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Challenge Your Comfort Zone in Addiction Recovery

April 30, 2012 Kendra Sebelius

Addiction recovery, or for that matter, any recovery, requires a certain amount of patience in yourself as you learn new healthy coping skills. Some people who struggle with addiction have struggled for years, and brain pathways have developed around the craving and use of substances. In order to change behaviors, there is absolutely going to be an amount of time where you feel uncomfortable, unsure of yourself, and feel out of your comfort zone. That is because the addiction was the comfort zone for so long, no matter how devastating the consequences.

You Will Challenge Your Comfort Zone In Addiction Recovery

You will challenge your comfort zone in addiction recovery. It's hard to do because the addiction was your comfort zone. But you can recover. Read this.I used to struggle with this concept of “comfort zone." I thought I had to do these HUGE monumental activities to feel I was living life to the fullest. I think that is why, for over 10 years of my life, I sought extremes in everything. I also am an impulsive person by nature and think this is also why I fell into substance abuse and eating disorders. I always chose to live in the extremes.

This is where black and white thinking came into play for me. I couldn't see the grey area - that living outside of my comfort zone doesn't have to be only through impulsive, life threatening, and dangerous activities or choices. Living outside our comfort zone is the very definition of what addiction recovery feels like at first, at times when struggling.

You will make new choices, replacing negative behaviors, countering negative thoughts, and more - all outside your comfort zone. When you are in recovery from an addiction remember that every day, and each decision, will feel different from one day to the next; what was once hard will become easier. A new behavior that once felt forced will happen naturally. Recovery is all about challenging our comfort zone to have a better life, free from the confines and prison of an addiction.

You Will Challenge Your Comfort Zone by Facing Your Fears

Fears can often take over when you are in the middle of a flashback, a triggering situation, and you feel out of control and uncertain you will be able to do the “right” thing for your recovery. This is why it is so important to have an addiction support system, a sponsor, a mentor, to help shed some light in the darkness. It is also critical to meet yourself where you are at, and be patient with yourself. There are some feelings you will want to run from, where you feel fear, and you'll be uncomfortable. These are the feelings where you need to be most kind, loving, and patient with yourself.

Fears will not be the deciding factor anymore in your life. Fears are blips on the radar, and you have a choice as to what weight you give to them. You can choose to recognize them for what they are, and what they are not. They will not guide, nor determine the choices or path you take in life.

I benefit greatly from challenging each and every fear along the road in recovery, and this will not change. I will continue to fight the fears, and challenge myself. My dreams, my passions, my goals are worth it. Your dreams, passions and goals are worth it because you and your recovery from an addiction is worth it.

Addiction recovery is all about challenging your comfort zone and facing your fears to have a better life. Never give up challenging yourself, and having patience and kindness when facing new fears. Every day is a new day, full of new experiences. Face them with a clean slate, a new desire to fight for the life you want, because you are worth it.

"Move out of your comfort zone. You can only grow if you are willing to feel awkward and uncomfortable when you try something new." Brian Tracy

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APA Reference
Sebelius, K. (2012, April 30). Challenge Your Comfort Zone in Addiction Recovery, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 2 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/debunkingaddiction/2012/04/facing-fears-and-your-comfort-zone-in-addiction-recovery



Author: Kendra Sebelius

Andy
April, 15 2016 at 10:45 am

This info is spot on. I'm in recovery, ive dropped from 90ml methadone to now 26mg and lowering 2ml a fortnight. I have so many fears, and my comfort zone is at home on the net. Even if I go to the hairdressers, I feel very uncomfortable the day before. However once I'm there and after, I feel great. Its weird, our minds make up so much crap and scary scenarios yet it is simply a negative thought, nothing more. I love to challenge my feelings now, and although slow I am making great strides. Dread, fear and the feeling I'm useless gets broke down piece by piece day by day. Thanks for your story, it has helped me so much.

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