Coping Strategies
Support Systems
Relapse Prevention
Mental Health & Recovery
Healthy Lifestyle
100

What does the acronym HALT stand for, commonly used as a coping check-in during recovery?

  • A) Happy, Active, Lively, Thankful
  • B) Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired 
  • C) Hopeful, Aware, Loving, Tenacious
  • D) Healing, Accountable, Loyal, Trusting

 

  • B) Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired

Reasoning: HALT is a self-check tool used in recovery to identify four basic states that can trigger cravings. When you feel a craving, asking "Am I Hungry, Angry, Lonely, or Tired?" helps you address the root cause rather than turning to substances.

100

What is the primary purpose of a sponsor in programs like AA or NA?

  • A) To provide financial support for treatment
  • B) To offer guidance and lived experience in working a recovery program 
  • C) To serve as a licensed therapist
  • D) To attend court hearings on your behalf

B) To offer guidance and lived experience in working a recovery program 

Reasoning: A sponsor is someone who has sustained their own recovery and guides a newer member through the steps. They offer peer support, accountability, and lived experience — not clinical services.

100

What are the three stages of relapse often identified by clinicians?

  • A) Physical, mental, spiritual
  • B) Emotional, mental, physical 
  • C) Denial, anger, acceptance
  • D) Craving, using, recovery

B) Emotional, mental, physical

Reasoning: Gorski's Relapse Prevention model identifies relapse as a process: Emotional relapse (poor self-care, isolation), Mental relapse (thinking about using, bargaining), and Physical relapse (actual use). Catching it in the emotional stage is the most effective intervention point.

100

What is a "co-occurring disorder"?

  • A) Two people in recovery dating each other
  • B) Having both a substance use disorder and a mental health condition simultaneously 
  • C) A medical condition caused solely by drug use
  • D) A disorder that only occurs after long-term sobriety

B) Having both a substance use disorder and a mental health condition simultaneously

Reasoning: Co-occurring disorders (dual diagnosis) refer to the simultaneous presence of a substance use disorder and a mental health condition like depression, anxiety, or PTSD. Over 50% of people with a substance use disorder have a co-occurring condition, and treating both simultaneously produces far better outcomes.

100

Which lifestyle habit is most widely associated with supporting long-term recovery?

  • A) Sleeping as much as possible throughout the day
  • B) Regular physical exercise 
  • C) Drinking energy drinks to replace cravings
  • D) Avoiding all social events

B) Regular physical exercise

Reasoning: Regular exercise increases dopamine, serotonin, and endorphin levels, counteracting neurochemical imbalances caused by substance use. It also reduces anxiety, improves sleep, builds routine, and provides a healthy source of reward and accomplishment.

200

Which of the following is considered a healthy coping strategy for managing stress during recovery?

  • A) Isolating from others to avoid conflict
  • B) Engaging in deep breathing or mindfulness exercises 
  • C) Using a small amount of alcohol to take the edge off
  • D) Suppressing emotions until they go away

B) Engaging in deep breathing or mindfulness exercises ✅

Reasoning: Deep breathing and mindfulness activate the parasympathetic nervous system, reducing the stress response. They are evidence-based techniques widely used in CBT and recovery programs to manage cravings and emotional distress. 

200

Which of the following best describes a recovery support group?

  • A) A court-ordered therapy session
  • B) A voluntary gathering where people in recovery share experiences and mutual support 
  • C) A medically supervised detox program
  • D) A group that meets to discuss medication management

B) A voluntary gathering where people in recovery share experiences and mutual support

Reasoning: Recovery support groups like AA, NA, and SMART Recovery are peer-led, voluntary, free, and widely accessible. Research shows active participation significantly reduces relapse rates and increases long-term recovery outcomes.

200

A "trigger" in relapse prevention refers to:

  • A) A medical device used during detox
  • B) A person, place, thing, or feeling that stimulates cravings or the urge to use 
  • C) A slang term for a new recovery sponsor
  • D) A legal term related to drug charges

B) A person, place, thing, or feeling that stimulates cravings or the urge to use

Reasoning: Triggers are internal or external cues that activate the brain's conditioned craving response. Identifying personal triggers is foundational to any relapse prevention plan so that coping strategies can be deployed proactively.

200

 

Which of the following is a common reason people use substances to cope with mental health symptoms?

  • A) Substances always permanently improve mental health
  • B) Self-medication — temporarily reducing emotional pain or quieting distressing symptoms 
  • C) Mental health professionals recommend it for certain conditions
  • D) Substances have no actual effect on the brain

B) Self-medication — temporarily reducing emotional pain or quieting distressing symptoms

Reasoning: Self-medication is the process of using substances to manage untreated mental health symptoms. While substances may provide short-term relief, they worsen mental health conditions over time and create a destructive cycle of dependence and worsening symptoms.

