Relapse Prevention & Slip Repair
The goal isn’t “never struggle.” The goal is to build a system that catches you early — before a rough day becomes a week, and before a slip becomes a story that pulls you back under. This page gives you prevention tools and a repair protocol that replaces shame with strategy.
Slip vs Relapse (words matter)
Some people use different definitions. The point here isn’t labels — it’s response. A slip is a moment where you went off-plan. A relapse is when you stop returning to the plan. The repair protocol below is designed to keep a moment from becoming a season.
Slip
- One episode
- You re-engage your plan quickly
- You learn from it
Relapse
- The plan disappears
- Secrecy increases
- “I’ll fix it later” becomes the pattern
Early Warning Signs (catch it sooner)
Relapses rarely start with alcohol. They start with drift: small compromises that stack up. Watch for these signals — not to shame yourself, but to activate support early.
Body + baseline
- Sleep disruption for multiple nights
- High stress without decompression
- Skipping meals / low blood sugar
- Increased anxiety or irritability
Mind + story
- “I deserve it.”
- “Just this once.”
- Romanticizing drinking
- Resentment: “I can’t have anything.”
Behavior drift
- Isolating
- Stopping routines that stabilize you
- Returning to high-trigger places/people
- “Testing” yourself without a plan
Secrecy signals
- Hiding purchases
- Deleting evidence
- Not being honest with yourself
- Avoiding support contact
The “Stack” Effect (how relapse builds)
Most people don’t relapse because they suddenly “stopped caring.” They relapse because stress stacks, sleep breaks, support fades, and the body starts craving relief.
Typical stack
- Bad sleep
- More scrolling / less movement
- Skipped meals
- Isolation
- One high-trigger event
Counter-stack
- Protect sleep (even imperfectly)
- Eat earlier
- Text one safe person
- Use Quick Reset / Cravings protocol
- Short walk
Prevention System (what makes relapse harder)
Prevention is not a mood. It’s structure. The goal is to reduce cues, reduce isolation, and ensure you have a default plan on hard days.
Environment
- Reduce access (don’t keep alcohol “just in case”)
- Avoid high-risk routes/stops
- Stock NA options
Routine anchors
- Consistent wake time
- Daily movement
- Evening wind-down
Support
- One person you can text
- One place you can go (group/meeting)
- One professional option (if needed)
Type-specific plan
- Use your drinker-type Quit Plan when cravings increase
- Don’t improvise in high-risk weeks
- Return to structure early
Slip Repair Protocol (same-day)
The purpose is not punishment. The purpose is interruption + stabilization. Do these steps in order. Keep it mechanical. Keep it kind.
Step 1: Stop the episode
- Leave the environment
- Remove access
- If needed, ask for help
Step 2: Stabilize the body
- Water / electrolytes
- Eat something
- Reduce screens / stimulation
Step 3: Tell one safe person
- Short message: “I slipped. I’m back on plan.”
- No long confession required
Step 4: Protect sleep
- Dim lights
- Wind-down routine
- Rest is recovery
24-Hour Debrief (learn, don’t spiral)
This is where a slip turns into insight. Keep it simple and factual.
- Trigger: What happened right before?
- State: What was my body/emotion state?
- Story: What did I tell myself?
- Point of failure: Where did my plan break?
- Repair: What guardrail will I add?
Next step: Use the plan that matches your drinker type and strengthen one support layer.
Shame Scripts (replace them)
Shame makes people hide. Hiding makes patterns stronger. Replace shame scripts with repair scripts.
Shame script
- “I ruined everything.”
- “I’m back at zero.”
- “I’m weak.”
Repair script
- “I’m back on plan today.”
- “I learned something important.”
- “I’m building a system, not a mood.”
Your Prevention Plan (printable)
Early warning signs I will treat as “high risk”
My repair steps if I slip
- Stop the episode
- Hydrate + eat
- Text one safe person
- Protect sleep
- Debrief within 24 hours