2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #5 โ€“ย Codependency A Helpful Concept Turned Toxic: A Lesson from Our Own History

Over the next several days, weโ€™ll be sharing 2025โ€™s posts with the most views. Today is #5. A few weeks ago on February 27th, Melody Beattie died at age 76. For those who may not know the name, she was an author and wrote a best-selling book called Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling … Continue reading 2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #5 โ€“ย Codependency A Helpful Concept Turned Toxic: A Lesson from Our Own History

2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #6 โ€“ย Revisiting William White: Can Recovering People Drink? – A Historical Footnote with Current World Relevance โ€“ William Stauffer

Over the next several days, weโ€™ll be sharing 2025โ€™s posts with the most views. Today is #6. "So what does one take from this interesting historical footnote? History promises us important lessons if we sit at her feet and listen carefully to her stories.โ€ โ€“ William White, Can Recovering People Drink?  I recently ran across … Continue reading 2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #6 โ€“ย Revisiting William White: Can Recovering People Drink? – A Historical Footnote with Current World Relevance โ€“ William Stauffer

Recovery Review as an Archive of Recovery Knowledge

By Archivo-FSP - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2942596 In reading this year's review of top articles at Recovery Review, I found myself suddenly overwhelmed by what the site has become over the years and by how impressed I am with it as the go-to for all the current debates and considerations in the field. … Continue reading Recovery Review as an Archive of Recovery Knowledge

2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #8 โ€“ย The Coproduction of a Recovery Evidence Base on the Frontiers of Future Recovery Research

Over the next several days, weโ€™ll be sharing 2025โ€™s posts with the most views. Today is #8. Frontiers of Recovery Research Series โ€“ William White Interview with Bill Stauffer   What an honor it is in my life to do this interview. I think the first time I ever heard the name William White was … Continue reading 2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #8 โ€“ย The Coproduction of a Recovery Evidence Base on the Frontiers of Future Recovery Research

2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #9 โ€“ย History Repeating โ€“ the โ€œOpioidโ€ Epidemic Supplanting the Recovery Movement: Pathology Over Resiliency and Healing

Over the next several days, we'll be sharing 2025's posts with the most views. Today is #9. โ€œThe historical sense involves a perception, not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presenceโ€ โ€• T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets The New Recovery Advocacy Movement got off the ground in America roughly three decades ago, … Continue reading 2025โ€™s Top Posts โ€“ #9 โ€“ย History Repeating โ€“ the โ€œOpioidโ€ Epidemic Supplanting the Recovery Movement: Pathology Over Resiliency and Healing

2025’s Top Posts – #11 – Expanding the Culture of Recovery

Over the next several days, we'll be sharing 2025's posts with the most views. Today is #11. (Originally posted as #10 in error.) I was first introduced to addiction and recovery being framed as cultures by the William White book Pathways: from the culture of addiction to the culture of recovery: a travel guide for … Continue reading 2025’s Top Posts – #11 – Expanding the Culture of Recovery

A List of Some Addiction-Related Mutual Aid Groups

I built a list of some addiction-related mutual-aid groups to use as an easy reference. I wanted it to reflect variety across a number of domains: primary substance(s), abstinence, moderation, medication status, the presence of co-occurring mental disorders, gender, cultures, agnosticism/atheism, family members, etc. And I wanted it to be a start, rather than try … Continue reading A List of Some Addiction-Related Mutual Aid Groups

“Who is missing from our meetings?”

Recently, I came across the 2026 Conference Agenda Report from the World Service Conference of Narcotics Anonymous. A recent post on Narcotics Anonymous sparked a lot of online discussion. It focused on professionals' lack of cognitive empathy and condescension toward NA. . . . they frame the ~250,000 Narcotics Anonymous members who are lay people, gathering in … Continue reading “Who is missing from our meetings?”

What does care for substance use problems look like?

What does care for substance use problems in the US look like? I don't really know. We hear a lot about substance use problem care dominated by an abstinence orientation. Is it? What form does most substance use care take? I don't really know. When these statements are made, they are often focused on specialty … Continue reading What does care for substance use problems look like?