200

Good sleep hygiene is especially important in recovery because poor sleep can:

  • A) Make recovery programs too easy to complete
  • B) Increase cravings, irritability, and impaired decision-making 
  • C) Only affect people with diagnosed sleep disorders
  • D) Have no meaningful impact on recovery

B) Increase cravings, irritability, and impaired decision-making

Reasoning: Sleep disturbances are extremely common in early recovery. Poor sleep impairs prefrontal cortex function — the brain region responsible for decision-making and impulse control — making cravings harder to resist and emotional regulation more difficult.

300

In recovery, "urge surfing" is a technique used to:

  • A) Find new social activities near the ocean
  • B) Suppress cravings using willpower alone
  • C) Observe cravings non-judgmentally and ride them out like a wave 
  • D) Immediately call a sponsor when a craving hits

C) Observe cravings non-judgmentally and ride them out like a wave

Reasoning: Urge surfing teaches individuals that cravings rise and fall like ocean waves. Rather than fighting or giving in, you observe the craving with curiosity. Cravings typically peak within 15–30 minutes and subside on their own.

300

When rebuilding relationships damaged by substance use, which approach is most recommended in recovery?

  • A) Demand immediate forgiveness and move on quickly
  • B) Avoid the topic to prevent conflict
  • C) Make amends through consistent changed behavior over time 
  • D) Explain that the substance was responsible, not you

C) Make amends through consistent changed behavior over time

Reasoning: Steps 8 and 9 of 12-step programs focus on making amends through demonstrated, sustained behavioral change — not just verbal apologies. Trust is rebuilt through consistent actions over time, not words alone.

300

What is a relapse prevention plan?

  • A) A legal document signed at the start of treatment
  • B) A structured personal strategy identifying triggers, warning signs, and specific coping responses 
  • C) A list of medications prescribed during recovery
  • D) A plan to gradually reduce substance use over time

B) A structured personal strategy identifying triggers, warning signs, and specific coping responses

Reasoning: A relapse prevention plan is a personalized, written document developed with a counselor or therapist. It typically includes triggers, early warning signs, coping strategies, emergency contacts, and commitments to the recovery community.

300

Post-Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS) refers to:

  • A) The initial detox phase in a medical facility
  • B) Extended withdrawal symptoms that can last months to years after stopping substance use 
  • C) Withdrawal from psychiatric medications
  • D) A legal term related to substance use

B) Extended withdrawal symptoms that can last months to years after stopping substance use

Reasoning: PAWS involves lingering neurological symptoms after acute withdrawal ends — including mood swings, cognitive difficulties, sleep problems, and anhedonia. Understanding PAWS helps people in recovery be patient with the healing process and reduces relapse risk from discouragement.

300

The concept of "structure and routine" in recovery is important because:

  • A) It prevents people in recovery from having any fun
  • B) Idle time and unpredictability are linked to increased craving and relapse risk 
  • C) Recovery programs require strict scheduling by law
  • D) Routine eliminates the need for professional support

B) Idle time and unpredictability are linked to increased craving and relapse risk

Reasoning: Unstructured time is a significant relapse risk factor because boredom and lack of purpose create vulnerability to cravings. A consistent daily routine involving meaningful activity — work, service, meetings, exercise — provides purpose and reduces opportunities for cravings to escalate.

400

A person in recovery notices they are beginning to romanticize their past substance use. The best coping response is to:

  • A) Reflect fondly on the positive memories to boost morale
  • B) Play the tape through — remembering the full consequences of use 
  • C) Avoid thinking about the past entirely
  • D) Discuss the good times with a non-recovery friend

B) Play the tape through - remembering the full consequences of use

Reasoning: "Playing the tape through" is a key cognitive technique in relapse prevention. You continue the memory beyond the initial high to its full consequences — the withdrawal, shame, and lost relationships — countering the brain's tendency to selectively recall only the pleasurable aspects.

400

SMART Recovery differs from 12-step programs primarily because it:

  • A) Requires a medical diagnosis before joining
  • B) Is based on a spiritual framework and belief in a higher power
  • C) Uses a science-based, self-empowerment model without reliance on a higher power 
  • D) Is exclusively for people using medication-assisted treatment

C) Uses a science-based, self-empowerment model without reliance on a higher power

Reasoning: SMART Recovery is grounded in cognitive-behavioral and motivational enhancement research. It does not use a spiritual framework, making it an important alternative for individuals who are secular or prefer an evidence-based, self-directed approach.

