Recovery With Co-Occurring Disorders: Steps 4, 5 and 6
Accumulate a bunch of small positive accomplishments over a succession of ‘todays’, and you’ll be stunned at exactly how much your life has changed for the better.
Read MoreSelect Page
Posted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 4, 2012 | Addiction Clinicians, People in Recovery | 0 |
Accumulate a bunch of small positive accomplishments over a succession of ‘todays’, and you’ll be stunned at exactly how much your life has changed for the better.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 3, 2012 | Addiction Clinicians, People in Recovery | 0 |
Someone who’s concluded that he or she has a disease is far more likely to treat it than somebody who is taking another person’s word for it (no matter how many degrees that other person may have.)
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 2, 2012 | Addiction Clinicians, People in Recovery | 0 |
One key to success is learning recovery skills for both addictive disease and mental illness, and applying them together.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Dec 31, 2011 | Addiction Clinicians | 0 |
Short animated vignettes from the Life Renaissance Center treatment program.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Dec 9, 2011 | Families | 0 |
A primary enabler is someone whose well-established pattern of enabling permits the alcoholic or addict to continue drinking or drug use.
Read More