Recovery News

Inside John Vance's Road to Recovery

2 min · 22 mei 2026
aflevering Inside John Vance's Road to Recovery artwork

Beschrijving

We often say that addiction is a disease of radical isolation, but the ultimate antidote is a community that simply refuses to give up on you. According to a profoundly moving profile published by Stand Together [https://standtogether.org/stories/strong-safe-communities/addiction-recovery-stories-how-one-man-turned-addiction-into-hope], the journey of John Vance is living proof that even the deepest personal darkness can be transformed into a movement of hope when given the right structure, unconditional support, and a chance to give back. Before discovering his path to recovery, John was completely hijacked by a severe heroin addiction. He describes the agonizing reality of being a father who deeply loved his young son, but who was physically and mentally unable to show up for him—locked instead in a brutal, daily cycle of either being too high to function or fighting the blinding pain of intense physical withdrawals. Seeing his life unravel, his mother insisted he enter the Shepherd’s House, a long-term residential program in Kentucky. John arrived there determined to be miserable. He spent his first full month completely isolating himself, sitting silently in the back of rooms, utterly convinced that the program would fail him just like everything else in his life had. But recovery often happens in the moments we least expect, when our defenses are down. For John, the ultimate turning point came during a simple group outing to a local haunted house with his peers. In that moment of unexpected, shared laughter, vulnerability, and raw human connection, the walls of his isolation crumbled. He looked around and realized he wasn’t alone in the dark anymore, and for the first time in years, a genuine spark of hope was ignited. He paired this newfound peer connection with a job at DV8 Kitchen, a local restaurant that exclusively hires individuals in early recovery, providing him with the baseline economic stability and routine he desperately needed to stay anchored. Today, John has been completely sober for over four years, but he didn't just walk away from his past—he chose to go straight back into the trenches. He now works inside a local county jail, helping inmates navigate their own complex substance use disorders. John explains that individuals currently struggling are often deeply wary of clinical counselors who only have a college degree. But when they sit down with John and hear his story, they realize he is one of them. This creates an immediate, unbreakable bridge of trust that allows true counseling to begin. A cornerstone of John’s work with these inmates is teaching them a difficult but essential psychological truth: you have to learn how to be anxious without getting high. He teaches his clients that substances are merely a symptom of a deeper problem, and true, long-term recovery means learning to deal with life on life’s terms without putting a chemical into your body just to feel okay. John's story serves as a beautiful reminder that our past mistakes do not disqualify us from a meaningful future—they can actually become our greatest asset in helping others heal. By fostering the exact same community and peer support that saved his life, John is proving that recovery is a continuous, beautiful cycle of giving back. You can read John Vance’s full story of resilience on the Stand Together website, here [https://standtogether.org/stories/strong-safe-communities/addiction-recovery-stories-how-one-man-turned-addiction-into-hope].

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aflevering Why Do ADHD and Mood Disorders So Often Overlap? artwork

Why Do ADHD and Mood Disorders So Often Overlap?

When an individual receives a diagnosis of ADHD, the clinical conversation usually zeroes in on a very specific set of behavioral struggles. We talk about managing executive function, overcoming chronic procrastination, and finding tools to stay focused in a world built for neurotypical brains. But according to an invaluable clinical report published by ADDitude Magazine [https://www.additudemag.com/mood-disorders-adhd-overlap/], addressing ADHD in absolute isolation leaves out a massive piece of the psychiatric puzzle. Leading mental health educators, including psychiatric nurse practitioner Desiree Matthews, reveal that up to a staggering seventy percent of adults living with ADHD map onto at least one other co-occurring mental health condition. This high prevalence rate is forcing medical professionals to drop the traditional term "comorbidity" and embrace a much more comprehensive framework known as "multi-morbidity"—recognizing that conditions like major depression, generalized anxiety, and complex PTSD can live alongside ADHD as entirely equal, independent drivers of impairment. To understand why these conditions are so inextricably linked, the research points directly into our biology. ADHD and mood disorders don't just happen to show up together by coincidence; they actively share deep-seated genetic root causes and neurobiological pathways. Scientists are looking closely at the dysregulation of serotonergic pathways in the brain. Because the neurotransmitter serotonin plays an essential role in regulating everything from mood and sleep to impulse control and basic cognition, disruptions along this pathway frequently serve as a dual launchpad for both ADHD traits and clinical depression or anxiety. Because serotonin acts as a primary buffer against chronic stress, this shared genetic vulnerability leaves neurodivergent individuals—especially women—at a profoundly elevated risk for experiencing compounding emotional distress. The real danger in this overlap lies in the subtle art of diagnostic camouflage. Because psychiatric symptoms are highly transdiagnostic—meaning they easily cross over the lines of different disorders—a core feature of ADHD like a lack of concentration or intense irritability can easily be mistaken for an anxiety disorder or a depressive episode. To prevent individuals from falling into the exhausting trap of misdiagnosis, clinicians use a vital metric: is your current treatment plan actually improving your holistic quality of life? If an individual is taking ADHD medication and finding that their daytime focus is sharp, yet they are still struggling with chronic insomnia, severe emotional distress, or persistent low self-worth, it is a definitive red flag that a deeper mood disorder remains completely unaddressed underneath the surface.  Ultimately, ADDitude’s analysis [https://www.additudemag.com/mood-disorders-adhd-overlap/] delivers a powerful message of hope: ADHD and complex mood disorders can be safely, effectively, and cohesively treated together. However, achieving true emotional stability requires a highly customized, non-linear approach to triage. For example, when a patient presents with both bipolar disorder and ADHD, clinical guidelines dictate that the bipolar disorder must be stabilized and treated first to prevent ADHD stimulants from accidentally triggering a manic episode or worsening insomnia. By utilizing specialized screening tools, tracking treatment responses over time, and closely monitoring medication interactions, we can move past the confusion of overlapping symptoms. We can build an intentional path to wellness that respects the full, complex reality of the neurodivergent mind, ensuring that every layer of a person's mental health receives the exact validation and targeted care it deserves.