400

The "seemingly irrelevant decisions" (SIDs) concept in relapse prevention refers to:

  • A) Random choices that have no effect on recovery
  • B) Decisions that appear harmless but gradually move someone closer to relapse 
  • C) Medical decisions made during inpatient treatment
  • D) Healthy lifestyle changes that seem unnecessary

B) Decisions that appear harmless but gradually move someone closer to relapse

Reasoning: SIDs are choices that seem unrelated to substance use but create relapse-conducive situations — like agreeing to go to a party "just to socialize." Recognizing SIDs helps people see how they may unconsciously set up relapses.

400

A client in recovery is prescribed an antidepressant by their psychiatrist and asks if taking it means they're "not really sober." The best response is:

  • A) Yes — any mood-altering medication compromises sobriety
  • B) No — medications prescribed and monitored by a doctor to treat a legitimate condition are not considered sobriety violations 
  • C) It depends on which 12-step group they attend
  • D) They should stop the antidepressant and use therapy alone

B) No — medications prescribed and monitored by a doctor to treat a legitimate condition are not considered sobriety violations

Reasoning: There is an important distinction between misusing substances and taking prescribed medications under medical supervision. Antidepressants are not addictive and treat a legitimate co-occurring diagnosis. Stigma around psychiatric medication in some recovery communities can be harmful and must be addressed clinically.

400

Nutrition plays a role in recovery because chronic substance use often leads to:

  • A) Enhanced nutrient absorption and improved digestion
  • B) Nutritional deficiencies that affect mood, energy, and brain function 
  • C) A naturally balanced diet regardless of food choices
  • D) Reduced appetite that must be maintained in recovery

B) Nutritional deficiencies that affect mood, energy, and brain function

Reasoning: Chronic substance use commonly depletes key nutrients including B vitamins, magnesium, zinc, and amino acids. These deficiencies contribute to depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment. Nutritional rehabilitation supports brain healing and emotional stability, which are foundational to sustained recovery.

500

DBT introduces the "TIPP" skill for managing intense emotional crises. What does TIPP stand for?

  • A) Talk, Identify, Pause, Plan
  • B) Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Progressive relaxation 
  • C) Trust, Inspire, Persist, Perform
  • D) Thought-stop, Integrate, Predict, Prevent

B) Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Progressive relaxation 

Reasoning: TIPP is a DBT distress tolerance skill targeting the body's physiology. Cold temperature activates the dive reflex, intense exercise burns adrenaline, paced breathing slows the nervous system, and progressive relaxation releases tension — all essential tools in early recovery.

500

Research on social support in recovery suggests which of the following is the most protective factor against relapse?

  • A) Having a large number of social media followers
  • B) Having at least one close, sober confidant who understands recovery 
  • C) Avoiding all social situations to reduce triggers
  • D) Maintaining friendships with people who use substances moderately

B) Having at least one close, sober confidant who understands recovery

Reasoning: Studies consistently show that even one strong, supportive relationship with someone who understands recovery dramatically reduces relapse risk. Quality of connection matters more than quantity.

500

According to research on the abstinence violation effect (AVE), when someone slips after a period of abstinence, the greatest predictor of whether the slip becomes a full relapse is:

  • A) The type of substance used during the slip
  • B) How long the person was abstinent before the slip
  • C) How the person cognitively and emotionally interprets the slip 
  • D) Whether or not a sponsor was contacted before using

C) How the person cognitively and emotionally interprets the slip

Reasoning: The Abstinence Violation Effect shows that how someone interprets a slip is the strongest predictor of what follows. Viewing it as proof of failure leads to continued use; viewing it as a temporary setback leads to a quicker return to recovery.

500

Trauma-Informed Care (TIC) in recovery settings is based on which foundational understanding?

  • A) Trauma is irrelevant to substance use disorders
  • B) Clients must disclose all trauma before treatment can begin
  • C) Recognizing that trauma is widespread, and that services should avoid re-traumatization while promoting safety, trust, and empowerment 
  • D) Trauma should be processed in group settings as the primary modality

C) Recognizing that trauma is widespread, and that services should avoid re-traumatization while promoting safety, trust, and empowerment

Reasoning: SAMHSA's (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration) Trauma-Informed Care model shifts the question from "What's wrong with you?" to "What happened to you?" It emphasizes safety, trustworthiness, peer support, collaboration, and empowerment — creating an environment where healing can occur without compounding prior harm.

500

Research on Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention (MBRP) suggests that regular mindfulness practice primarily helps by:

  • A) Eliminating all negative emotions permanently
  • B) Increasing the pleasant effects of substances if used again
  • C) Strengthening the ability to observe cravings and emotional states without automatically reacting to them 
  • D) Replacing the need for any other form of professional treatment

C) Strengthening the ability to observe cravings and emotional states without automatically reacting to them

MBRP teaches practitioners to observe internal experiences — including cravings and difficult emotions — with awareness and non-reactivity. Clinical trials show MBRP reduces substance use, craving severity, and depressive symptoms by creating space between stimulus and response rather than acting on impulse.

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