Early recovery can feel like a constant internal emergency. Your body wants something.Your mind starts talking.Fear rushes in. For many people, everything that follows gets lumped together and labeled failure in progress. That misunderstanding creates unnecessary panic and shame, and it makes recovery harder than it needs to be. A simple distinction helps. Cravings are…
Month: January 2026
Kim’s Story: When Survival Turned Into a Choice for Life
Kim: I still remember the first time we talked. I didn’t want to be there. I was using every day just to function, and part of me was hoping you’d tell me it wasn’t that bad yet. Tim: You were hoping I’d give you permission to keep surviving the way you were. Kim: Yeah. Exactly….
When Going Deep Matters More Than Going Broad
Integrative Recovery often emphasizes flexibility. It recognizes that different people respond to different approaches, and that blending perspectives can be powerful. For many, combining practical tools, emotional support, medical insight, and spiritual grounding creates a balanced and sustainable path. But integration does not always mean using many things at once. For some people, recovery becomes…
Integrative Recovery Made Simple
Integrative Recovery is a practical, human way of approaching recovery. At its core, it is based on a simple idea: there is no single right path to recovery, but there is a path that works better for each person. Instead of asking people to conform to one program, one philosophy, or one identity, Integrative Recovery…
The Difference Between Urges and Intent
One of the most common sources of panic in recovery is the belief that an urge means something bad is about to happen. “I want to drink.”“I’m thinking about gambling.”“I keep picturing the old behavior.” For many people, the moment an urge appears, the mind jumps straight to conclusions. This means I’m failing. This means…
Luis’s Story: Replacing an Unhealthy Addiction for a Healthy One
(The following story is fictional. It does not describe any real person, client, or recovery journey. It is a composite meant to reflect common patterns seen in people rebuilding their lives after severe substance addiction.) Tim:It’s good to see you, Luis. It’s been a while. How are you really doing? Luis:Honestly? I’m doing really well….
Consistency Is How Change Becomes Trust
Many people enter recovery carrying a quiet but heavy doubt:“I don’t trust myself anymore.” They have promised change before and broken those promises. They have meant well and still ended up back where they started. Over time, this erodes confidence, not just in specific plans, but in their own judgment and follow-through. Recovery does not…
Simple Does Not Mean Easy
In many recovery spaces, newcomers are gently reminded to “easy does it.”The point is not that recovery will feel easy, but that trying to do too much, too fast often backfires. Early on, people are often overwhelmed. They want to fix everything at once. Stop the behavior. Repair relationships. Heal emotionally. Make sense of their…
Michael’s Story: Am I Addicted to Working?
(The following story is fictional. It does not describe any real executive, client, or workplace situation. It is a composite meant to reflect common patterns seen in high-achieving professionals struggling with compulsive overwork.) Mike:Thanks for taking the call, Tim. I wasn’t sure who else to talk to. Tim:I’m glad you reached out. What’s going on?…
Keeping It Simple When Everything Feels Urgent
When people first start trying to change, everything can feel urgent. The habit feels dangerous. Time feels short. Consequences feel close. There is a strong pull to act quickly, decisively, and completely. Fix the whole thing. Make a plan for the rest of your life. Finally get it right. This sense of urgency is understandable….









