Self Care
Coping Skills
Triggers
Stages of Relapse
Thinking Errors
100

Getting 7–9 hours of this each night can improve mood, thinking, and recovery success.

What is sleep?

100

This simple coping skill involves taking slow deep breathes at regular intervals and holding the breath for a specified period of time.

What is 'Box Breathing'?

100

These are people, places, or things that increase the urge to use substances.

What are triggers?

100

This is the first stage of relapse, where a person may not be thinking about using yet but begins neglecting self-care and coping skills.

What is emotional relapse?

100

This thinking error happens when a person sees situations as all good or all bad with no middle ground.

What is all-or-nothing thinking?

200

Eating balanced meals and staying hydrated are examples of taking care of this part of your health.

What is physical self-care?

200

This grounding technique uses your five senses to help bring attention back to the present moment during anxiety or cravings.

What is the 5-4-3-2-1 grounding technique?

200

Feeling stressed, angry, lonely, or anxious are examples of this type of trigger.

What are internal triggers?

200

In this stage of relapse, a person begins thinking about using again or romanticizing past substance use.

What is mental relapse?

200

Believing “I already messed up once, so I might as well keep using” is an example of this thinking error.

What is catastrophizing?

300

Taking breaks, relaxing, and doing enjoyable sober activities can help reduce this common relapse risk factor.

What is stress?

300

Calling a sponsor, trusted friend, or support person instead of isolating is an example of using this type of coping skill.

What is reaching out for support?

300

Seeing alcohol at a party or driving past a former drug dealer are examples of this kind of trigger.

What are external triggers?

300

Actually returning to substance use is known as this stage of relapse.

What is physical relapse?

300

This thinking error occurs when someone blames others for their choices or refuses to take responsibility for their behavior.

What is blaming?

400

Setting limits with unhealthy people or situations is an example of practicing these.

What are boundaries?

400

This coping strategy involves replacing negative or irrational thoughts with healthier and more realistic ones.

What is cognitive restructuring?

400

This relapse prevention strategy involves avoiding risky people, places, and situations whenever possible.

What is trigger avoidance?

400

Skipping meetings, isolating, and bottling up emotions are examples of these that may happen before a relapse.

What are warning signs?

400

Telling yourself “I can quit anytime I want” despite repeated negative consequences is an example of this thinking error.

What is denial?

500

This self-care concept reminds people in recovery to avoid becoming too Hungry, Angry, Lonely, or Tired.

What is HALT?

500

This relapse prevention coping skill encourages individuals to experience cravings like an ocean wave—without fighting them—until they naturally pass.

What is urge surfing?

500

This term describes when a person becomes overly confident in recovery and begins exposing themselves to unnecessary high-risk situations.

What is complacency?

500

This relapse prevention concept emphasizes that relapse is often a gradual process rather than a single event.

What is the relapse process?

500

This CBT concept involves identifying irrational thoughts and replacing them with healthier, more realistic ones.

What is cognitive restructuring?

M
e
n
u