Feeling guilty or ashamed of past behavior or actions during active addiction is natural and healthy. Research shows that if you maintain these types of toxic relationships, your chances of relapsing are greater. To avoid relapse and remain sober, it’s important to develop healthy relationships. These steps, when done with commitment, can result in sustained sobriety…
Category Archives: Sober living
Some AEDs have side effects that include lowering tolerance for alcohol. This means a person will become intoxicated faster than they used to before they were on the medication. This rapid intoxication can surprise a person and cause them embarrassment, stress, and anxiety — which can, in turn, trigger seizures. Statistical analyses were calculated using…
For example, a value of 3.6 for bipolar disorder indicates that illicit drug dependency became more than three times more likely in individuals with bipolar disorder than those without. The risk of an alcohol use disorder is highest in individuals with intermittent explosive disorder, dysthymia, ODD, bipolar disorder, and social phobia. In the chart, we…
If someone’s blood alcohol content is 0.08, it would take about five hours and 20 minutes for the body to metabolize the alcohol. It typically takes a person with a BAC of 0.20 anywhere from 12 to 14 hours to reach sobriety. Urine tests can detect alcohol for between 12 hours and 24 hours. This…
A halfway house is a transitional living facility for individuals in the early stages of recovery from substance abuse. It offers a safe and supportive place where they can continue their recovery from addiction to drugs or alcohol after leaving inpatient treatment programs, federal prison, or the streets as a homeless person. In some cases,…
Some will certainly remain, but even those aren’t necessarily long-game friendships. Sobriety is kind of like the fast-pass line at Disneyland, except the ride is growing up. So if all of your friends drink alongside you, then there’s no issue, right? Well, there’s a concept in psychology known as “confirmation bias,” and it means that…
It can indicate unhealthy coping mechanisms, lack of self-control, and potential challenges in communication and emotional well-being. Alcohol ruins relationships because it can fuel conflict and arguments, amplifying negative emotions and leading to heated disputes that escalate quickly and have long-lasting consequences on the relationship. Alcohol ruins relationships, creating a wide range of challenges and…