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You Never Know

Sometimes, I can’t fix things. I can’t rewind time. It’s too late. I’m at a place in my life where I felt ready to reach out to an old friend. We were actually best friends in high school. Then I abruptly broke off the friendship. No explanation. She moved on and made new friends. I folded into myself. See, we were getting too close. I had to keep my secrets about my abuse. I was ashamed and afraid. Since then, I’ve always been the one to denigrate a relationship. I’ve never felt worthy.
Well, I decided I was ready to reconnect with my old friend. I wanted to explain to her what I’d been going through back then. I wanted to ask for forgiveness. I wanted to hug her. It was too late. I found out she died of cancer in August 2 years ago.
I guess I just wanted to remind everyone not to wait. If there is something you want to tell someone, say it. Regret is something I’ll always live with. Rest in peace, Mary.

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Rewiring Addiction: Healing the Brain, Reclaiming the Self By BigmommaJ

Addiction is one of the most misunderstood illnesses of our time.

People love to debate it—Is it a choice? Is it a weakness? Why can’t they just stop?
But the truth is far less judgmental and far more human:

Addiction is a brain disorder rooted in trauma, emotional pain, and neurochemical imbalance — not a moral failure.

And the most hopeful part?

The brain can be rewired.
Healing is possible.
Recovery is a biological and spiritual transformation.

When Addiction Begins: The Brain Trying to Survive

Most people don’t pick up a substance because life is good.
They pick it up because something inside them hurts.

According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), 75% of individuals with addiction have experienced significant trauma in their lifetime (SAMHSA, 2023).

Trauma changes the brain.
Addiction changes it again.

What starts as emotional band-aids—relief, escape, numbness—quickly becomes a neurological loop:

1. The dopamine reward system becomes overstimulated.

2. Stress and threat circuits go into overdrive.

3. The prefrontal cortex (the “stop and think” part) weakens.

4. The brain begins to prioritize the substance over everything else, even survival.

This is why “just stop” has never been an effective treatment plan.

Is Addiction a Choice?

The research is clear:

The decision to use may begin as a choice.

Addiction itself is not.

Once the brain is rewired by repeated substance use, the person loses much of their ability to choose.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse describes addiction as a chronic, relapsing brain disorder that alters decision-making, impulse control, and self-regulation (NIDA, 2024).

If someone’s leg was broken, we wouldn’t ask them to run.
If someone’s brain is dysregulated, we shouldn’t expect them to “just quit.”

The Rewiring: How Recovery Actually Happens

Recovery isn’t just sobriety.
It’s the slow, powerful process of teaching the brain a new way to live.

1. Neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to change

The same pathways that addiction hijacked can be reshaped through new habits, therapy, routine, and connection.

2. Trauma-informed healing

When people heal their trauma, their nervous system calms.
The urge to self-medicate decreases.

Safety replaces survival mode.

3. Community and connection

Humans heal in relationship.
Connection triggers oxytocin and stabilizes the stress response—two things essential for rewiring a recovering brain.

4. Time and consistency

Research shows it can take 12–18 months for dopamine systems to rebalance after chronic substance use (Harvard Health Publishing, 2022).
That doesn’t mean recovery is impossible before that—but it shows why grace is essential.

Healing is not linear.
But every day, every choice, every moment of awareness is building new neural pathways.

A Personal Reflection from the Journey

I used to blame myself for the chaos in my brain.

I thought addiction meant I was weak, broken, or unworthy.
But the more I learned, the more I realized

I wasn’t trying to destroy myself.

I was trying to survive a storm no one else could see.

Recovery for me wasn’t loud or pretty.

It wasn’t a single moment of clarity.

It was small shifts—
choosing stillness over escape,
choosing truth over numbing,
choosing myself when I didn’t even feel worth choosing.

Every day I rise,
I’m rewiring something inside me.

Teaching my brain a new way to breathe.

A new way to feel.
A new way to live.

The Bridge Between Who You Were and Who You’re Becoming

Recovery isn’t a destination.
It’s a rebuilding — neuron by neuron, breath by breath, day by day.

You’re not fighting addiction.
You’re rewiring your life.

You’re shaping a brain that can hold peace.

A heart that can hold joy.
A nervous system that can hold safety.

And no matter how many times you fall, relapse, restart, or rebuild, the truth never changes:

Healing is possible.
Rewiring is real.
And you are not your addiction — you are your recovery.

