The Brain
Triggers
Putting it all together
Coping Skills
Random
100

T/F. Substances operate by hijacking the natural reward system in the brain and overtime the brain comes to believe the drug is more important than anything else. 

True

100

Compare a trigger versus a craving. 

Trigger - things out in the world and inside our minds that lead us to have cravings 

Cravings - intense desire to use your drug of choice 

100

T/F. Cravings last a long period of time. 

False. Cravings only last a short period of time. It can be an awful feeling but remember your brain has changed related to the production of neurotransmitters and then becomes convinced that using the substance is important and your survival depends on it. 

100

What skill is described as stopping the thought when it first begins to prevent it from building into an overpowering craving?

Thought-stoppage

100

T/F. Anxiety is not dangerous.

True. Although anxiety may feel uncomfortable, it is not dangerous or harmful to you. 

200

When dopamine levels go ___________, positive feelings are experienced 

Up (increase) 

200

Every time you are triggered but manage to resist the urge to use substances, you make that trigger _________.

Weaker until it eventually disappears or is replaced by another more positive reaction 

200

Describe relapse justification AND Give three examples of relapse justification 

Relapse justification is when you decide to stop drinking or using but then end up moving toward alcohol or other drugs anyway and your brain gave you permission. 

Examples: "I can have just one", "No one will know", "I deserve a drink" 

200

Name the technique: Picture a switch or level in your mind, imagine yourself moving in from "on" to "off" to stop the thought about alcohol or other drugs. Have another picture ready to replace those thoughts 

Visualization/Imagery 


200

What are 5 ways you can be active in your recovery? 

Community support groups, obtaining a sponsor, reaching out to healthy supports, exercising, practicing coping skills, volunteering 
300

What brain chemicals are responsible for making us feel good/high after we do something enjoyable making us want to continue the enjoyable activity? 

Dopamine, oxytocin, endorphin & serotonin

300

Give 3 examples of internal triggers 

Thoughts, emotions, bodily sensations (overwhelmed, loneliness, sad)

300

Trigger --> _______ -----> Craving ----> _________

Trigger --> Thought --> Craving --> Use 

300

Name the 3 first steps to stopping the cravings process

1. Identify the triggers

2. Prevent exposure to triggers whenever possible 

3. Deal with triggers in a different way

300

Example the difference between self-esteem and self-compassion. 

Self-esteem represents how much we like or value ourselves and is often based on comparisons with others. Self-compassion is not based on positive judgements or evaluation, it is a way of relating to ourselves.  

400

Describe the Reward Circuitry. 

The reward circuitry is the place where inputs results in a dopamine surge, translating into "feeling good" or "feeling really good" 

400

Compare an external trigger vs. internal trigger 

External trigger - A trigger that comes from outside of you that leads us to have cravings

Internal trigger - a trigger that comes from inside of you that leads us to have a cravings 

400

Describe conditioning with substance use. 

People, places, things, emotions and even certain times of the day become so closely associated with using substances that even though we are in recovery and have no intention of using they can cause intense cravings for our substance of choice. Conditioning is powerful because it creates automatic responses which are responses without any rational thought associated. This is why we encourage you to avoid certain people, places and things that have been conditioned as a trigger for you. 

400

What is a breathing technique used to calm the body, regulate breathing, and counteract some of the negative effects of anxiety?? 

Respiratory control 

400

Describe enabling and explain how it can be problematic during active addiction. 

Enabling is the behavior of protecting others from experiencing the full impact and consequences of their behavior. 

Problematic because the enabler can help keep you in active addiction. For example - give you money to buy substances or blame others for your substance use.

500

Explain what happens when you stand strong and are resilient against a trigger. 

You continue to stay in recovery and the trigger lost some of its power over you!!! 

500

Give 3 examples of external triggers 

People, places and things (friends, family, grocery store, bar, certain time of day, songs)

500

Compare the fight, flight, face or freeze response to your cravings response (HINT: adrenaline, singular focus, automatic responses) 

Adrenaline: The brain instantly prepares the body to respond to the threat by flooding adrenaline into the system (you physically feel strong cravings)

Singular focus: In oder to survive the threat, we have to put all our attention on it. (you become solely focused on your cravings because your brain thinks you need the substance to survive)

Automatic response: When under attack we need to think very fast (when you have a craving, reason & rationale does not make sense and you start to develop irrational reasons to use the substance when you clearly know the substance use is not good for you)

500

Name 5 coping skills that help you manage a craving. 

Mindfulness, prayer, reaching out to support, DBT Skills - TIPP/IMPROVE/ACCPETS, going to a meeting, distractions, exercise 

500

What is radical acceptance AND how can you use the skill during a crisis. 

Radical acceptance is the ability to accept situations that are outside of your control without judging them. It helps keep pain from turning into suffering. 

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