Recovered Not Cured
2 episodes tagged "Recovered Not Cured".

How Addiction Tricks Your Brain Into Craving More!
🔥 Your Brain's Not Just Tempted—It's Hijacked. That “just one drink” voice in your head? Yeah, it’s not you. It’s your addicted brain hijacking your reward system and screaming like a toddler denied a second cookie. A 2016 meta-analysis in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews found that addiction cues (like that neon Bud Light sign or a clinking glass) spike your dopamine like a Vegas jackpot. And once that hit comes? Logic taps out. The Big Book called this decades ago: Page XXIV — “The phenomenon of craving.” That’s not a mild want. That’s a full-blown tantrum. And let’s talk denial. Page 30 — “The idea that somehow, someday he will control and enjoy his drinking is the great obsession of every abnormal drinker.” If that hit a nerve, good. It should. You’re not sipping casually—you’re rolling dice with your life, over and over. A 2020 study in Addiction confirmed that overconfidence in your ability to moderate is one of the biggest predictors of relapse. So if you're still telling yourself “I got this” while blacking out once a week… Buddy, you don’t got this. Get real. Get help. Get sober. Or keep pretending moderation works—until it doesn’t.

The Truth About Relapse No One Tells You
💥 Relapse Isn’t Failure — It’s a Plot Twist. Now Flip the Script. Let’s get brutally honest: relapse doesn’t mean you’re weak—it means you’re human. But don’t you dare use that as a hall pass to keep falling off the wagon. If you’re relapsing, it’s not bad luck—it’s you ignoring flashing red warning signs while humming “I’m fine” with a lit match in your hand. Relapse is like signing up for a sequel you know sucks. You’ve seen Hangover Part II—why are you trying to live it now? Here’s the truth: Addiction is a chronic disease, not a bad haircut. It doesn’t just grow out and disappear. It needs consistent effort, not comfort zone coddling. But here’s the twist: relapse can sharpen your recovery. A 2020 study in Addiction Research found that people who relapse and recommit actually build stronger long-term sobriety—because they’ve seen the abyss and don’t want to go back. The Big Book says on page 559: “We are going to know a new freedom and a new happiness.” That ain’t fluff. That’s real. So don’t romanticize that bottle or baggie—it’s not your soulmate. It’s your abuser. You want freedom? You’ve gotta earn it. You’ve gotta fight. This is your wake-up call. Answer it.