Bigmommaj
#AddictionRecovery #Addiction

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When You See a Couple Going Through Divorce…

As doctors, we witness not just illnesses of the body, but also the silent, painful struggles of the heart. And when we see a couple navigating the stormy, traumatic process of divorce, there are three deeply important things we must remember:
✨Pause the Assumptions
Even if you have a PhD-level understanding of relationships, remember—you can’t decode every story. Every bond has its mysteries, every fracture its own hidden reasons. Resist the urge to judge, to comment, to assume you “know” what went wrong. Keeping your thoughts to yourself is not weakness—it’s compassion. Gossip behind closed doors? That’s not just unhelpful, it’s cruel.
✨Pray for Them, Sincerely
Turn to prayer, from the heart. In the Quran, we are reminded that trusting Allah’s wisdom and relying on His guidance brings peace. Pray that they find protection, strength, and provision beyond what they can imagine. Pray that even in this pain, something beautiful, something redemptive, can come from it.
✨ Pray for Yourself, Too
Yes, for yourself. Pray endlessly for your own relationships, for your own growth, for your own heart to be guided. Today, they are facing a trial—you might face it tomorrow. This is the humbling truth: empathy is also self-preservation. Let this awareness remind you to cherish the blessings you have, and to seek Allah’s barakah in every connection in your life.
Sometimes, the simplest acts of humanity—silence instead of judgment, prayer instead of gossip, empathy instead of criticism—are the most revolutionary. They’re the acts that heal, both for others and for ourselves.
💥 Let’s not forget: kindness is contagious. And a little human decency can ripple farther than we ever imagine.

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So, I try to stay as positive as possible with my posts here, but I think it's safe enough to open up a bit. I've struggled a lot these past few years, and it's all come to a boiling point recently.

My anxiety has affected my stomach to the point where I'm nauseous every day at random, and now getting random headaches. This morning I woke up to an excruciating migraine that brought me to tears.

There are a lot of things going on in my life that I'm uncomfortable talking about openly here, but I feel like this all stems from anxiety and my inability to process certain unresolved traumas. I'm considering medication at this point. I've been on Zoloft and Wellbutrin, but ended up with brain zaps and as an side-effect.

Are you taking meds? Are you not? Whats working for you, if anything at all? Can anyone relate to this? I'm feeling pretty isolated and alone in this because I hate to feel like a burden to others...

#MentalHealth #GeneralizedAnxietyDisorder #Depression #Loneliness #PTSD #ComplexPosttraumaticStressDisorder #Trauma #Addiction #ADHD #AutismSpectrumDisorder #Autism #Caregiving #Relationships #CheckInWithMe #MightyTogether

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I’m new here!

Hi, my name is DazzlingRobin3705. I'm here because I want to connect with others that have been through childhood trauma and abuse within relationships

#MightyTogether #Anxiety #Depression

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Sigh it's almost 1pm and Pauley is still asleep

I guess plans fell through again. Or maybe we can still grab dinner at the Greek restaurant that I really enjoy. I've been craving their lamb shanks and stuffed cabbage rolls. But I also really want French fries and broccoli. And it's Saturday which means they have my favorite soup today... Cream of chicken lemon rice. Oh my gosh it's so yummy!
#Relationships

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BPD a few years later

Im probably addicted to weed, and alcoholic, and taking many meds. Most of the time I think everything is fine but most issues are not gone, just pushed back. I am so severely insecure. I feel like i will ruin any relationship i walk into i destroy. Nothing has gotten easier but only with the help of drugs, i wish i was a baby duck with no thought. at this point there is no asking for help, there is just crying into the open hoping someone understahds. if I die, may we die together

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Understanding Mental Health and Addiction: A Comprehensive Approach By BigmommaJ

Understanding Mental Health and Addiction: Rising Above the Cycle

Mental health and addiction don’t exist in separate worlds—they are deeply intertwined, often feeding off one another in ways that are misunderstood, stigmatized, and oversimplified. Research shows that individuals living with mental health challenges are significantly more likely to experience substance use disorders, and the reverse is equally true (SAMHSA, 2023; NIDA, 2024).

But behind the research are real people—people trying to survive pain, trauma, loss, and untreated wounds.

Understanding this connection is not about blame. It’s about compassion, awareness, and creating pathways to healing.

When Mental Health and Addiction Collide

Many individuals live with both a mental health disorder and a substance use disorder at the same time—a reality known as dual diagnosis.

Conditions such as depression, anxiety, PTSD, and bipolar disorder frequently coexist with addiction, making recovery more complex but not impossible (NIDA, 2024; SAMHSA, 2023).

