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Sober Living An Early Recovery Living Arrangement For Addicts

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SOBER LIVING HOUSING (SOBER LIVING) Sober Living is an early recovery living arrangement for addicts while they rebuild their lives free from substances. Recovering addicts come to Sober Living through many paths, such as a referral from an emergency room, detoxification center, or the court. Each person has a place to sleep, usually sharing a room with others. Residents share house duties and pay a monthly fee. Sober Living provides structure because regulations are strictly enforced. Substance abuse is not permitted. Substances found on the premises or a resident returning to the house intoxicated is likely to result in discharge. Sober Living is not a treatment program, but a strategy to allow more time for sobriety to take firm hold …show more content…

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS AND FIVE ALTERNATIVES Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) and Narcotics Anonymous (NA) are Twelve Step support and recovery programs for addicts. The themes for both AA and NA are the same at every meeting and in every location: attain and maintain sobriety. Terms such as denial, sobriety, clean and sober, relapse, falling off the wagon, one day at a time, working the steps, making amends to people you have hurt, “it works if you work at it,” and changing People, Places, and Things are common terms and themes voiced at the meetings. The premise for AA, and later NA, comes from two alcoholics (one a surgeon) who could not maintain sobriety from alcohol on their own. The concept of abstinence as a necessary component of wellness was born, and it remains the cornerstone of twelve-step support programs. The value of Twelve Step support and recovery programs is immeasurable. Sustained recovery highly correlates with regular participation in a Twelve Step program (http://bit.ly/1hmY9yy). Narcotics Anonymous advocates for sobriety utilizing many of the same principles as AA. Other anonymous Twelve Step support programs focus on behavioral addictions, such as overeating (Overeaters Anonymous; http://www.oa.org), gambling (Gamblers Anonymous®; http://bit.ly/1KeLhVA), and sex (Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous; http://www.slaafws.org). Typically, a recovering addict (chairperson) leads the

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