Aging In Recovery
In this episode, we explore the emerging concept of Aging in Recovery and the growing population of older adults living in long-term recovery who have largely remained invisible within both addiction systems and traditional aging services. This discussion examines how millions of Americans survived addiction, rebuilt their lives, raised families, established careers, and maintained recovery for decades — yet now face the realities of aging with little recognition or recovery-informed support. Topics include: • The hidden population of older adults in long-term recovery • Why recovery often becomes “invisible” once people stabilize • Trauma, grief, PTSD, incarceration, and aging • The limitations of traditional treatment and aging models • Recovery-informed home care and support services • NAHCS and the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) • The importance of peer support, dignity, and community in later life • Why long-term recovery is far more than abstinence This episode argues that recovery is not simply the absence of substances. Recovery is a lifelong process of rebuilding identity, relationships, purpose, emotional stability, and community across decades. And as America itself continues aging, society must begin preparing for the growing number of people aging in long-term recovery. Because the generation that survived addiction and helped build recovery communities should not grow old forgotten… or invisible
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