Resources & Education

Knowledge is the first step toward healing.

Whether you're struggling yourself or supporting a loved one, understanding addiction is a powerful tool. Our resource library is here to inform, guide, and reassure you — because asking questions is always the right move.

Articles & Guides

Addiction education & recovery guidance.

Written and reviewed by our clinical team. We believe informed families make better decisions — and that information should be free.

Signs of addiction
Education

10 Warning Signs of Alcohol Addiction You Shouldn't Ignore

Understanding the early warning signs of alcohol use disorder can mean the difference between early intervention and years of struggle. Many people don't recognize they have a problem until significant damage has been done. Learn what to watch for — in yourself or someone you love.

5 min read · Reviewed by Dr. Eleanor Marsh, MD
Talking to family
For Families

How to Talk to a Loved One About Getting Help for Addiction

Starting the conversation about addiction is one of the hardest things a family member can do. This guide provides specific language, ideal timing, and evidence-based strategies for approaching someone who needs help — without triggering defensiveness or driving them away.

8 min read · James Okafor, LCSW
Understanding relapse
Recovery

Understanding Relapse: Why It Happens and What To Do Next

Relapse is not a moral failure — it is a recognized, common part of the recovery process for many people. This guide explains the stages of relapse (emotional, mental, physical), why they happen, how to recognize them early, and how to respond constructively rather than with shame.

7 min read · Clinical Team
Mental health and addiction
Mental Health

Dual Diagnosis: When Addiction and Mental Health Overlap

More than half of people with addiction also have an undiagnosed or untreated mental health condition. Learn why this happens, how each condition worsens the other, and why treating both simultaneously — not one at a time — is the only approach that consistently leads to lasting recovery.

6 min read · Dr. Eleanor Marsh, MD
Detox safety
Safety

Why Detoxing From Alcohol or Opioids at Home Can Be Deadly

Many people try to manage withdrawal on their own — and for some substances, this decision can be fatal. Alcohol and benzodiazepine withdrawal can cause life-threatening seizures. This guide explains the real medical risks and why supervised medical detox is not optional — it's essential.

4 min read · Medical Team
Family boundaries
For Families

Setting Boundaries With an Addicted Loved One: A Compassionate Guide

Healthy boundaries are not punishment — they are protection, for both you and your loved one. This guide helps families understand the difference between support and enabling, and provides practical, specific language for establishing the limits that make recovery more possible.

9 min read · Dr. Maria Santos, PhD
Understanding Addiction

What addiction actually is — and isn't.

Addiction is a chronic, relapsing brain disease characterized by compulsive substance use despite harmful consequences. It is recognized as a medical condition by the American Medical Association, the American Society of Addiction Medicine, and the World Health Organization.

Addiction is not a character flaw, a moral failing, or a lack of willpower. People do not choose to become addicted. Addiction changes the structure and function of the brain — affecting areas responsible for reward, decision-making, impulse control, and stress — making continued substance use feel compelled, even when the person desperately wants to stop.

This is why willpower alone is rarely enough, and why professional treatment — like the kind we provide — produces far better outcomes than attempts to "just stop." Recovery is possible. But it requires the right support.

Common signs that professional help is needed:

  • Using more of a substance than intended, or for longer than planned
  • Repeated unsuccessful attempts to cut down or stop
  • Spending significant time obtaining, using, or recovering from the substance
  • Cravings or strong urges to use the substance
  • Continued use despite it causing problems at work, school, or home
  • Giving up important activities because of substance use
  • Using the substance even when it causes physical or psychological harm
  • Developing tolerance (needing more to get the same effect)
  • Experiencing withdrawal symptoms when not using

If two or more of these apply to you or a loved one, speaking with a professional is strongly advised.

Crisis Resources

If you or someone is in crisis, help is available right now.

You don't have to be ready for treatment to reach out. If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, please use one of these resources.

Mountainside Recovery

Our admissions team is available 24/7, 365 days a year. Call us to talk — whether you're ready for treatment, not sure yet, or just need to hear a compassionate voice.

📞 (800) 555-0100

SAMHSA National Helpline

Free, confidential, 24/7 treatment referral and information service for individuals and families facing mental health and substance use disorders.

📞 1-800-662-4357

988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline

Free and confidential support for people in distress, prevention and crisis resources for you or your loved ones, and best practices for professionals.

📞 988 (call or text)

Crisis Text Line

Text-based crisis support, available 24/7. Trained crisis counselors respond in real time. Ideal for those who prefer not to speak on the phone.

💬 Text HOME to 741741

Al-Anon Family Groups

A worldwide fellowship offering a program of recovery for the families and friends of alcoholics. Free meetings available in every state and country.

🌐 al-anon.org

Nar-Anon Family Groups

A worldwide twelve-step program designed to help families and friends of people addicted to drugs, providing a supportive community and tools for healing.

🌐 nar-anon.org
Take the First Step

Still have questions? Let's talk.

Our counselors are available right now to answer any questions about addiction, treatment options, insurance, or anything else on your mind. No pressure. Just help.

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