens, your
program is there for you to follow. It provides a structure
and a routine to your day - and to the activities of your
recovery.
Follow your program when you are feeling
lazy. Follow it when you are worried - or confident - about
your recovery.
Follow your program when you have the
time - and follow it when you are pressured, stressed or
busy.
Share Your Recovery Story counteracts the
disorder of addiction - and provides a centre of stability
on days when you are pressured.
As you become accustomed to your Program
- you will find comfort in its routine and its benefits.
Share Your Recovery Story provides direction
for your recovery. Spend a few minutes each week - to organize
and to update your Program.
Listen to what others do for their recovery.
Learn what is necessary and most helpful to you.
Then follow through with what you have
written down. Apply your self to your Program - and let
it empower your recovery.
Getting Started
SupportNet offers a variety of Recovery Learning Series - to help you to get started with your Personal
Program of Recovery.
The Notes Handbook that accompanies this
Learning Seminar will introduce you to several of these
guides.
Ask for help in the morning - Attend
to a Recovery Support Group - Read recovery literature
- Connect with others in recovery - Care for, calm and
express yourself - Consider the Principles of Recovery
- and Apply them to your daily life.
The Principles of Recovery offer that
balance, routine and action will empower a lasting recovery
from addiction - one day at a time.
The Ways of Recovery offer strategies
to counteract the sick tendencies of addiction - and to
help you to enjoy your life along the way.
Avoid risky people, places and things
- Repeat the Serenity Prayer - Apply it to your life -
Journal write - Listen to the experience of others in recovery
- Pause for one moment - Breathe deeply in to your abdomen
- Give thanks at night.
Make a list of those things that you
will do for your recovery each day.
This list is the foundation for your
day to day Personal Program of Recovery from addiction.
Keep a schedule of your recovery support
meetings, exercise routine and your personal time. Make
note of any appointments with professional supports.
Entering a pharmacy - Letting myself
get too tired - Spending too much time alone - Going to
a bar - Treating my own symptoms - Playing resentments
in my mind - Working long hours - Being near to others
who are using - Doing nothing - Taking on too much at once
. . .
There are many potential triggers to
relapsed use.
But each of us has those people, places
and things most likely to get under our skin.
Make a list of those triggers most likely
to challenge your recovery. Remind yourself daily - to
be alert to these risks.
Regardless of all efforts - a day will
come when you feel overwhelmed or at other risk to your
recovery.
Make a list of what you will do. Be specific.
Write down the names of people you would contact - or places
that you would go to.
Apply the Principles of Recovery to your
Program - as to all the activities of your life in recovery.
Keep it simple. Don’t clutter your
day with more than you can handle. Listen to the experience
of others. Put first things first - and follow your program
one day at a time.
In Summary
The compulsion of addiction may linger
and recur.
We must therefore remain active in the
Principles and Ways of recovery from addiction.
Share Your Recovery Story helps you to put your recovery first.
Its routine reminds you of what is most
important in your day - and its activities counteract any
tendency towards relapse.
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