Protect Your Peace
Relapse Prevention
Stages of Change
Emotion Regulation
Miscellaneous
100

This is one healthy habit that can improve your mood daily.

What is exercise / sleep / eating well / hydration / routine? Various answers accepted :)

100

This is a plan made in advance for handling difficult moments.

What is a coping plan / relapse prevention plan?

100

This stage is where a person begins to think change might be needed.

What is contemplation?

100

This is the ability to notice and manage your emotions in a healthy way.

What is emotional regulation?

100

Spending time in this environment, even just 20 minutes, has been shown to reduce stress and improve mental health.

What is nature (or being outside)?

200

This is the long-term benefit of consistently choosing self-preservation over people-pleasing.

What is improved mental health, safety, and self-respect?

200

This is what "HALT" is used for in recovery.

What is checking emotional and physical needs to prevent relapse?

200

This stage involves preparing mentally or practically to make a change.

What is preparation?

200

You assume the worst possible outcome in a stressful moment. This thinking pattern is called this.

What is catastrophizing?

200

You avoid a problem because it feels uncomfortable, but it keeps getting worse over time. What is happening?

What is avoidance making the problem worse? 

(avoidance, cycle of avoidance, etc)

300

This is what your “gut feeling” is often warning you about in unsafe situations.

What is intuition / a red flag?

300

This is what “urge surfing” means in recovery.

What is riding out cravings without acting on them?

300

Someone is planning changes like scheduling appointments or setting goals. This stage.

What is preparation?

300

This is why learning emotional regulation is more effective than trying to “not feel emotions.”

What is emotions can’t be eliminated, only managed and responded to?

300

Why is it difficult to change unhealthy roles within a family system?

What is roles are reinforced over time and others resist change?

400

This is a coping skill used to slow down your body and mind before making a decision in a stressful moment.

What is grounding / deep breathing / pause technique?

400

This is the difference between a “trigger” and a “decision point” in relapse prevention.

What is- a trigger is external/internal cue, while a decision point is where action is chosen?

400

This is the difference between external pressure and internal motivation in stage progression.

What is external pressure may start movement, but internal motivation sustains change?

400

This is a healthy way to release emotions instead of acting on them impulsively.

What is journaling / talking it out / physical activity?

various answers accepted :)

400

A person changes behavior, but others interpret it negatively despite it being objectively healthier.
What does this reveal?

What is- perception is shaped by existing roles, not objective behavior?

500

You notice your environment keeps pulling you toward unhealthy choices. This is a long-term strategy to protect yourself.

What is change your environment, routines, or boundaries to support healthier behavior?

500

This is why recovery is described as a process rather than a single event.

What is because behavior change requires ongoing choices, not one-time effort?

500

A person successfully maintains change long-term despite ongoing stress and triggers. What factors are most likely supporting this?

What is strong coping skills, support systems, and stable routines?

500

Someone knows coping skills but still doesn’t use them in the moment. Why might that happen?

What is emotions can override thinking skills under stress?

500

This is something that can look like progress in recovery—but can actually be avoidance in disguise.

What is overworking? What is isolating? What is people-pleasing?

Varying responses accepted :)