Recovery is one of the most complete identity transformations available to a human life — the decision to organize the self around sobriety and growth rather than around the substance that had become the center of gravity. It requires building a new story from materials that include, rather than erase, the story of addiction: a narrative that neither romanticizes the past nor pretends it was not real. Many recovery traditions — from twelve-step programs to Indigenous healing circles — have understood that this is not a private project but a communal one.
Each step builds on the last.