Texas

Sober Living Homes

Colorado

Sober Living Homes

Philadelphia

Sober Living Homes

Reasons to Get Sober this Easter

Written by

Table of Contents

Spring is a great time for change

Spring is the time of year, when change and new growth occurs. The color of the leaves begin to change and new plants begin to grow. Whether you are transitioning into sober living or making the decision to enter drug and alcohol treatment, spring time could be your time to change and begin a new life. You can choose to change the color of your life of addiction and enter a new life of sobriety.

Spring is a second chance at resolutions. It is a second chance to change. Whether you are committing to getting help with drug and alcohol addition, or have changed your mind about entering sober living in Austin, Texas, take this opportunity to renew your commitment and make a change.

Whether you are religious individual or not, some people mark easter as the day of change. Easter marks the day of a new life and when everyone was given a second chance to change. Today, can be your opportunity to change your life. Sometimes change can be simple and sometime changes needs to be done in steps. Changing your life of addiction can start with making a decision to change and looking for supportive treatment options like a sober living home in Texas or an outpatient treatment provider in Austin, Texas. Change can start small, but should start somewhere.

What if you have already made a change in your life and have chosen sobriety over addiction. There are still reasons for you to seek change this spring. We have all heard the term “Spring Cleaning”. It is a time in the year, where we clear out the old, to make room for the new. In you are currently living in a sober living home in Texas or working a program of recovery in Texas, you will understand. Use the spring time to perform a through inventory and “spring clean” the resentments you are holding on to. Let go of the bad memories, so you can make room for the new ones to come this summer.

Remember, spring is a time for change and a time for cleaning. Lets use this season to grow our sobriety.

Contact Us

Our Locations

Gender Specific Homes

Recent Blogs

Alcoholics Anonymous Big Book with blue cover on a wooden desk beside an AA handbook, smartphone displaying a big book app, notebook, glasses, and coffee mug in a sober living environment.
Alcoholics Anonymous

AA Handbook and Big Book Apps: Covers and Access

Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) literature usually falls into two categories. The Big Book is the core text that describes A.A.’s program for recovery from alcoholism, and an AA handbook (often a service or group handbook) supports how groups run and how members carry the message through service. This post looks at AA big book covers, how the AA handbook is used, and what to expect from an aa big book app or other big book app. It also addresses common searches such as free AA books and they stopped in time aa. The focus is practical and neutral, not promotional.

Read More »
Four adults preparing a healthy meal together in a sober living home while focusing on alcohol recovery and rebuilding healthy routines.
Alcoholics Anonymous

How Long Does Alcohol Stay on Your Breath?

People often ask how long does alcohol stay on your breath because the answer affects decisions like driving and workplace testing. A related concern is how long does alcohol stay in your system when a test is possible the next day. Alcohol does not simply sit in the mouth. Ethanol moves from the stomach and intestines into the bloodstream, then reaches the lungs. As blood passes through the lungs, some ethanol transfers into the air that is exhaled, which is why breath alcohol testing works. The key point is that “alcohol on your breath” can mean two different things, and those two timelines do not always match.

Read More »
Person writing a relapse prevention plan in a notebook with checklist items and recovery tools on a wooden desk.
Exercise for Recovery

Relapse Prevention Plan: Strategies and Example

A relapse prevention plan is a written, personal guide for staying in recovery when cravings, stress, or pressure show up. It brings together your warning signs, your relapse prevention strategies, and the support you will use. It is meant to help you act early, before a slip turns into a return to regular use. Many people create a plan near discharge from treatment, but it can also be built in outpatient care and updated over time.

Read More »
Call Now Button