Classic recovery acronym stands for four vulnerable physical and emotional states that instantly prime a person for relapse: Hungry, Angry, Lonely, and Tired.
What is HALT?
Core concept involves acknowledging the painful, hard reality of an overwhelming situation exactly as it is, without making excuses or fighting reality.
What is Radical Acceptance?
This clear communication tool allows you to state a firm boundary regarding your personal recovery needs without directly attacking or blaming the other person.
What is an "I" statement?
This powerful internal driving force is what a client is experiencing when they state they want their sobriety more right now than they ever did in previous recovery attempts.
What is high resolve (or internal motivation)?
This behavioral practice involves organizing your day into dedicated slots for tasks and emails to eliminate sporadic, daily chaos and reduce anxiety.
What is time-blocking (or structured routine)?
Refers to the split-second window of opportunity between encountering an external trigger and executing a behavioral reaction where choice actually lives.
What is "The Pause" (or the gap)?
This is the cognitive skill of stepping away from polarized, rigid, "black-and-white" thinking to find balanced solutions to complex emotional problems.
What is cognitive flexibility (or finding the grey area)?
When family members tell someone to "step up" without understanding the historical hardships that person has survived, they are failing to see the situation from this.
What is the individual's perspective?
Anger is frequently described as this psychological professional because its primary job is to stand guard and protect more vulnerable emotions like hurt, grief, or shame.
What is a bodyguard (or secondary emotion)?
This structural action plan is put into place before discharge to bridge the gap between residential care and home, typically involving 3 days of clinical support per week.
What is an Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)?
When an individual encounters an old acquaintance, environment, or routine that actively pulls them back into old, destructive patterns, they are experiencing this type of risk factor.
What is an external trigger (or negative environmental tie)?
Gentle internal practice involves treating oneself with understanding after a moment of weakness or setback, embracing the belief that "tomorrow is a new day."
What is self-compassion?
This difficult, protective boundary choice is sometimes required when a relationship or family dynamic continuously pulls a person down into a negative lifestyle.
What is cutting off contact (or going no-communication)?
This iron-clad realization is made when a person notices they are excellent at giving great guidance to others but struggle to apply that same guidance to their own life.
What is the "Sports Coach" paradox (or lack of self-accountability)?
Taking a strategic time-out, utilizing deep breathing patterns, or physically removing yourself from a high-tension room are all forms of this reset tool.
What is a somatic reset (or physical de-escalation)?
This term describes the internal, automatic thought process that tells an individual, "If I can't do this perfectly today, I shouldn't even bother trying."
What is perfectionism (or all-or-nothing/black-and-white thinking)?
This distortion happens when you look at an old acquaintance's life milestones or success outside and decide that you are completely lagging behind, spiking your personal distress.
What is external comparison?
This heavy, historical emotion often hits an individual when they realize past choices or weaknesses forced loved ones or children to step into caregiver roles.
What is relationship guilt (or parental shame)?
This state of mind occurs when a person relies on an external substance (like kratom) to manage or numb daily stress, leaving them completely unpracticed in sitting with raw feelings
What is the "addict mentality" (or chemical emotional regulation)?
Choosing to attend a group session to absorb peer feedback, track the speaker, and process material internally without verbally sharing is called this.
What is active listening (or passive participation style)?
Early-warning indicator that your internal thermometer is rising toward an explosive reaction, often felt as a tight chest, clenched jaw, or racing heart.
What is a physiological anger trigger?
Moving from an emotional baseline of a 10 down to a manageable 4 after practicing mindfulness is clinically referred to as this.
What is emotional stabilization (or down-regulation)?
This is the underlying psychological mechanism that tricks an individual into prioritizing the comfort of a toxic family member over their own long-term safety.
What is codependency (or external validation seeking)?
Experiencing a massive financial inheritance or a sudden professional setback can both serve as this major recovery challenge, proving that sudden life adjustments threaten stability.
What is a high-stress life transition?
This is the specific category of clinical tools used to safely tolerate and survive high-intensity cravings or emotional distress without blowing up or turning to a substance.
What are distress-tolerance skills?