This substance is a central nervous system depressant whose acute withdrawal can cause life-threatening seizures and delirium tremens (DTs).
Alcohol
This term describes the physical or psychological need to take higher doses of a substance over time to achieve the same initial effect.
Tolerance
This type of peer-led organization utilizes a structural framework centered on spiritual principles, personal inventories, and mutual accountability.
12-step program
This internal state is often mistaken for a primary emotion, but it usually functions as a secondary emotion that masks underlying hurt, fear, or shame.
Anger
This early phase of the relapse process occurs before a person even thinks about using, characterized by isolating, skipping groups, and neglecting self-care.
Emotional Relapse
This synthetic opioid is up to 50 times stronger than heroin and is frequently mixed into other illicit drugs without the user's knowledge.
Fentanyl
An intense, often overwhelming desire or urge to use a substance, frequently triggered by environmental cues or emotional stress.
Craving
This secular, science-based mutual support group focuses on self-empowerment and uses cognitive techniques rather than 12-step spirituality.
SMART Recovery
A state of physical, emotional, and mental exhaustion caused by excessive and prolonged stress, which can severely threaten early recovery.
Burnout
This cognitive warning sign involves glamorizing past substance use, remembering only the "good times," and forgetting the painful consequences that led to treatment.
Romanticizing
This prescription medication is an opioid antagonist used to rapidly reverse an opioid overdose by blocking opioid receptors in the brain.
Narcan (Naloxone)
This specific stage of the addiction cycle occurs when an individual experiences negative physical and emotional symptoms when the substance leaves their system.
Withdrawal
The practice of creating a structured schedule, maintaining basic hygiene, eating regular meals, and prioritizing sleep to stabilize early recovery.
Routine
This psychological concept involves the ability to withstand negative emotional states or physical discomfort without rushing to numb them with substances.
Distress tolerance
This specific type of warning sign happens when a person starts convincing themselves that they can safely use "just one drink" or switch to a different, less addictive substance.
Bargaining
This class of drugs, which includes medications like alprazolam and diazepam, carries a high risk of dependence and severe withdrawal if stopped abruptly.
Benzodiazepines
This psychological defense mechanism involves minimizing, hiding, or completely refusing to acknowledge the negative impact of substance use on one's life.
Denial
This therapeutic approach uses medications, in combination with counseling and behavioral therapies, to provide a whole-patient treatment.
Medication-Assisted Treatment
This deeply painful emotion involves the belief that one is fundamentally flawed, bad, or unworthy, distinct from guilt, which focuses on a specific behavior
Shame
This dangerous attitude occurs when a person becomes overconfident in their recovery, stops utilizing their support systems, and believes they no longer need to work a program.
Complacency
This chemical compound found in marijuana binds to cannabinoid receptors in the brain, causing the psychoactive "high."
THC
This brain structure acts as the emotional alarm system and is highly active during stress, anxiety, and the withdrawal stage of addiction.
Amygdala
This technique involves mentally playing out a craving to its actual, negative end conclusion rather than focusing only on the temporary high.
Playing the tape through
This term describes a person's capacity to bounce back, adapt, and grow stronger in the face of adversity, trauma, or significant stress.
Resilience
This cognitive warning sign involves developing a rigid "all-or-nothing" mindset in which a person believes their life cannot improve unless conditions are absolutely perfect, leading them to abandon their coping tools when minor setbacks occur.
Perfectionism (dichotomous thinking)