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You don't have to
figure this out alone

Whether you're struggling yourself, supporting someone you love, or just starting to ask questions this is a place to start. No pressure, no judgment.


Words you'll hear explained simply

The addiction world has a lot of jargon. Here's what it actually means, without the medical speak.

Detox

The process of clearing substances from your body, usually with medical supervision. It's the first step not a full treatment on its own.

Inpatient / Residential

You live at the treatment facility, usually 28–90 days. More intensive, more structured good for people who need to step away from their environment.

Outpatient (IOP)

You go to treatment several hours a day but live at home. IOP = Intensive Outpatient Program. Works well if you have a stable home environment.

MAT

Medication-Assisted Treatment. FDA-approved medications (like Suboxone or Vivitrol) alongside counseling. Highly effective not "trading one addiction for another."

Naloxone (Narcan)

A medication that reverses an opioid overdose in minutes. Easy nasal spray. Everyone who knows someone using opioids should have it. Free in most states.

Harm Reduction

Meeting people where they are. Providing safety information and supplies even if someone isn't ready to stop using because their life still matters.

Relapse

Using again after a period of not using. It's common not a moral failure or a sign that recovery is impossible. Most people need multiple attempts.

Co-occurring Disorder

When addiction and a mental health condition (like depression, anxiety, or PTSD) exist at the same time. Very common. Both need to be treated together.

Sober Living

A shared housing option for people in early recovery. Structured, substance-free a bridge between treatment and fully independent living.

What actually happens when you reach out

The unknown is what stops most people. Here's what to expect no surprises.

01

What happens when you call SAMHSA?

A real person answers not a robot. They'll ask about your location, situation, and insurance. No pressure, no record created. The call is completely confidential.

02

What does a Suboxone intake look like?

A short appointment covering your medical history and current use. Most providers can prescribe same day. Telehealth options mean you can start from home in many states.

03

What does detox actually feel like?

Depends on the substance. Medical detox monitors you around the clock. Withdrawal is uncomfortable but manageable with support. Most inpatient stays are 28–30 days.

04

What does "aftercare" actually mean?

Outpatient therapy, sober living, peer support, MAT check-ins. The first 90 days after discharge are the hardest good programs build a real plan for this phase.

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Built by someone who works in this field every day

Not Alone In This was created by a behavioral health professional with direct clinical experience across residential SUD treatment, PHP, and IOP settings in the Chicago area. Everything here is written in plain language because good information, accessible and judgment-free, saves lives.

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