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Addiction treatment and recovery can be some of the most challenging times in a person’s life. Lessons learned and changes implemented can be so daunting that we forget to celebrate them as healthy, positive changes. You may not be in a place at this time where you can see recovery as something to celebrate. The journey is different for everyone, but the day will come. Until then, let’s consider some of the ways people celebrate recovery and try to better understand what it means to celebrate recovery. 

Before diving into things, it seems necessary to mention that once you are in recovery, each day is something to celebrate. Recovery is a long-term journey, but when we view it that way, it becomes daunting or overbearing. For that reason, we must celebrate each minute, each hour, and each day while sober. Now, let’s learn to celebrate recovery, not just from one year to the next, but for each day sober. 

Understanding the Evolution of Recovery

The concept of celebrating one’s recovery may be uncomfortable for some people. However, that could be because of the negative stigmatization of addiction treatment and recovery over the years. For decades, substance use disorder (SUD), behavioral addictions, and mental health conditions in general were extremely taboo. Admittedly, some conversations surrounding these topics continue to be uncomfortable for many individuals today, but we’ve definitely made progress. 

Along with stigmatization, people back then, and some nowadays, continue rejecting the idea of SUD as a real condition. Unfortunately, this sometimes makes it hard for people to find support from friends and family members who maintain an ignorant opinion on the subject matter. The first step toward treatment is an acknowledgment of a problem. It’s hard to acknowledge the problem when so many are in disbelief of its existence. 

Thankfully, there are tons of addiction treatment facilities nationwide — like West Coast Recovery Centers — that understand the very real dangers of addiction and can help you achieve recovery. National Recovery Month can help reduce stigmas surrounding recovery. It has helped evolve the recovery process over the years by bringing substance use and mental illness into the light. This time also allows people to focus on relapse prevention and substance abuse psychoeducation. It’s only through continual education that we can effectively reduce stigmatization regarding substance use, addiction, and mental health conditions. 

How to Measure the Success of Your Recovery

Before you begin celebrating recovery, it might be helpful to learn how to track your recovery progress. How you track your progress may vary, but some ways to go about it include: 

  • Setting goals for yourself: Throughout recovery, goal-setting can be especially helpful, beginning with small achievable goals and leading up to bigger goals. 
  • Journaling: This is an excellent way to track progress and helps you expose triggers, document positive and negative responses to these triggers, and indicate opportunities for growth and improvement. 
  • Listening to your body: Paying attention to sleeping patterns, eating habits, fitness, and physical responses to triggers and cravings can improve mind-body awareness and improve your overall wellness.
  • Checking in with your support network regularly: Talking to friends, family members, peers, and a mental health or recovery support specialist can help others hold you accountable for your continued recovery progress. 

Again, there’s no one way to measure the success of recovery. Thankfully, time in treatment can help you learn healthy ways to monitor your recovery progress by working with counselors, case managers, and other recovery professionals. 

What Does It Mean to Celebrate Recovery?

Addiction treatment comes with a lot of negative connotations. For that reason, some grow confused by using the word celebrate to describe anything having to do with recovery. However, at the end of the day, recovery is absolutely something to celebrate! 

When living in an active state of addiction, we miss out on a lot. Our home and professional lives suffer, relationships break, and each present moment becomes a huge blur. Recovery means a break in the vicious cycle of living this way. 

Additionally, recovery is about so much more than just abstaining from alcohol. It’s about making a number of healthier life choices that improve your overall well-being and help you stay sober. So, what happens once a person becomes more comfortable with the idea of celebrating recovery? How can we celebrate our recovery not only during National Recovery Month but all year round? Let’s consider some ways today!

How Can You Celebrate Recovery Today?

There are many different ways you can celebrate your recovery today. We can celebrate recovery the same way we celebrate birthdays, anniversaries, and other special occasions. That includes: 

  • Attending or leading a meeting and sharing your story annually, not only to commemorate your sobriety but to inspire others. 
  • Celebrating like you would a birthday by gathering your closest friends and family members who’ve supported you along the way. 
  • Giving back to others by volunteering with an outreach program, providing resources to those in treatment, or sponsoring someone. 

September is National Recovery Month, and along with educating others, it’s an excellent time to celebrate your own recovery. Individuals still in active addiction should consider this the perfect time to seek treatment and get sober by seeking treatment with West Coast Recovery Centers today! Let us help you get on a path that will allow you to be celebrating your recovery before you know it.

September is National Recovery Month, which makes it an excellent time for people to learn more about substance use disorder (SUD), co-occurring mental health conditions, and the importance of recovery treatment. For years, misunderstanding and misinformation have created stigmatization, but with time, education, and resources, reducing these stigmas is possible. It’s also an excellent time to learn how to celebrate recovery. Whether you’re sober for years or are in early recovery, learning to celebrate your recovery is critical because it provides hope, inspiration, and motivation to continue doing what it takes to stay sober. To learn more or begin your sobriety journey, contact West Coast Recovery Centers at (760) 492-6509 today!