TRIGGERS
COPING SKILLS
RELAPSE PREVENTION
RELATIONSHIPS
SELF-CARE
100

Question: 

What are the two main types of triggers?

Answer:
Internal and external triggers.

100

Question:
Name one healthy coping skill you can use when stressed.

Answer:
Examples include deep breathing, walking, calling someone, journaling, exercising, praying, listening to music, grounding, mindfulness.

100

Question:
True or False: Relapse begins with the first drink or drug.

Answer:
False. It often begins with emotional and mental relapse.

100

Question:
What is one characteristic of a healthy relationship?

Answer:
Trust, honesty, respect, communication, support, healthy boundaries.

100

Question:
Name one area of self-care besides physical health.

Answer:
Emotional, mental, spiritual, social, financial.

200

Question:
Name three examples of internal triggers.

Answer:
Feelings such as stress, anxiety, loneliness, anger, boredom, sadness, shame, excitement, or physical pain.

200

Question:
What is the difference between coping and avoiding?

Answer:
Coping helps deal with the problem or emotion. Avoiding temporarily escapes it.

200

Question:
Name one warning sign that someone may be heading toward relapse.

Answer:
Isolation, dishonesty, skipping meetings, romanticizing use, increased stress, poor self-care, stopping coping skills.

200

Question:
What is a boundary?

Answer:
A limit that protects your physical or emotional well-being.

200

Question:
Why is sleep important in recovery?

Answer:
It improves mood, decision-making, concentration, and reduces relapse risk.

300

Question:
Name three examples of external triggers.

Answer:
People who use substances, certain places, money, paydays, bars, parties, drug paraphernalia, specific songs, smells, anniversaries.

300

Question:
What grounding technique uses your five senses?

Answer:
The 5-4-3-2-1 grounding exercise.

300

Question:
HALT stands for what four conditions?

Answer:
Hungry
Angry
Lonely
Tired

300

Question:
True or False: Setting boundaries is selfish.

Answer:
False.

300

Question:
Name three healthy self-care activities.

Answer:
Exercise, Reading, Journaling, Prayer, Meditation, Healthy eating, Time outside,
Talking with friends, Hobbies

400

Question:
True or False: Avoiding every trigger forever is the goal of recovery.

Answer:
False. The goal is learning healthy ways to respond when triggers happen.

400

Question:
Why is having several coping skills better than relying on only one?

Answer:
Not every coping skill works in every situation, so having options increases success.

400

Question:
What should you do if you recognize several relapse warning signs?

Reach out immediately, use coping skills, attend a meeting, talk to your counselor, change your environment.

400

Question:
Name one sign that a relationship may be unhealthy for recovery.

Answer:
Pressure to use, dishonesty, manipulation, disrespect, controlling behavior, enabling.

400

Question:
True or False: Self-care is something you only do when you're stressed.

Answer:
False. It should be practiced consistently.

500

Question:
Someone says, "I wasn't craving until I drove past my old dealer's house." What type of trigger is this?

Answer:
An external trigger.

500

Question:
A craving suddenly hits. Name three healthy coping skills you could use immediately.


Answer:
Examples:

  • Call sponsor/support--Go for a walk--Deep breathing--Leave the situation--Pray--Journal--Drink water--Attend a meeting--Distract yourself--Practice mindfulness 
500

Question:
Why is honesty considered one of the strongest relapse prevention skills?

Answer:
Because relapse often grows in secrecy and denial.

500

Question:
Why is building a sober support network important?

Answer:
Support reduces isolation, increases accountability, and provides encouragement during difficult times.

500

Question:
How can neglecting self-care increase relapse risk?

Answer:
Poor sleep, stress, burnout, emotional overwhelm, and physical exhaustion reduce coping ability and increase vulnerability to cravings.

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