We Lack a United Voice in the Recovery Movement

"With the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water markโ€”that place where the wave finally broke and rolled backโ€ โ€“ Hunter S. Thompson" Collection of 2000s recovery advocacy ephemera. (Credit: Illinois Addiction Studies Archive) This week I am attending the annual conference of the National Alliance on Recovery Residences (NARR). NARR is … Continue reading We Lack a United Voice in the Recovery Movement

Long Term Recovery โ€“ the Policy Opportunities of Demand Reduction to Strengthen Our Nation

Many years ago, I met with a conservative member of Congress from my home state of Pennsylvania who eventually went on to the US Senate. I was relatively new to legislative meetings but quite passionate about recovery, even in those days. His background before serving politically was in international economics. When I got done explaining … Continue reading Long Term Recovery โ€“ the Policy Opportunities of Demand Reduction to Strengthen Our Nation

7-OH and the Question of Harm Production

This guest post is by Lee Holley, LCSW, LCDC, PSS. Lee is a psychotherapist based in Texas. He specializes in therapy for people with alcohol and other drug problems through a recovery-oriented harm reduction lens, combining clinical expertise with lived experience in long-term recovery. As a psychotherapist who bases my philosophy of treating alcohol and … Continue reading 7-OH and the Question of Harm Production

History Repeating โ€“ the โ€œOpioidโ€ Epidemic Supplanting the Recovery Movement: Pathology Over Resiliency and Healing

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, during a time when addiction recovery policy and practice had fundamentally lost its way. In that era, … Continue reading History Repeating โ€“ the โ€œOpioidโ€ Epidemic Supplanting the Recovery Movement: Pathology Over Resiliency and Healing

Gratitude Friday โ€“ 9 5 25 National Recovery Month and the Giants Whose Shoulders We Stand On

Note to readers โ€“ as a practice of gratitude, for over five years I have posted a weekly gratitude musing at Billstauffer.net. This week, I decided to post it at Recovery Review as well given the content. Just in case anyone may not be aware, September is National Recovery Month. As this link explains, National … Continue reading Gratitude Friday โ€“ 9 5 25 National Recovery Month and the Giants Whose Shoulders We Stand On

Definitions and Measurement of Recovery, Where We Have Come from and Where We Need to Go – Jason Schwartz

Frontiers of Recovery Research Interview Series Interview โ€“ William Stauffer In April of 2024, William White asked me to present his keynote to the first annual Consortium on Addiction Recovery Science conference. It was titled Frontiers of Recovery Research and it articulates critical factors of investigation in respect to expanding recovery into the future across … Continue reading Definitions and Measurement of Recovery, Where We Have Come from and Where We Need to Go – Jason Schwartz

Social Transmission of Recovery as a Helix of Connectivity, not a Service Checklist: A Conversation with Dr David Best

The Frontiers of Recovery Research Interview Series โ€“ William Stauffer What is this series of interviews? In April of 2024, I had the distinct honor of being asked by William White author and thought leader of the new recovery advocacy movement to present his words as the keynote to open up the first annual NIDA … Continue reading Social Transmission of Recovery as a Helix of Connectivity, not a Service Checklist: A Conversation with Dr David Best

Cultural Coproduction in Recovery Science: A Conversation with Mark Sanders

The Frontiers of Recovery Research Interview Series โ€“ William Stauffer What is this series of interviews? In April of 2024, I had the distinct honor of being asked by William White author and thought leader of the new recovery advocacy movement to present his words as the keynote to open up the first annual NIDA … Continue reading Cultural Coproduction in Recovery Science: A Conversation with Mark Sanders