Gisteren4 min
aflevering Trauma-Focused CBT Reverses PTSD in Psychosis Patients artwork

Trauma-Focused CBT Reverses PTSD in Psychosis Patients

When treating severe psychological conditions, clinical protocols have traditionally operated under a strict hierarchy of caution. For decades, a deeply ingrained rule in mental healthcare dictated that if a patient suffered from a severe psychotic disorder, clinicians should never actively touch or uncover deep trauma memories. The fear was that direct exposure work would overwhelm the individual, spike their anxiety, and catastrophically worsen symptoms like paranoia, mania, or multisensory hallucinations. But according to a groundbreaking clinical neuroscience report featured by Technology Networks [https://www.technologynetworks.com/neuroscience/news/trauma-focused-cbt-improves-recovery-in-people-with-psychosis-and-ptsd-413746], a landmark study is completely shattering that old clinical playbook—proving that ignoring trauma doesn't protect a patient; it blocks their path to true recovery. The report details the results of the STAR trial—the Study of Trauma And Recovery—led by researchers at King’s College London and published in The Lancet Psychiatry. This massive multi-site randomized controlled trial evaluated an integrated nine-month treatment protocol called Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for psychosis, or TF-CBTp. Historically, individuals navigating both psychosis and PTSD have been systematically excluded from trauma trials due to safety concerns. However, the STAR trial completely turned this dynamic on its head. The study revealed that working with trauma memories directly is not only entirely safe, but it also resulted in fifty percent of the treatment group completely clearing their clinical PTSD criteria. For the Recovered Life community, this breakthrough challenges the very essence of how we look at deep-seated emotional pain and psychiatric conditions. PTSD prevalence is up to five times higher in people experiencing psychosis compared to the general public, with their unaddressed past traumas actively shaping the frightening content of their delusions or voices. By integrating standard CBT tools with flexible, individualized trauma-memory processing, patients were finally given the vocabulary to safely make sense of the experiences they had carried for years. Remarkably, the trial recorded a tiny disengagement rate of just six point five percent, completely disproving the myth that complex patients can't tolerate deep emotional work. Ultimately, this psychological milestone moves the entire recovery landscape from passive symptom management to authentic, comprehensive healing. Facing our deepest traumas isn't about rushing the story or forcing distress; it is about building a secure foundation of trust, engagement, and emotional regulation. When we stop treating the symptoms of the mind as isolated, fragile problems and instead address the integrated whole of human experience, we open the floodgates to genuine, sustainable freedom. This monumental neuroscience report was originally detailed by Technology Networks, and you can explore the complete article here [https://www.technologynetworks.com/neuroscience/news/trauma-focused-cbt-improves-recovery-in-people-with-psychosis-and-ptsd-413746].

Gisteren3 min
aflevering How "Prediction Games" Fuel an Underage Teen Gambling Crisis artwork

