Fight Addiction Stop Blaming Yourself and Take Back Power!
🧠“You Are Not Your Addiction—Break the Loop” | Psychology-Based Recovery Short
Let’s get one thing straight: you are not your thoughts. You’re not your addiction. You’re not your depression. You’re a person—and you can fight back.
When you’re in recovery, your brain doesn’t always play fair. You’ll hear lies like, “Just one more shot won’t hurt,” or “One more day in bed doesn’t matter.” But these lies? They’re deadly. Every time you listen, you’re not just delaying healing—you’re deepening the hole.
So what can you do?
đź§© Stop blaming yourself by default. Ask yourself:
Did I act with malicious intent?
Was I being impulsive, or did I think it through?
Did I try to do the right thing?
If the answer is yes—you tried—you’re probably not the problem.
But here’s the kicker: the addiction-depression feedback loop is real. You feel terrible, so you use. You use, so you feel worse. And it spirals. Why? Because we’re creatures of pattern. Habitual. Predictable.
But that also means we can rewire. That loop? It’s strong—but it’s not unbreakable.
You have the power to pause, reflect, and reroute. Every time you do, you're reclaiming control.
This video is for general educational purposes and is not a substitute for professional medical or mental health advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are in crisis or having thoughts of harming yourself, call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or go to your nearest emergency room.

About Michael
I'm Michael, a mental health creator, recovered alcoholic, future therapist, and the host of Sober Psychology. After realizing how much of the traditional mental health conversation misses the mark, I decided to build a space dedicated to raw, unfiltered self-examination and personal healing. My approach combines psychological principles with brutal honesty and hard truths, cutting through the noise to help people navigate their own growth. No toxic positivity, no hidden shame—just real conversations about what it actually takes to heal.