Help Seeking
Coping Styles
Triggers and Stressors
Relationships and Boundaries
Wild Cards
100

Men often avoid entering treatment because they fear it makes them look like this.

What is weak?

100

Men are often socialized to externalize stress through this intense emotion.

What is anger?

100

Gender norms push men toward risky behavior, increasing exposure to these triggers.

What are high-risk situations (triggers)?

100

Women often struggle with this pattern where they focus on others instead of recovery.

What is people-pleasing?

100

This gender carries higher stigma for substance use, leading many to hide their use longer and enter treatment later.

What are women?

200

Women may struggle to attend treatment due to fear of losing this responsibility or role.

What is caregiving or child custody?

200

Women are often socialized to internalize feelings, leading to this emotional pattern.

What is guilt or shame?

200

Women often face stress from juggling multiple roles, increasing this emotional trigger.

What is overwhelm?

200

This type of relationship pattern involves prioritizing others to the point of losing oneself.

What is codependency?

200

Women often feel they must maintain the role of emotional anchor in families, known as this term.

What is emotional labor?

300

Gender-diverse people may avoid treatment programs because staff may lack this essential skill.

What is cultural competence or gender-affirming care?

300

Gender norms teach men to “push through,” leading to this maladaptive recovery behavior.

What is emotional suppression?

300

Gender-diverse individuals may experience triggers from misgendering or rejection, which is part of this larger issue.

What is discrimination?

300

In recovery, unhealthy relationships with people from your using past are considered what kind of risk?

What is a high-risk relationship?

300

Men who join peer support groups and share openly are practicing this essential recovery skill.

What is connection?

400

Men often have higher dropout rates in treatment because they struggle with this part of group therapy.

What is vulnerability or emotional sharing?

400

Women often cope by putting others first, which increases this relapse-related pattern.

What is self-neglect?

400

Pressure to live up to gendered expectations often causes this internal experience.

What is chronic stress?

400

Communicating needs clearly and respectfully is known as this communication style.

What is assertive communication?

400

Gender-diverse individuals benefit from programs that center this type of culturally respectful care.

What is affirming or inclusive treatment?

500

Avoiding help due to gender norms increases relapse risk by limiting access to this crucial recovery factor.

What is a support network?

500

This term describes hiding true emotions to appear “fine,” common in many genders during recovery.

What is masking?

500

Trying to force yourself into a gender role that doesn’t fit can create this emotional trigger that often precedes relapse.

What is identity distress?

500

Women often relapse under stress because they struggle to set this healthy skill in relationships.

What are boundaries?

500

Men often use substances to manage anger or stress because they were taught not to express this vulnerable emotion.

What is sadness?

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