How "Prediction Games" Fuel an Underage Teen Gambling Crisis

When we talk about the dangers of addiction threatening modern teenagers, our minds immediately pivot to the ongoing battles with vaping, substance use, or illicit drugs. But according to a deeply alarming investigative feature published by The Philadelphia Inquirer [https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia/teen-gambling-prediction-games-addiction-signs-treatment-recovery-pennsylvania-20260531.html], a quiet, completely digital epidemic is taking root inside school hallways and bedrooms across Pennsylvania. Driven by the massive expansion of online sportsbooks, casino apps, and social media promotions, underage teenagers are falling into severe, compulsive gambling habits. Experts warn that the newest gateway isn't even a traditional casino—it is disguised as a casual mobile "prediction game" or video game feature, blurring the line between harmless entertainment and real-money addiction.  The report highlights that because teenagers are digital natives, they are uniquely vulnerable to the high-tech psychological design of these modern apps. From buying virtual "loot boxes" in video games to placing real-money wagers on sports outcomes through unauthorized platforms, teens are risking and losing thousands of dollars completely out of sight. Psychologists note that the human brain continues developing critical impulse control centers well into a person's mid-twenties. When a malleable teenage brain experiences the sudden, intense dopamine rush of an unexpected digital win, the brain's reward pathway can become rapidly overstimulated—creating a compulsive urge to chase losses and place larger, riskier bets to recreate that initial high.  For the Recovered Life community, this Inquirer investigation serves as a vital call to action for parents and mentors. Gambling is frequently called the "hidden illness" because it carries no physical symptoms like a bloodshot eye or slurred speech. A teenager can be losing their entire savings or sinking into devastating debt while sitting quietly right at the family dinner table. Parents are urged to look for subtle behavioral shifts: an increasing preoccupation with sports statistics, extreme restlessness or irritability when their phone is taken away, sudden requests to borrow money, or a sharp drop in academic performance. Because underage gambling is illegal, teens carry an immense burden of secret shame and guilt, which often leads them to withdraw from friends and isolate entirely.  Ultimately, the solution requires treating this crisis as a legitimate behavioral disorder rather than a simple disciplinary issue. Treatment centers in Pennsylvania are expanding specialized talk therapies, such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, to help young people decode their underlying compulsions, address co-occurring stressors like anxiety or loneliness, and build healthy real-world coping mechanisms. Reclaiming a teenager's life starts by pulling back the curtain on these predatory apps and normalizing open, honest family check-ins about digital habits. By replacing isolation with immediate, non-judgmental professional support, we can safely guide the next generation away from the screen and back toward true stability. This crucial public health report was originally detailed by The Philadelphia Inquirer, and you can explore local treatment resources and helplines through the link here [https://www.inquirer.com/news/philadelphia/teen-gambling-prediction-games-addiction-signs-treatment-recovery-pennsylvania-20260531.html].

11 jul 20263 min
aflevering Vatican News: Pediatricians Urge Families to Watch for Eating Disorder Warning Signs artwork

Vatican News: Pediatricians Urge Families to Watch for Eating Disorder Warning Signs

When we think about protecting the well-being of the next generation, our minds naturally gravitate toward shielding them from visible, external dangers. We monitor their safety online, track their academic progress, and keep an eye on their physical environments. But according to an urgent public health advisory featured by Vatican News [https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2026-03/pedriatricians-urge-families-to-watch-for-warning-signs-with-eat.html], pediatricians worldwide are warning that one of the most aggressive threats to adolescent health is often developing quietly right under our own roofs. Medical experts are issuing a profound call to action, urging families to maintain sharp vigilance and learn how to identify the subtle, early warning signs of eating disorders before these behaviors solidify into severe, life-threatening crises. The pediatric data highlights that conditions like anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating are rarely just about food—they are complex, chronic psychiatric conditions that young people use to manage overwhelming stress, low self-esteem, or a paralyzing need for perfection. Pediatricians emphasize that early detection is the single most critical factor in achieving a full medical recovery. Because children and teenagers frequently experience deep shame or confusion around their changing habits, they go to extreme lengths to hide their behaviors from friends and teachers. This makes parental observation at home the ultimate frontline defense. For the Recovered Life community, this clinical warning reinforces a fundamental rule of emotional sobriety: true healing begins with radical honesty and open family communication. Experts note that families should watch for sudden changes in daily routines, such as an adolescent consistently making excuses to skip family dinners, adopting highly rigid rules around "clean eating," or spending long periods isolating in the bathroom immediately after a meal. Dramatic personality shifts—turning from an outgoing child into a withdrawn, irritable loner—can also indicate that a young person is trapped in a silent battle with their own body image. Ultimately, the medical community reminds us that addressing a potential eating disorder requires a shift in how we approach family dynamics. Pediatricians caution parents to entirely drop directive criticism or comments about weight, as even well-intentioned observations about appearance can reinforce harmful beliefs. Instead, families are encouraged to approach their children with deep curiosity, active listening, and unconditional love. By normalizing honest conversations about mental health and treating the mind and body as one integrated unit, we can dissolve the paralyzing shame and build a safe pathway for our loved ones to step back into health. This vital pediatric retrospective was originally detailed by Vatican News, and you can access the full clinical updates through the official links here [https://www.vaticannews.va/en/world/news/2026-03/pedriatricians-urge-families-to-watch-for-warning-signs-with-eat.html].

10 jul 20262 min
aflevering Brief 10-Minute Reiki Sessions Sharpen Stress and Pain Relief artwork

Brief 10-Minute Reiki Sessions Sharpen Stress and Pain Relief

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