Aging In Recovery

A Candid Interview with Pico: Long-Term Recovery and Aging in Recovery

14 min · 25 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio A Candid Interview with Pico: Long-Term Recovery and Aging in Recovery

Descripción

In this honest and personal episode of Aging in Recovery, Pico shares his story of growing up in an environment where alcohol and drug use were common, beginning substance use at a very young age, and ultimately entering recovery at just 23 years old. Now decades later, Pico reflects on what it means to age in long-term recovery — including the emotional, social, and personal realities that often go unseen by society and healthcare systems alike. This episode explores addiction, recovery, resilience, identity, and the emerging conversation around Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort — older adults living with long-term recovery histories who are now entering later life. A powerful conversation about survival, transformation, and hope.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Aging In Recovery!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

16 episodios

episode A Candid Interview with Pico: Long-Term Recovery and Aging in Recovery artwork

A Candid Interview with Pico: Long-Term Recovery and Aging in Recovery

In this honest and personal episode of Aging in Recovery, Pico shares his story of growing up in an environment where alcohol and drug use were common, beginning substance use at a very young age, and ultimately entering recovery at just 23 years old. Now decades later, Pico reflects on what it means to age in long-term recovery — including the emotional, social, and personal realities that often go unseen by society and healthcare systems alike. This episode explores addiction, recovery, resilience, identity, and the emerging conversation around Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort — older adults living with long-term recovery histories who are now entering later life. A powerful conversation about survival, transformation, and hope.

25 de may de 202614 min
episode Why We Need Services Specifically For People Aging In Recovery artwork

Why We Need Services Specifically For People Aging In Recovery

Why would people aging in long-term recovery require recovery-aware home care, assisted living, or nursing services if traditional aging services already exist? In this episode, Gilberto Cintron explores an increasingly important question facing America’s aging recovery population. As millions of Americans with 20, 30, 40, and even 50 years in recovery enter older adulthood, society is beginning to confront a reality that has remained largely invisible for decades: People in long-term recovery are aging. While addiction remains highly visible through overdoses, arrests, homelessness, and public crises, recovery often becomes private and unseen as people quietly rebuild their lives, families, careers, and communities. But recovery is more than abstinence. For many individuals, recovery became a complete way of life built around: • Recovery meetings • Peer support • Sponsorship • Community connection • Recovery routines • Identity and purpose This episode explores why recovery-aware services may matter in: • Home care • Home attendant services • Assisted living • Nursing homes • Long-term care systems Topics include: • Aging in Recovery • The Invisible Cohort • Recovery-informed care • Trauma, grief, and isolation in aging • Cultural lag within healthcare and aging systems • The future of recovery-aware aging services • The Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) This conversation challenges traditional assumptions about addiction, aging, and recovery while asking an urgent public health and social care question: How do we help people not only age safely… but continue aging in recovery with dignity? https://nahcs.nyc [https://nahcs.nyc]

25 de may de 20266 min
episode Addiction Is Public. Recovery Is Invisible. artwork

Addiction Is Public. Recovery Is Invisible.

Millions of Americans are living in long-term recovery. Not days. Not months. But decades. In this episode, Gilberto Cintron explores the growing population of older adults aging in long-term recovery — what he calls “The Invisible Cohort.” While addiction remains highly visible through arrests, overdoses, treatment systems, and media portrayals, recovery often becomes quiet, private, and forgotten. Yet millions of individuals who survived addiction decades ago are now entering older adulthood and confronting the realities of aging, chronic illness, trauma, isolation, and long-term care needs. This episode examines: • Why recovery becomes invisible • How addiction affects every level of society • The hidden population of professionals and public figures in recovery • Aging, trauma, and long-term recovery • Recovery-informed home care, assisted living, and nursing care • The development of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) • The mission of Never Alone Home Care Services, Inc. This conversation challenges traditional views of addiction and asks an urgent question: What happens when the recovery generation itself begins aging? https://nahcs.nyc [https://nahcs.nyc]

24 de may de 20266 min
episode Baby Boomers in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort artwork

Baby Boomers in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort

In this episode, We discuss Aging in Recovery and the millions of Americans now growing older after surviving addiction, rebuilding their lives, and remaining in long-term recovery for decades. The discussion explores the connection between the social upheaval of the 1960s and 70s, the drug epidemics that followed, and the emerging population of older adults aging in recovery today. Topics include: • Long-term recovery and identity transformation • Trauma, PTSD, grief, and aging • Recovery-informed home care and aging services • The Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) • Why traditional elder care systems often fail to understand recovery culture • The importance of peer support, dignity, purpose, and community in later life This episode argues that recovery is not merely abstinence — it is a lifelong process of rebuilding a human life across decades. And as the recovery generation ages, society must begin developing systems designed specifically for older adults living in long-term recovery.

23 de may de 202612 min
episode Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort artwork

Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort

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

22 de may de 20266 min