You are 3 weeks sober. An old friend texts you and asks you to meet at a bar “just to hang out.”
What would you do?
A. Go to prove you can handle it
B. Ignore the text and isolate at home
C. Suggest meeting somewhere safe like a coffee shop
D. Go for only 15 minutes
Correct Answer: C. Suggest meeting somewhere safe like a coffee shop
WHY: Early recovery is a vulnerable time. Going to a bar increases exposure to triggers and cravings. Recovery is not about “proving” strength — it is about protecting sobriety. Choosing a safer environment shows healthy boundaries and planning
You miss two recovery meetings in a row and begin telling yourself:
“I’m fine now. I probably don’t need support anymore.”
What would be the healthiest action?
A. Continue skipping meetings
B. Reach out to support before isolation increases
C. Test whether you can use socially now
D. Wait until things get worse
Correct Answer: B. Reach out to support before isolation increases
WHY: Relapse often begins emotionally and mentally before physical use happens. Pulling away from support can increase denial, loneliness, and risky thinking.
You are feeling anxious and restless at night.
Which coping skill is healthiest?
A. Taking more medication than prescribed
B. Calling a trusted support person
C. Keeping all feelings inside
D. Drinking alcohol to sleep
Correct Answer: B. Calling a trusted support person
WHY: Connection reduces isolation and emotional intensity. Healthy support systems help people regulate emotions without turning to substances
A friend pressures you by saying:
“If you were really fun, you’d drink with us.”
What is the healthiest response?
A. Give in to avoid conflict
B. Set a boundary and protect your recovery
C. Stay silent and resentful
D. Lie about why you cannot drink
Correct Answer: B. Set a boundary and protect your recovery
WHY: Healthy recovery includes learning boundaries. Protecting sobriety is more important than pleasing others
You think:
“I’ve already relapsed once, so recovery is impossible for me.”
What type of thinking is this?
A. Balanced thinking
B. Catastrophizing / all-or-nothing thinking
C. Healthy self-reflection
D. Problem-solving
Correct Answer: B. Catastrophizing / all-or-nothing thinking
WHY: Addiction often involves distorted thinking patterns. Recovery improves when people learn to challenge hopeless or extreme thoughts
You had a stressful day at work and suddenly think:
“One drink would calm me down.”
What is the healthiest response?
A. Use a coping skill first before making any decision
B. Keep thinking about the drink until the feeling passes
C. Call the liquor store to see what time they close
D. Remind yourself you deserve a reward
Correct Answer: A. Use a coping skill first before making any decision
WHY: Cravings are temporary. Healthy coping skills like calling support, exercising, journaling, deep breathing, or attending a meeting can reduce urges and help the brain relearn safer ways to manage stress.
A family member offers you pain pills after a minor injury.
What should you do first?
A. Take them immediately because they are prescribed
B. Hide the pills for emergencies
C. Talk honestly with your doctor and support system
D. Take extra because you have a tolerance
Correct Answer: C. Talk honestly with your doctor and support system
WHY: People in recovery benefit from honesty, accountability, and medical guidance. Some medications can increase relapse risk, especially without supervision.
You feel overwhelmed after an argument.
What is the healthiest next step?
A. Immediately react in anger
B. Use grounding skills before responding
C. Leave and buy substances
D. Post about it online while upset
Correct Answer: B. Use grounding skills before responding
WHY: Grounding helps calm the nervous system. Recovery involves learning to pause instead of reacting impulsively
Your partner becomes upset when you attend recovery meetings.
What is the healthiest response?
A. Stop going to avoid arguments
B. Use guilt to manipulate them back
C. Communicate honestly about why recovery matters
D. Secretly attend meetings and hide everything
Correct Answer: C. Communicate honestly about why recovery matters
WHY: Open communication and honesty strengthen relationships. Recovery often requires difficult but healthy conversations
You feel emotionally numb and disconnected.
What would likely help most?
A. Isolating more
B. Using substances to feel something
C. Practicing emotional awareness and talking openly
D. Pretending everything is fine
Correct Answer: C. Practicing emotional awareness and talking openly
WHY: Avoiding emotions often strengthens addiction patterns. Recovery includes learning to identify, tolerate, and express feelings safely.
You notice certain music reminds you of using substances.
What is the best recovery-focused response?
A. Listen anyway because music cannot affect recovery
B. Avoid all music forever
C. Recognize it as a trigger and create healthier playlists
D. Use substances while listening to the music one last time
Correct Answer: C. Recognize it as a trigger and create healthier playlists
WHY: Triggers can be emotional, environmental, sensory, or social. Recovery involves learning what activates cravings and making healthier choices instead of pretending triggers do not exist.
You feel ashamed after making a mistake and think:
“I already messed up, so why even try?”
What recovery skill would help most?
A. Self-compassion and reaching out for support
B. Giving up completely
C. Keeping the shame secret
D. Using substances to numb the feeling
Correct Answer: A. Self-compassion and reaching out for support
WHY: Shame often fuels addiction. Recovery grows when people learn to respond to mistakes with accountability, honesty, and self-compassion instead of self-destruction.
You are lonely on a weekend and notice cravings increasing.
What is the BEST recovery-focused choice?
A. Stay alone all weekend
B. Contact sober supports or attend a meeting
C. Scroll through old photos from active addiction
D. Visit people you used with “just to talk”
Correct Answer: B. Contact sober supports or attend a meeting
WHY: Loneliness is a major relapse trigger. Healthy connection builds accountability, support, and emotional safety.
