Fun Recovery Questions
Addiction Myths
Boundaries
Emotions
Recovery Trivia
100

What is stronger: a craving that lasts forever or a craving that passes?

A craving that passes

100

True or False: Addiction is only a lack of willpower.

False — addiction involves brain changes, behavior patterns, environment, and emotional factors.

100

What is a boundary?

A limit you set to protect your well-being.

100

What emotion often signals that something important needs attention?

Any emotion (emotions provide information)


100

What are the three parts of the CBT triangle?

Thoughts, feelings, behaviors

200

Fill in the blank: “Progress, not ______.”

Perfection

200

True or False: A person can only recover if they hit “rock bottom.”

False — people can seek recovery at any stage.

200

True or False: Setting boundaries means you don’t care about others.

False.

200

What is the difference between feeling an emotion and acting on it?

Feelings are automatic; behaviors are choices.

200

What does HALT stand for?

Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired

300

What is one word that describes asking for help?

Strength

300

What is a common myth about people with substance use disorders?

That they are lazy, weak, or don’t care.

300

What is an example of a healthy boundary?

“I am not comfortable discussing that right now.”

300

Name one physical sign of anxiety.

Racing heart, sweating, tense muscles, stomach discomfort

300

What is a trigger?

Something that creates an emotional reaction or craving.

400

What is a healthy replacement for isolating?

Connecting with supportive people

400

Why do cravings happen even after someone stops using?

The brain remembers rewards and learned patterns associated with substance use.

400

What is the difference between a boundary and control?

Boundaries focus on your choices; control focuses on changing others.

400

What does emotional regulation mean?

Managing emotions in healthy ways without being controlled by them.

400

What is the opposite of isolation in recovery?

Connection/support


500

What is one thing recovery teaches people about themselves?

Self-awareness, resilience, growth, or personal strengths

500

Someone says, “I can stop anytime, I just choose not to.” What recovery concept challenges this belief?

Addiction impacts decision-making, cravings, and brain reward systems.

500

A friend pressures you to use substances. What boundary could you set?

“I’m choosing my recovery, and I won’t be around substance use.”

500

Someone says, “I’m angry, so I have to yell.” What skill can challenge this?

Pause, regulate, and choose a different response.

500

A person experiences a stressful event, notices cravings, reaches out, and uses coping skills instead of using. What recovery skill are they practicing?

Relapse prevention