Treating one without the other often leaves people stuck in a cycle of relapse and shame.This phenomenon, complicates treatment and requires an integrated approach that addresses both conditions simultaneously.

Self-Medication Isn’t Weakness—It’s Survival

For many, substances become a way to numb overwhelming emotions, silence intrusive thoughts, or escape unresolved trauma. This pattern, described by the self-medication hypothesis, explains how substance use often begins as an attempt to cope rather than a desire to self-destruct (Khantzian, 1997). Over time, however, the very thing used to survive becomes another source of suffering (CCSA, 2022) and worsens underlying mental health issues.

Trauma Changes Everything

Trauma—especially when experienced early in life—significantly increases the risk of both mental illness and addiction. Adverse childhood experiences, chronic stress, and unsafe environments shape how the brain copes with pain and regulation (PHAC, 2023; WHO, 18 2023). Healing requires acknowledging these roots, not ignoring them.

Factors such as trauma, genetic predisposition, and environmental influences can contribute to the development of both mental health disorders and addiction. Understanding these risk factors can help in designing prevention strategies and early interventions.

Creating Spaces Where Healing Is Possible

Awareness Breaks the Silence.
Education and open conversations reduce stigma and invite people out of isolation. When mental health and addiction are spoken about honestly, people are more likely to seek help and less likely to suffer in silence (WHO, 2023; MHCC, 2022).

Creating a supportive environment

1. Awareness and Education: Promoting mental health awareness can reduce stigma and encourage individuals to seek help. Education for friends, family, and the broader community can create a supportive network for those in need.

2. Access to Resources: Ensuring access to mental health services and addiction treatment is crucial. This includes therapy, support groups, and rehabilitation programs tailored to the needs of individuals with dual diagnoses.

3. Holistic Approaches: Recovery from mental health and addiction often involves a combination of therapies, including cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), medication, mindfulness practices, and lifestyle changes. Encouraging holistic approaches can lead to more sustainable outcomes.

Access to Care Saves Lives

Integrated, trauma-informed treatment—care that addresses both mental health and substance use together—leads to better outcomes and long-term recovery (SAMHSA, 2023; NICE, 2016). Healing should not depend on privilege or luck; it should be accessible, compassionate, and continuous.

Healing Is Holistic

Recovery is not just about stopping a behavior—it’s about rebuilding a life. Evidence supports combining therapy (such as CBT), medication when appropriate, mindfulness, peer support, and lifestyle changes to create sustainable recovery (Miller & Rollnick, 2013; NICE, 2016).

Empathy Is Not Optional

For Those Walking Beside Others

Integrated Care Matters.
Professionals who collaborate across disciplines—mental health, addiction, medical, and social supports—help reduce relapse and foster stability (NIDA, 2024).

At Rise Above Your Norm, we believe recovery isn’t about becoming someone else—it’s about reclaiming who you were always meant to be, beyond survival.

Mental health and addiction are interconnected issues that affect millions of people worldwide. The complex relationship between the two can significantly impact individuals and their families. By fostering awareness and understanding, we can create better outcomes for those experiencing these challenges.

Strategies for Professionals in the Field

1. Integrated Treatment Plans: Healthcare providers should develop integrated treatment plans that address both mental health and substance use issues. This includes collaboration among psychiatrists, addiction specialists, therapists, and healthcare providers.

2. Empathy and Communication: Building a trusting relationship with clients is essential. Practitioners should practice empathy, active listening, and open communication to create a safe space for individuals to share their experiences.

3. Ongoing Support: Recovery is a lifelong journey. Providing ongoing support through follow-up care, community resources, and continued therapy can help prevent relapse and promote long-term stability.

Healing happens in safe relationships. Trauma-informed, empathetic care builds trust and allows individuals to feel seen rather than judged (MHCC, 2022).

Recovery Is a Journey, Not a Finish Line

Recovery is ongoing, non-linear, and deeply personal. Continued support and community connection are essential to long-term wellbeing (Anthony, 1993).

Recovery is possible—not because the journey is easy, but because people are resilient when given the right support. When we move away from shame and toward understanding, when we treat mental health and addiction as interconnected rather than separate failures, we create space for real healing.

Conclusion

Working with mental health and addiction requires a compassionate, integrated approach that recognizes the complexity of these issues. By fostering awareness, providing access to resources, and creating supportive environments, we can help individuals navigate their paths to recovery. It is vital to remember that recovery is possible, and with the right support, individuals can lead fulfilling lives.

BigmommaJ
#MentalHealth #Addiction

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