Someone in recovery asks you for money, but you suspect they may use it for substances.
What is the healthiest choice?
A. Give money no matter what
B. Ignore them completely forever
C. Offer support without enabling harmful behavior
D. Shame them for asking
Correct Answer: C. Offer support without enabling harmful behavior
WHY: Healthy support does not mean enabling addiction. Compassion and boundaries can exist together.
“Nobody cares about me anyway.”
What is the healthiest recovery response?
A. Treat the thought as a fact
B. Challenge the thought and seek connection
C. Withdraw from everyone
D. Punish yourself emotionally
Correct Answer: B. Challenge the thought and seek connection
WHY: Negative core beliefs can fuel shame, isolation, and relapse. Recovery involves learning to question distorted beliefs and build healthier relationships.
You are feeling confident in recovery and think:
“I can probably hang around people who use now without a problem.”
What is the healthiest response?
A. Test yourself to see if you can handle it
B. Recognize overconfidence as a relapse warning sign
C. Go only if someone else is with you
D. Use substances “just one time” to prove control
Correct Answer: B. Recognize overconfidence as a relapse warning sign
WHY:
Overconfidence can lower awareness of risk and weaken healthy boundaries. Recovery works best when people stay honest about triggers and protect themselves from unnecessary temptation.
You stop sleeping well, stop eating regularly, and begin isolating from others.
What stage of relapse may already be happening?
A. Physical relapse only
B. Emotional relapse
C. Full recovery
D. Social relapse
Correct Answer: B. Emotional relapse
WHY:
Relapse often begins long before substance use occurs. Emotional relapse includes poor self-care, isolation, irritability, bottling emotions up, and neglecting recovery routines.
You are overwhelmed emotionally and notice the urge to escape your feelings immediately.
What coping skill would help MOST in this moment?
A. Acting impulsively
B. Grounding yourself and slowing down the moment
C. Avoiding everyone for several days
D. Numbing the emotions however possible
Correct Answer: B. Grounding yourself and slowing down the moment
WHY:
Strong emotions can make people reactive. Grounding helps calm the nervous system and creates space to make healthier decisions instead of impulsive ones.
A loved one constantly rescues someone from the consequences of addiction by giving money and covering up problems.
What is this called?
A. Healthy support
B. Tough love
C. Enabling
D. Accountability
Correct Answer: C. Enabling
WHY:
Enabling removes natural consequences and can unintentionally support continued addiction. Healthy support balances compassion with accountability and boun
You think:
“If people really knew me, they wouldn’t want me around.”
What is this most connected to?
A. Healthy self-esteem
B. Shame and negative core beliefs
C. Confidence
D. Problem-solving skills
Correct Answer: B. Shame and negative core beliefs
WHY:
Deep shame often creates beliefs of being unlovable, defective, or unwanted. These thoughts can increase isolation, depression, and relapse risk if left unchalleng
You unexpectedly run into someone you used substances with. They invite you to “catch up later.”
What is the BEST recovery-focused response?
A. Meet up briefly to avoid seeming rude
B. Ignore your discomfort and exchange numbers
C. Politely decline and contact a support person afterward
D. Spend time with them but avoid talking about substances
Correct Answer: C. Politely decline and contact a support person afterward
WHY:
Unexpected triggers can activate cravings, emotions, and old patterns quickly. Reaching out for support afterward helps reduce isolation and strengthens accountability.
You relapse after several months sober and feel ashamed.
What is the healthiest next step?
A. Hide the relapse from everyone
B. Give up because recovery failed
C. Be honest, seek support, and learn from the relapse
D. Continue using because the sobriety is “ruined” anyway
Correct Answer: C. Be honest, seek support, and learn from the relapse
WHY:
A relapse does not erase progress. Shame and secrecy increase the risk of continued use. Recovery grows through honesty, accountability, and understanding what led to the relapse.
You feel emotionally drained and realize you have not done anything enjoyable or healthy for yourself in weeks.
What recovery concept is MOST important here?
A. Self-care supports recovery stability
B. Recovery should always feel miserable
C. Coping skills are unnecessary long-term
D. Isolation helps people recharge best
Correct Answer: A. Self-care supports recovery stability
WHY:
Recovery is not only about avoiding substances. Healthy routines, rest, connection, enjoyment, nutrition, and emotional care all reduce vulnerability to relapse.
You notice you constantly ignore your own needs to keep others happy, even when it hurts your recovery.
What would be the healthiest change?
A. Continue people-pleasing to avoid conflict
B. Begin practicing healthy boundaries and assertiveness
C. Expect others to read your mind
D. Stop caring about everyone completely
Correct Answer: B. Begin practicing healthy boundaries and assertiveness
WHY:
Many people struggling with addiction or codependency prioritize others while neglecting themselves. Healthy boundaries improve self-respect, emotional safety, and recovery stability.
You notice yourself blaming everyone else for your problems and refusing to look at your own choices.
What recovery skill is MOST needed?
A. Denial
B. Accountability and self-reflection
C. Avoidance
D. Defensiveness
Correct Answer: B. Accountability and self-reflection
WHY:
Recovery requires honesty and personal responsibility. Self-reflection helps people recognize patterns, make changes, and build healthier coping strategies.