Core Concepts
Signs of Unmanageability
The Illusion of Control
Breaking Denial
Acceptance & Surrender
100

The foundational spiritual principle behind Step 1 that requires absolute truthfulness with oneself.

honesty

100

The physical, mental, or emotional state that occurs when your external life falls apart due to active addiction.

unmanageability

100

 The false belief that you can stop or limit your using or behavior anytime you want on willpower alone.

illusion of control

100

The primary psychological barrier that prevents a person from seeing the reality of their addiction.

denial

100

The action Step 1 calls for instead of fighting harder, which means to stop trying to control the uncontrollable.

yielding 

200

The two-part realization required to successfully complete Step 1.

 powerlessness and unmanageability

200

Engaging in behavior you explicitly do not want to do because of your substance use or behavior patterns.

loss of control

200

This psychological defense mechanism tells you that your situation "isn't that bad" compared to others.

minimization

200

Pointing out someone else’s worse behavior to justify your own actions and avoid looking at your problem.

comparison

200

The gut-level, emotional acceptance of utter defeat that differs completely from just an intellectual acknowledgment.

real admission 

300

The name of the textbook chapter that this specific game is based on.

Step 1

300

Frequently lying, making excuses, or shifting blame to hide the consequences of addiction from family or work.

external unmanageability

300

Making rules like "only drinking on weekends" or "only using after 6 PM" to prove you are still in charge.

controlled using strategies

300

The feeling of deep embarrassment or humiliation that often forces an addict to construct defensive lies.

shame 

300

Shifting your daily mental state from a chaotic "crisis mode" into this healthy, self-monitoring approach.

prevention mode 

400

Unlike traditional recovery texts, The 12 Steps Unplugged frames addiction specifically for this audience group.

young adults and teens

400

Experiencing severe internal chaos, anxiety, or depression even when your external life looks fine to others.

internal unmanageability

400

Escalating addictive behaviors in a frantic, superhuman effort to patch up your mistakes and hide the pain.

crisis mode

400

The moment a person finally looks at their true behaviors, financial loss, and broken relationships without making excuses.

facing the facts 

400

Conceding to your innermost self that you cannot manage your behavior alone allows you to open up to this vital asset.

outside help 

500

The baseline requirement for Step 1 that does not require spiritual faith, only an admission of the facts.

rigorous honesty

500

The pattern where an addict completely runs out of options, finding that no one believes their promises anymore.

hitting rock bottom

500

The dangerous mental trap where you rely entirely on your own mind and determination to cure a mind-based illness.

reliance on willpower

500

John R. emphasizes that this group of people is often the first to notice the unmanageability, even when the addict remains completely blind to it.

family members and loved ones

500

The paradox of Step 1: you must admit complete defeat in order to find this.

personal freedom