Monday, December 1, 2014



Greetings,



Please see the PRO-ACT PRCC Calendar for December attached to this email. Please note that our hours of operation have changed to better meet the needs of the community.



New Hours of Operation:

Monday 10am – 6pm

Tuesday 10am – 6pm

Wednesday 10am – 6pm

Thursday 11:30am – 7:30pm

Friday 11:30am – 7:30pm

Saturday According to programming- please check the calendar



Philadelphia Recovery Community Center would like to invite you to our Holiday Party on December 12th from 4pm to 7pm at the PRCC 1701 W. Lehigh Ave. and the Tree of Hope on December 17th 6:30pm at the Bucks County Courthouse Lobby, Doylestown PA (please see flyers attached to this email).



Regards,



Sean E. Brinda, MSW, CCDP Diplomate

Senior Peer Services Coordinator

PRO-ACT/Philadelphia Recovery Community Center

1701 W. Lehigh Avenue

Philadelphia, PA 19132



Register for Recovery Walks! 2014 at www.recoverywalks.org






1 (800) 221-6333 Twenty-four Hour Information Line






PRO-ACT… Ambassadors for Recovery!



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CALENDAR LISTING: 

“Expanding Your Recovery Toolkit” Workshop Dec. 16 in Doylestown



Free monthly workshop series for individuals and families with a current or pastdrug/alcohol addiction issue. Next session meets Tuesday, Dec. 16, 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc., 252 W. Swamp Rd., Unit 12, Doylestown, Pa. This month’s theme is “Sustaining Recovery During the Holidays.” Featuring presentations by speakers in recovery, plus a group discussion period. Refreshments. To register, call 215-345-6644, ext. 3151 or email RPetrolawicz@councilsepa.org.










The Addict's Mom needs your help. We need volunteers to help with our mission of fighting this horrible disease that is killing our children. If you don't help who will?



We even need volunteers to manage the volunteers!!



Whatever you would like to help with whether it is your state chapter group, helping admin, writing, technical work, organizational skills just about anything you can think of we can use.



If you are interested please email me at barbara@theaddictsmom.com or pm me on Facebook. Please be sure to put volunteer in the subject line



A little or a lot it would be greatly appreciated.



Much love to all addict's moms and their families.



 

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

November 26 Chp 89 v 50 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH FROM THE PSALMS


Consider , Lord , how your servants are disgraced ! I carry in my heart the insults of so many people.


STEP 4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.


Are you one of those folks who try to carry all the grocery bags at once ? I am ,and there can be 15 bags and I will attach each individual bag to my fingers regardless of the weight .In the back of my mind I am telling myself , I am saving myself two trips.Half way to the house I begin losing feeling in my fingers ,suddenly I realize I am not gonna make it ,but giving up is not an option so i make a run for it but the load is too heavy and the bags split groceries spill everywhere and not just in my general area but the groceries actually take the stairs and down the driveway and down the street goes my fruits and sodas. Same goes for life ,we will do and say stuff out of anger and people will respond out of defense and hurt .Most words we receive are designed too hurt and cause as much damage as possible. Working this step will help you discover that like the groceries carrying too much in your heart will lead to your heart bursting with sadness and then collapse. No cutting corners when it comes to this step ! My heart was so full of the pain of the past that finding or fitting happiness into my heart was impossible. Gods Big book teaches that the issues of life flow from the heart and if it is full of anger , sadness , misery , and fear ,what do you think is gonna come out.Slow steady and consistent is how step 4 should be worked . Once you get rid of the heavy load you have been carrying there will be no reason too self - medicate and for once in your life you will have room for peace and happiness.

James 5-16 - Confess [your] faults one to another, and pray one for another, that ye may be healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.



By Joseph Dickerson

Tuesday, November 25, 2014


Survey Finds Many Positive Aspects to Recovery
/By Celia Vimont
November 19th, 2014/




There are many positive aspects to being in recovery, suggests a new survey of people who are experiencing recovery from alcohol or drug problems. The findings of the national survey of more than 9,000 people will help both people in recovery, and those who treat them, according to the researchers.

Currently there is no agreement about the definition of recovery, says lead researcher Lee Ann Kaskutas, DrPH, of the Public Health Institute’s Alcohol Research Group in Emeryville, California. Many people believe it requires total abstinence from drugs and alcohol, while others do not. “Most of what we know about the definition of recovery has come from scientists and expert panels, not from people in recovery,” she says.

The goal of the “What Is Recovery?” project was to develop a way of defining recovery based on how it is experienced by those who actually live it. The researchers did a tremendous amount of outreach to find people in recovery, including ads on Craigslist and announcements on radio programs. “People in recovery are a hidden population,” Dr. Kaskutas said. “There is a serious stigma attached to addiction. These elements that define recovery demonstrate to those going through it, as well as the general public and policymakers, that it is not something to be ashamed of.”

Survey respondents were most likely to say recovery is:
Being honest with myself.
Being able to enjoy life without drinking or using drugs like I used to.
Living a life that contributes to society, to my family or to my betterment.
Being the kind of person that people can count on.
About giving back.
Striving to be consistent with my beliefs and values in activities that take up the major part of my time and energy.

Dr. Kaskutas says people in recovery can use the findings to explain to family and friends what they are going through. “They can say, ‘When I say I’m in recovery, I mean that it’s an ongoing process, and I’m actually trying to live a life that’s contributing to society,’” she says. “Recovery doesn’t just (or always) mean abstinence—it can also mean you have a positive way of being that you didn’t have before.”

She said it is significant that almost all respondents said recovery is about giving back and helping other people. She noted that some people are reluctant to attend recovery programs because they think the programs will be religious or spiritual. “The survey shows that being spiritual can really just mean you’re giving back and helping others—and it’s not necessarily about religion either.”

Helping others and giving back can be as simple as reading to your child at night, doing the dishes for your wife when she comes home tired from work, or talking to someone else in recovery, Dr. Kaskutas notes. “When you help others, you are helping yourself,” she says. “It makes you feel better. Helping others may be the combustion engine of recovery.”

Professionals treating those in recovery can also use the findings, Dr. Kaskutas says. “The findings point to specific, tangible topics that people can use in service delivery,” she notes. “It helps define what they should be concerned about, and what they should be helping people to achieve.” For instance, providers might add or suggest sober fun activities and opportunities for volunteering, and emphasize contributing to society.

To conduct the study, the researchers started by interviewing dozens of people in recovery. Some were in 12-step groups or other support groups, while others were treatment program alumni, or doing it on their own. They ended up with 167 potential items that define recovery, which were whittled down to 47 based on a survey with more than 200 recovering individuals and more than 50 additional interviews. The researchers then asked 9,341 people in recovery nationwide whether these items belonged in a definition of recovery. The final definition of recovery included 39 of these items.

The findings are published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs.

Dr. Kaskutas says she hopes to keep in touch with more than 1,000 survey respondents who said they were interested in staying involved in future studies on recovery, to track their progress over time.